commit fb411cc84dc3ba881440bd5e711608e7bc88699f
Author: hiro <[email protected]>
Date:   Thu Nov 29 17:03:00 2018 +0100

    Fix typo in date
---
 .../contents+en.lr                                 | 251 ++++++++++-----------
 .../contents.lr                                    |   2 +-
 .../text/contents+en.lr                            |  72 ++----
 3 files changed, 136 insertions(+), 189 deletions(-)

diff --git 
a/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents+en.lr
 
b/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents+en.lr
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a/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents+en.lr
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b/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents+en.lr
@@ -4,183 +4,170 @@ _template: newsletter.html
 ---
 author: [email protected]
 ---
-pub_date: 2018-06-28
+pub_date: 2018-21-01
 ---
-title: Censorship Circumvention, Trackers, Onion Protections, New Releases, 
Events
+title: New Board Member, Internet Freedom Threats, Events, New Releases
 ---
 html_body:
 
 <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td width="100%">
-<table align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" 
cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody><!-- Spacing -->
-<tr>
-<td height="20" width="100%"><a href="https://newsletter.torproject.org";><img 
alt="tor-news-logo" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-news-logo-560.png";
 style="width: 250px; height: 75px;" /></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td width="100%">
-<table align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" 
cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody><!-- /Spacing --><!-- Spacing -->
-<tr>
-<td height="15" style="font-size:1px; line-height:1px; mso-line-height-rule: 
exactly;" width="100%">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-<!-- /Spacing --><!-- content -->
-<tr>
-<td style="padding:0 15px 15px 15px;">
-<hr />
-<h1><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1202/title/und/full" 
property="schema:name">Breaking Through Censorship Barriers Even When Tor Is 
Blocked</span></h1>
-
-<p><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1202/title/und/full" property="schema:name"><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/rompiendo-barreras-de-censura-incluso-cuando-tor-esta-bloqueado";><img
 alt="stop-sign-pare" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/image/ronaldo-oliveira-423252-unsplash_0.jpeg?itok=HKkGM1pq";
 style="width: 560px; height: 373px;" /></a></span></p>
+       <tbody>
+               <tr>
+                       <td width="100%">
+                       <table align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" 
cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
+                               <tbody><!-- Spacing -->
+                                       <tr>
+                                               <td height="20" width="100%"><a 
href="https://newsletter.torproject.org";><img alt="tor-news-logo" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-news-logo-560.png";
 style="width: 250px; height: 75px;" /></a></td>
+                                       </tr>
+                                       <tr>
+                                               <td>
+                                               <table align="center" 
border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
+                                                       <tbody>
+                                                               <tr>
+                                                                       <td 
width="100%">
+                                                                       <table 
align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
class="devicewidth" width="650">
+                                                                               
<tbody><!-- /Spacing --><!-- Spacing --><!-- /Spacing --><!-- content -->
+                                                                               
        <tr>
+                                                                               
                <td style="padding:0 15px 15px 15px;">
+                                                                               
                <p><small><em>We&#39;re in the middle of our year-end education 
and fundraising campaign, Strength in Numbers.&nbsp; <a 
href="https://torproject.org/donate/donate-sin-tn2";>Learn more about it or 
support our work</a>.</em></small></p>
 
-<p>Last week, <a 
href="https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/59qvwz/venezuela-maduro-tor-network-censorship";>Venezuela
 blocked access to the Tor network</a>. Prior to the block, there were over 
30,000 people in Venezuela enjoying the privacy and security protections Tor 
provides.</p>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <h1><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1578/title/en/full" 
property="schema:name">Growing Our Board of Directors&nbsp; </span></h1>
 
-<p>Connecting to Tor is a luxury, but we have developed ways for people where 
Tor is blocked to continue to connect to the network. Using bridges and 
pluggable transports, people can break through censorship and continue to 
access the open web. For more information about using bridges, see:</p>
+                                                                               
                <p><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1578/title/en/full" property="schema:name"><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/strength-numbers-growing-our-board-directors";><img
 alt="tor-nighat" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/image/nighat-dad-tor-board.png?itok=Nve4r1Xz";
 style="width: 560px; height: 280px;" /></a></span></p>
 
-<p>[<a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/rompiendo-barreras-de-censura-incluso-cuando-tor-esta-bloqueado";>Spanish</a>]</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Like most nonprofit organizations, the Tor Project relies on 
its Board of Directors to provide fiscal and corporate oversight to our 
important work. Over the past two years, the Tor Project has been focused on 
growing our board to reflect the diversity of cultures of people who build and 
use Tor.</p>
 
