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Re: [tor-bugs] #31539 [Applications/Tor Browser]: FAQ page (esp connection troubleshoooting) should be available offline in TB
#31539: FAQ page (esp connection troubleshoooting) should be available offline in
TB
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Reporter: mrphs | Owner: tbb-team
Type: enhancement | Status: new
Priority: Medium | Milestone:
Component: Applications/Tor Browser | Version:
Severity: Normal | Resolution:
Keywords: censorship, support, | Actual Points:
Parent ID: | Points:
Reviewer: | Sponsor:
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Changes (by mrphs):
* type: defect => enhancement
Old description:
> Tor has been once again blocked as of few hours ago in Iran. And as per
> usual my DMs and Email have been flooded with questions from censored
> users not knowing how to get back on the network. This means people still
> don't know they can use a bridge or that there are default bridges
> provided to the user or that they can perform bridge discovery inside the
> Tor Browser.
>
> One of the things I've always admired Tails for, is that all of their
> documentation is available offline inside Tails. We used to do a similar
> thing. In the old days, there was a short Tor Browser manual. A one page
> simple html that was served when someone would request TB via GetTor.
>
> I think it wont hurt to load an offline HTML page in case connection
> fails, and users are confused on what to do next. In my experience, most
> users don't even know that there are other ways to connect to the Tor
> network when the direct connection fails.
>
> Additionally, we should consider a scenario that I haven't seen covered
> by any of the help documents I've read so far and that is when a user has
> already been connecting to the Tor network directly, but after some time
> it fails and now they need a bridge.
>
> I'm not sure which component would be the right one for this, considering
> it involves censorship circumvention, tor browser and tor support. Feel
> free to move it to the right bucket.
New description:
Tor has been once again blocked as of few hours ago in Iran. And as per
usual my DMs and Email have been flooded with questions from censored
users not knowing how to get back on the network. This means people still
don't know they can use a bridge, or that there are default bridges
provided, or that they can perform bridge discovery inside the Tor
Browser.
One of the things I've always admired Tails for, is that all of their
documentation is available offline inside Tails. We used to do a similar
thing. In the old days, there was a short Tor Browser manual. A one page
simple html that was served when someone would request TB via GetTor.
I think it wont hurt to load an offline HTML page in case connection
fails, and users are confused on what to do next. In my experience, most
users don't even know that there are other ways to connect to the Tor
network when the direct connection fails.
Additionally, we should consider a scenario that I haven't seen covered by
any of the help documents I've read so far and that is when a user has
already been connecting to the Tor network directly, but after some time
it fails and now they need a bridge.
I'm not sure which component would be the right one for this, considering
it involves censorship circumvention, tor browser and tor support. Feel
free to move it to the right bucket.
--
--
Ticket URL: <https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/31539#comment:1>
Tor Bug Tracker & Wiki <https://trac.torproject.org/>
The Tor Project: anonymity online
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