commit df496945881e69d7a85a94b4bc98019c7bbf8661
Author: David Fifield <[email protected]>
Date:   Mon Apr 2 09:35:17 2012 -0700

    Remove notice of public connector.
    
    That won't be working at the moment.
---
 README |   15 ---------------
 1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)

diff --git a/README b/README
index a28c608..2351195 100644
--- a/README
+++ b/README
@@ -79,21 +79,6 @@ From tor you are looking for:
        [notice] Tor has successfully opened a circuit. Looks like client 
functionality is working.
        [notice] Bootstrapped 100%: Done.
 
-=== Using a public connector
-
-Rather than running connector.py on your computer, you can use a public
-connector. This way is not as realistic because all your Tor traffic
-will first go to a public connector, which is at a fixed address and can
-be easily blocked. However this is an easy way to try out the system
-without having to do port forwarding.
-
-1. Edit the included torrc file to comment one line and uncomment
-   another:
-       # Socks4Proxy 127.0.0.1:9001
-       Socks4Proxy tor-facilitator.bamsoftware.com:9999
-2. Run Tor using the included torrc file.
-       $ tor -f flashproxy/torrc
-
 === Troubleshooting
 
 Make sure someone is viewing https://crypto.stanford.edu/flashproxy/, or



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