[tor-commits] [community/master] add missing parenthesis, thanks curtisb for report

emmapeel at torproject.org emmapeel at torproject.org
Tue May 18 17:20:17 UTC 2021


commit 4e6fe110646d9a16693727d47c33f3cf43fed0f9
Author: emma peel <emma.peel at riseup.net>
Date:   Tue May 18 19:08:15 2021 +0200

    add missing parenthesis, thanks curtisb for report
---
 content/relay/community-resources/tor-exit-guidelines/contents.lr | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/content/relay/community-resources/tor-exit-guidelines/contents.lr b/content/relay/community-resources/tor-exit-guidelines/contents.lr
index 61e4084..722e513 100644
--- a/content/relay/community-resources/tor-exit-guidelines/contents.lr
+++ b/content/relay/community-resources/tor-exit-guidelines/contents.lr
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ Another benefit of an association-like structure is that it might still work eve
 ### Consider preemptively teaching your local law enforcement about Tor.
 
 "Cybercrime" people actually love it when you offer to [teach them about Tor and the Internet](https://blog.torproject.org/blog/talking-german-police-stuttgart) -- they're typically overwhelmed by their jobs and don't have enough background to know where to start.
-Contacting them gives you a chance to teach them why Tor is useful to the world (and why it's [not particularly helpful to criminals](https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/faq-abuse#WhatAboutCriminals).
+Contacting them gives you a chance to teach them why Tor is useful to the world (and why it's [not particularly helpful to criminals](https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/faq-abuse#WhatAboutCriminals)).
 Also, if they do get a report about your relay, they'll think of you as a helpful expert rather than a potential criminal.
 
 ## Handling abuse complaints





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