Hi everyone,
my name is Lucia and I am a computer science student from UPC, Spain. I am also starting my final year project and I chose to develop the Censorship Analyser you had in the volunteer's page.
A month ago I realize that this project idea was gone and I asked Philipp Winter about it. He told me that it is not listed as he cannot spend time on it, but I really wanted to do a project to help Tor community.
My questions here are only two: do you think this project is not needed anymore now we have a lot of recent data about censorship in other countries (OONI Explorer) and other tools? If I develop this software (I will probably do it even if the answer to the first question is "yes"), can I ask the Tor community (tor-dev?) for help in testing and improving proposals?
I will not ask it a lot as I have my project director and some friends of the college who will help me, but I think it would be great if more people test it as it will be more robust and adapted to Tor community needs.
A quick review about the project: it will be a tool like OONI scripts but more basic and without using tor. It will also be more difficult to detect as I will study how to avoid being noticed by surveillance systems and with DPI methods for example. Also it will be user friendly, as one of its purpose is to reach all kind of users.
Thanks for your time, Lucia.
On Tue, May 03, 2016 at 11:33:54PM +0200, Lucia Di Marco wrote:
My questions here are only two: do you think this project is not needed anymore now we have a lot of recent data about censorship in other countries (OONI Explorer) and other tools? If I develop this software (I will probably do it even if the answer to the first question is "yes"), can I ask the Tor community (tor-dev?) for help in testing and improving proposals?
Hi Lucia,
I still think that this could be useful. To make it useful, however, a bunch of boring engineering and usability challenges must be tackled: the executable should be self-contained, portable, and easy to use. I say "boring" because these challenges are usually not what students find very interesting.
It's certainly fine to ask tor-dev@ for feedback. I think several people, me included, would be happy to provide feedback once you have a prototype. Good luck!
Cheers, Philipp