-<p>[<a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/breaking-through-censorship-barriers-even-when-tor-blocked";>English</a>]</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>We are proud to welcome the newest member of our Board of 
Directors, Nighat Dad. Nighat is the founder and Executive Director of Digital 
Rights Foundation, Pakistan. She is an accomplished lawyer and human rights 
activist, and she is one of the pioneers campaigning for access to a safe and 
open internet in Pakistan. <a 
href="https://www.ted.com/talks/nighat_dad_how_pakistani_women_are_taking_the_internet_back";>Watch
 her TED talk</a> to hear the amazing story of how she set up Pakistan&#39;s 
first cyber harassment helpline to support women who face serious threats 
online--a major problem in Pakistan.</p>
 
-<p>If you have basic command line experience, you can help out people in 
countries with heavy censorship by <a 
href="https://www.torproject.org/docs/pluggable-transports#operator";>becoming a 
bridge operator.</a></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>&ldquo;Nighat brings an abundance of expertise and 
experience campaigning for digital rights in Pakistan and beyond,&rdquo; said 
Isabela Bagueros, Executive Director of the Tor Project. &ldquo;She has strong 
ties to the communities we serve and our most at-risk users.&rdquo;</p>
 
-<hr />
-<h1>Don&#39;t Let Facebook or Other Trackers Follow You on The Web</h1>
+                                                                               
                <p><a href="https://www.torproject.org/about/board.html.en";>Our 
board</a> has eight members representing four continents: North America, 
Europe, Africa, and now Asia. Over the past year, the board held 16 official 
meetings plus several committee meetings during our searches for a new 
Executive Director and new board members.</p>
 
-<p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/dont-let-facebook-or-any-tracker-follow-you-web";><img
 alt="fb-image" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/image/thought-catalog-609285-unsplash.jpeg?itok=IHGStRWh";
 style="width: 560px; height: 373px;" /></a></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>In the coming year, we hope to continue to grow our board in 
number and in diversity. Like everyone involved with Tor, our Board of 
Directors all share a common commitment to internet freedom and human 
rights.</p>
 
-<p><span class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">In the 
early age of the internet, people enjoyed a high level of privacy. Webpages 
were just hypertext documents; almost no personalization of the user experience 
was offered (or </span><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z comment  
c-jMLQ2ANwlbH3SipS">forced</span><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">). The web today has 
evolved into a system of </span><a 
href="https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/apr/07/facebookgot-into-mess-cant-get-out-of-it-mark-zuckerberg-surveillance-capitalism";><span
 class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">surveillance 
capitalism</span></a><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">, where advertising 
networks follow users while they browse the web, continuously collecting traces 
of personal data and surfing patterns to create profiles of users in order to 
target them.</span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>As we challenge major threats to internet freedom around the 
world, there is strength in numbers -- our numbers keep us strong as we 
challenge those threats. And our diversity gives us the understanding to fight 
with compassion.</p>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">Using the web today, 
you are a target. And because of the rampant tracking across websites, each 
time you use the internet, you become an easier target. </span></p>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <h1>Internet Freedom Is on the Line</h1>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">By tracking you 
across different applications and sites through cookies or open web sessions, 
your personal preferences and social connections are collected and often sold. 
Even if you do not accept cookies or are not logged into a service account, 
such as your Google, Twitter, or Facebook accounts, the web page and 
third-party services can still try to profile you by using third-party HTTP 
requests or other techniques. </span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/strength-numbers-internet-freedom-line";><img 
alt="strength-in-numbers" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/image/facebook-cover%203.png?itok=IiMLiM2r";
 style="width: 560px; height: 212px;" /></a></p>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">Within the HTTP 
request, various selectors can be included to communicate user preferences or 
particular features, in the form of URL variables. Personali</span><span 
class="author-a-ajz71zz75zvi60r7f3z79z6me">z</span><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">ed language or fonts 
settings, browser extensions, in-page keywords, battery charge and status, and 
more can be used to identify you by restricting the pool of possible candidates 
among all the visitors in a certain time frame, location, profile of interests. 
You can then be distinguished, or fingerprinted, across multiple devices or 
sessions and then the profile the tracker </span><span 
class="author-a-az69zz122zz70zcz89zcfdz66zz84zxvz66z7z66z">h</span><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">as on you is 
expanded.</span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>The Tor Project believes that everyone should have private 
access to an uncensored web, but digital authoritarianism is on the rise. For 
the 8th year in a row, internet freedom has declined around the world, 
including in the United States.</p>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">By the sites and 
applications themselves, the story is spun to sound as if they&rsquo;re doing 
you a favor: they say this collection allows them to customize your experience. 
You see ads more relevant to you, Facebook and others say. </span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>&ldquo;Of the 65 countries assessed, 26 have been on an 
overall decline since June 2017,&rdquo; reveals <a 
href="https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-net/freedom-net-2018";>a new 
report</a> by Freedom House.</p>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">Even if you think of 
an advertising network as a recommendation system, this same system is also 
influencing what you see. It&rsquo;s changing your experience of the internet. 
</span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>A huge factor in this decline is government censorship, a 
growing problem in many countries. Freedom to publish, share, and access 
information online is critical for a healthy society, yet governments and 
entities around the world are denying people this universal human right, and 
their tactics for doing so are becoming more advanced.</p>
 
