[or-cvs] r21585: {website} add a link to archive.torproject.org. suggested by barkerjr. (website/trunk/en)

Andrew Lewman andrew at torproject.org
Mon Feb 8 12:28:27 UTC 2010


Author: phobos
Date: 2010-02-08 12:28:27 +0000 (Mon, 08 Feb 2010)
New Revision: 21585

Modified:
   website/trunk/en/download.wml
Log:
add a link to archive.torproject.org.  suggested by barkerjr.


Modified: website/trunk/en/download.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/en/download.wml	2010-02-08 12:28:00 UTC (rev 21584)
+++ website/trunk/en/download.wml	2010-02-08 12:28:27 UTC (rev 21585)
@@ -140,9 +140,11 @@
 not change for many months.
 </p>
 <p>
-Unstable packages are released so you can help us test new features and bugfixes. Even though they have a higher version number
-than the stable versions listed above, there is a much higher chance of
-serious reliability and security bugs in these downloads.  Please be prepared to <a href="https://bugs.torproject.org/">report bugs</a>.
+Unstable packages are released so you can help us test new features
+and bugfixes. Even though they have a higher version number than the
+stable versions listed above, there is a much higher chance of serious
+reliability and security bugs in these downloads.  Please be prepared
+to <a href="https://bugs.torproject.org/">report bugs</a>.
 </p>
 </div>
 
@@ -212,17 +214,16 @@
 disabled. If you really need your Youtube, you can <a href="<page
 torbutton/faq>#noflash">reconfigure Torbutton</a> to allow it; but
 be aware that you're opening yourself up to potential attack. Also,
-extensions like Google toolbar look up
-more information about the websites you type in:
-they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast sensitive information. Some
-people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, one for unsafe browsing).
+extensions like Google toolbar look up more information about the
+websites you type in: they may bypass Tor and/or broadcast sensitive
+information. Some people prefer using two browsers (one for Tor, one
+for unsafe browsing).
 </li>
 
 <li>
-Beware of cookies: if you ever browse without Tor
-and a site gives you a cookie, that cookie could identify you even when
-you start using Tor again. Torbutton tries to handle your cookies
-safely. <a
+Beware of cookies: if you ever browse without Tor and a site gives
+you a cookie, that cookie could identify you even when you start
+using Tor again. Torbutton tries to handle your cookies safely. <a
 href="https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/82/">CookieCuller</a> can help
 protect any cookies you do not want to lose.
 </li>
@@ -233,19 +234,18 @@
 but <a
 href="https://wiki.torproject.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#ExitEavesdroppers">it
 can't encrypt your traffic between the Tor network and its final
-destination.</a>
-If you are communicating sensitive information, you should use as much
-care as you would on the normal scary Internet &mdash; use HTTPS or other
-end-to-end encryption and authentication.
+destination.</a> If you are communicating sensitive information, you
+should use as much care as you would on the normal scary Internet &mdash;
+use HTTPS or other end-to-end encryption and authentication.
 </li>
 
 <li>
-While Tor blocks attackers
-on your local network from discovering or influencing your destination,
-it opens new risks: malicious or misconfigured Tor exit nodes can send
-you the wrong page, or even send you embedded Java applets disguised as
-domains you trust. Be careful opening documents or applications you
-download through Tor, unless you've verified their integrity.
+While Tor blocks attackers on your local network from discovering
+or influencing your destination, it opens new risks: malicious or
+misconfigured Tor exit nodes can send you the wrong page, or even send
+you embedded Java applets disguised as domains you trust. Be careful
+opening documents or applications you download through Tor, unless you've
+verified their integrity.
 </li>
 </ol>
 
@@ -267,6 +267,12 @@
 </p>
 
 <p>
+If you would like to research any past release of Tor source, packages,
+or other binaries, see <a href="http://archive.torproject.org/">the
+archive</a>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
 See the <a href="<page documentation>#Developers">developer
 documentation</a> for instructions on fetching Tor from Git to get
 the very latest development version source code.



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