Greetings from the Boston 2013 Tor developer hack day! TorBirdy 0.1.1 is now out; we think it is the the best release so far and we encourage you to upgrade. This release is the second in our beta series. It's still experimental - of course. Use at your own risk and especially if you're using it with Enigmail and GnuPG without a local[0] HTTP proxy. We've continued with updating the web page to show some TorBirdy screen shots: https://github.com/ioerror/torbirdy/wiki/Screen-shots Call for help: We're looking for assistance with Translations - if you'd like to translate TorBirdy, we'd gladly accept a patch that prepares TorBirdy for translation work. We now have an amazing number of translations! Even if you can't help translate, we'd love to know what languages matter to you or your friends - please let us know? We're especially looking for translations of TorBirdy into Persian - if you'd like to help us translate, please contact us! Release Highlights: 0.1.1, 20 Mar 2013 Add a dialog for new users that is shown during the first-run (closes #8238) Do not confirm before sending an email if Enigmail is enabled; default behavior changed from 0.1.0 (user opt-in allowed through the preferences) Restore all account settings that were changed on uninstall Allow the user to use Thunderbird's automatic configuration wizard in case they don't want to use our manual account configuration wizard Set the SOCKS port to 9150 to reflect the change in the latest TBB Add opt-out from TLS-specific settings (closes #8420) Allow additional keyservers to be used/changed (closes #8332) Add Korean translation (thanks to cwt96) Add Norwegian BokmÃl translation (thanks to lateralus) Add Galician translation (thanks to tombouzada) General content anonymity caution note: TorBirdy has known leaks in the Message-ID and in the Date header, we're working on merging an upstream patch that will allow these leaks to be closed. There are no known proxy leaks unless you use additional extensions that do not respect the proxy settings of Thunderbird. If you use GnuPG and Enigmail, we encourage you to use it with a local HTTP proxy due to the issues mentioned[0] regarding GnuPG. Here's the wiki page for TorBirdy: https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/torbirdy Here's the latest XPI for TorBirdy: https://www.torproject.org/dist/torbirdy/torbirdy-0.1.1.xpi Here is a proper GPG signature for the latest XPI: https://www.torproject.org/dist/torbirdy/torbirdy-0.1.1.xpi.asc Here is the sha1sum of torbirdy-0.1.1.xpi: 6ccfe90fcc1abc446b2734c41794d7af55eaf58f The GnuPG signature that signed this email is also the same key that signs the TorBirdy releases. To learn more about signature verification of Tor Project related software such as TorBirdy please visit this page: https://www.torproject.org/docs/verifying-signatures.html The plugin on AMO has been preliminarily reviewed and we are still in the review process. It is again possible (Hooray!) to install TorBirdy directly from Thunderbird or by downloading the extension in a web browser from Mozilla's website: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/torbirdy/ We believe that users who installed previous versions from Mozilla's addons site should receive this update automatically. It may take some time before Mozilla approves this update but it should eventually show up as an available update. We now upload a full XPI and GnuPG signature for every new release to the Tor Project's web servers: https://www.torproject.org/dist/torbirdy/ All the best, Jacob [0] https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/2846
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