Dear folks, we'll have the opportunity to talk and leverage HS/Tor at one of the most ancient University & Library in Europe. We'd propose to start something like "libraryfreedomproject.org" use to do in US but with a special focus on Onion Services.
I'd ask to you if you'd share your list of case histories about using Websites & Hidden Services in the Facebook way, bloggers, artists and so on. But by common entity (persons or company), not by crypto movements or real anonymous HS. Cases of websites who think Tor users like an important audience for their contents and/or services.
That's why I supposed the ML tor-onions could be the right starting point. I'll appreciate any feedback in contributing sharing cases of HS like these. If you prefer, or don't want to spam the ML, you'd reach me directly. I'll release the case histories list hoping it'd be useful for others too.
Just to say, we experimented lots of HS on related projects. By example one on many, last year we shared content data/social mining on HS about the International Festival of Journalism '15. Knowing guest's contents could be censored somewhere. And it happened on the clearnet, mainly by far-east, so this year we opened an HS to permit access to the entire Festival's contents b/c lots more guests were coming from censored countries.
Thank you for your time and patience in reading this, [TW] @Gilda35
(CCing tor-teachers@ for which Library Freedom Project people are on and can start helping.)
David
On 20 Apr (11:30:49), cippalippa wrote:
Dear folks, we'll have the opportunity to talk and leverage HS/Tor at one of the most ancient University & Library in Europe. We'd propose to start something like "libraryfreedomproject.org" use to do in US but with a special focus on Onion Services.
I'd ask to you if you'd share your list of case histories about using Websites & Hidden Services in the Facebook way, bloggers, artists and so on. But by common entity (persons or company), not by crypto movements or real anonymous HS. Cases of websites who think Tor users like an important audience for their contents and/or services.
That's why I supposed the ML tor-onions could be the right starting point. I'll appreciate any feedback in contributing sharing cases of HS like these. If you prefer, or don't want to spam the ML, you'd reach me directly. I'll release the case histories list hoping it'd be useful for others too.
Just to say, we experimented lots of HS on related projects. By example one on many, last year we shared content data/social mining on HS about the International Festival of Journalism '15. Knowing guest's contents could be censored somewhere. And it happened on the clearnet, mainly by far-east, so this year we opened an HS to permit access to the entire Festival's contents b/c lots more guests were coming from censored countries.
Thank you for your time and patience in reading this, [TW] @Gilda35
pub 2048R/0x97F35A211886BE53 2014-06-17 cippalippa cippalippa@inventati.org sub 2048R/0xE6FA9D6087CCF8C9 2014-06-17 [expires: 2017-01-19]
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Hi all, so sorry for my delayed response. Thank you for cc'ing us on this David. Comments below:
David Goulet:
(CCing tor-teachers@ for which Library Freedom Project people are on and can start helping.)
David
On 20 Apr (11:30:49), cippalippa wrote:
Dear folks, we'll have the opportunity to talk and leverage HS/Tor at one of the most ancient University & Library in Europe. We'd propose to start something like "libraryfreedomproject.org" use to do in US but with a special focus on Onion Services.
Woo hoo! Glad to hear this! Can you tell me some more about the relationship you have with this library? Any particular reason you're focusing just on onion sites? In my experience, it is always better to start from a basic place of explaining and teaching Tor Browser, and then move on to other Tor services. I'm interested in hearing your strategy, and also, please let me know how LFP can help.
Alison (director of Library Freedom Project)
On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 09:46:03AM -0400, David Goulet wrote:
I'd ask to you if you'd share your list of case histories about using Websites & Hidden Services in the Facebook way, bloggers, artists and so on. But by common entity (persons or company), not by crypto movements or real anonymous HS. Cases of websites who think Tor users like an important audience for their contents and/or services.
The Torist comes to mind, if you haven't already seen it:
http://toristinkirir4xj.onion/ https://twitter.com/thetorist
full disclosure: an excerpt of one of my novels appears in Issue One.
cheers jmp
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