-<p class="primary-author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z"><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">But at what cost is 
this customization? When confronted with transparency around what this 
&ldquo;customization&rdquo; takes, it </span><span 
class="author-a-z73zz72zz86zqpz74ziz83z0hz74zsjz122ziz75z">&ldquo;<a 
href="https://theintercept.com/2018/05/09/facebook-ads-tracking-algorithm";>poisons</a>&rdquo;
 the ad. So of course these companies are pushing back against transparency, 
but we need to keep pushing them and doing what we can to prevent them from 
continuing to exploit us online. </span></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>In many countries around the world, people are only 
permitted to access state-sponsored news, where the stories always spin a 
nation&#39;s government and leadership in favorable lights.</p>
 
-<p>Learn about <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/dont-let-facebook-or-any-tracker-follow-you-web";>how
 Tor Browser can help</a>.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Internet controls in China have reached new extremes, and 
China is <a 
href="https://qz.com/africa/1447015/china-is-helping-african-countries-control-the-internet/";>exporting
 its methods</a> to other governments. China, Egypt, Iran, Venezuela, Ethiopia, 
Turkey, and a few other countries now block the Tor network.</p>
 
-<hr />
-<h1><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1556/title/en/full" 
property="schema:name">Privacy International Protects Partners With Its Onion 
Address</span></h1>
+                                                                               
                <p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/domain-fronting-critical-open-web";>Amazon and 
Google shut down domain fronting</a>, a once reliable tactic used by many 
pluggable transports to access the Tor network when it is blocked.</p>
 
-<p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/privacy-international-protects-partners-its-onion-address";><img
 alt="pi-tor" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/image/privacy-international-onion.jpg?itok=DclGfP1t";
 style="width: 560px; height: 280px;" /></a></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>These developments make our work more important than ever. 
That is why in 2018 we worked hard to keep the Tor network secure and strong. 
We made Tor Browser <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-browser-80";>more 
user-friendly</a> and localized it into 9 additional languages (for a total of 
24). We brought Tor Browser to mobile with the alpha version of Tor Browser for 
Android, which has already been installed <a 
href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.torproject.torbrowser_alpha";>over
 half a million times</a>. We traveled to different countries to meet at-risk 
communities and provided them with digital security training.</p>
 
-<p><em>This guest post is written by <a 
href="https://privacyinternational.org/people/909/ed-geraghty";>Ed Geraghty, 
Technologist, Privacy International</a>.</em></p>
+                                                                               
                <p>We are determined to reach even more people in need.<br />
+                                                                               
                &nbsp;<br />
+                                                                               
                <a href="https://www.torproject.org/download";>Tor Browser</a> 
protects against tracking, surveillance, and censorship, and we think everyone, 
no matter where they are in the world, should be able to use it and enjoy their 
universal human rights to privacy and freedom.</p>
 
-<blockquote>
-<p>No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with [their] privacy, 
family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon [their] honour and 
reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such 
interference or attacks.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>We&rsquo;re in a race with the censors. They are getting 
more sophisticated, and so must we. <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/strength-numbers-internet-freedom-line";>Find 
out how we&#39;re taking this work to the next level</a>.</p>
 
-<p>- United Nations Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) 1948, Article 12</p>
-</blockquote>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <h1>New Releases</h1>
 
-<p>The right to privacy is a qualified, fundamental human right. We at Privacy 
International (PI) work hard with our network of partners to ensure this 
fundamental right is protected - it is essential to autonomy, the protection of 
human dignity, and is the foundation upon which many other human rights are 
built.</p>
+                                                                               
                <h2 class="title"><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1622/title/en/full" property="schema:name">Tor 
Browser for Android 1.0a3</span></h2>
 
