
Just to clarify: technically tools like Jekyll or Sinatra could be used because the server can be started wherever the site files are located whether it’s a USB stick or a laptop, correct? On Jan 8, 2014, at 9:34 AM, Lunar <lunar@torproject.org> wrote:
Sean Rafferty:
Pardon my ignorance, but is the requirement for a static site a security concern or simply an ease-of-use issue?
Security concerns, ease to setup, ease of mirroring.
Another dumb question, but when you say the site needs to work offline, do you mean people can view the content without a web server, or that it must run on a local instance of a web sever and not require things like google's cdn version of query?
Tor is used for censorship circumvention. Think about an USB stick with the Tor Browser Bundle, and a copy of the website. The website should be usable without requiring any access to the network so people can learn how to use Tor to reach the wider Internet.
-- Lunar <lunar@torproject.org> ________________________________________________________________________ Tor Website Team coordination mailing-list
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