-<p>This is becoming ever-more important in an age of ubiquitous, 
indiscriminate mass surveillance, especially as more and more aspects of our 
daily lives - interactions with friends, family, companies, and the state - are 
dependent upon technology. In order for individuals to fully participate in the 
modern world, developments in law and technologies must strengthen and not 
undermine the ability to freely enjoy this right.We challenge governments&#39; 
powers by advocating and litigating for stronger protections. We lead research 
and investigations to shine a light on powers and capabilities, and to 
instigate and inform debate. We advocate for good practices and strong laws 
worldwide to protect people and their rights. We equip civil society 
organisations across the world to increase public awareness about privacy. We 
raise awareness about technologies and laws that place privacy at risk, to 
ensure that the public is informed and engaged.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>This release features important security updates to Firefox. 
Moreover, we backport a defense against protocol handler enumeration developed 
by Mozilla engineers. <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-browser-android-10a3";>Full 
changelog</a>.</p>
 
-<p>Tor is an important tool in our arsenal - a technology which allows people 
to communicate, use the internet, and browse the web in a manner which evades 
censorship.</p>
+                                                                               
                <h2>Tor 0.3.5.5-alpha</h2>
 
-<p>Many of our partners work in challenging environments, with massive state 
surveillance and/or ongoing censorship programmes. Giving them an ability to 
securely browse the web (both clear and onion) in a way which allows them to 
evade dragnet surveillance also allows them to conduct investigations 
securely.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Tor 0.3.5.5-alpha includes numerous bugfixes on earlier 
releases, including fixing our usage of named groups when running as a TLS 1.3 
client in OpenSSL 1.1.1. Full 
changelog:https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-0355-alpha</p>
 
-<p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/privacy-international-protects-partners-its-onion-address";>Find
 out what else</a> running an onion address provides the Privacy International 
community.</p>
+                                                                               
                <h2>Tor 0.3.5.4-alpha</h2>
 
-<hr />
-<h1>New Releases</h1>
+                                                                               
                <p>Includes numerous bugfixes on earlier versions and improves 
our continuous integration support, this release continues our attempts to 
stabilize this alpha branch and build it into a foundation for an acceptable 
long-term-support release. <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-0354-alpha";>Full 
changelog</a>.</p>
 
-<h2 class="title"><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1533/title/en/full" property="schema:name">Tor 
0.3.3.7</span></h2>
+                                                                               
                <h2>Tor 0.3.4.9</h2>
 
-<p>This release backports several changes from the 0.3.4.x series, including 
fixes for bugs affecting compatibility and stability. (<a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/tor-0337-released";>Full changelog</a>).</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>This is the second stable release in its series; it 
backports numerous fixes, including a fix for a bandwidth management bug that 
was causing memory exhaustion on relays. Anyone running an earlier version of 
Tor 0.3.4.9 should upgrade. <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-0349";>Full changelog</a>.</p>
 
-<h2><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1528/title/en/full" property="schema:name">Tor 
Browser 7.5.6</span></h2>
+                                                                               
                <h2><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1630/title/en/full" property="schema:name">Tor 
0.3.5.3-alpha</span></h2>
 
-<p>This release features important <a 
href="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2018-17/";>security 
updates</a> to Firefox, updates Firefox to 52.9.0esr, and includes newer 
versions of NoScript and HTTPS Everywhere. Moreover, we added the latest Tor 
stable version, <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/tor-0337-released";>0.3.3.7</a>. (<a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/tor-browser-756-released-";>Full 
changelog</a>).</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Tor 0.3.5.3-alpha fixes several bugs, mostly from previous 
0.3.5.x versions. One important fix for relays addresses a problem with rate- 
limiting code from back in 0.3.4.x: If the fix works out, we&#39;ll be 
backporting it soon. <a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/new-release-tor-0348-also-other-stable-updates-02917-03212-and-03310";>Full
 changelog</a>.</p>
 
-<hr />
-<h1>Upcoming Events with Tor</h1>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <h1>Upcoming Events with Tor</h1>
 
-<ul>
-<li>
-<p class="title"><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1535/title/en/full"><a 
href="https://petsymposium.org/2018/index.php";>HOPE. </a>New York City, USA. 
July 20-22, 2018.</span></p>
-</li>
-<li>
-<p class="title"><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1535/title/en/full"><a 
href="https://petsymposium.org/2018/index.php";>The 18th Privacy Enhancing 
Technologies Symposium (PETS)</a>. Barcelona, Spain. July 24-27, 2018. 
</span></p>
-</li>
-<li>
-<p class="title"><span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1535/title/en/full"><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/meetup-tor-community-night-pets";>Tor 
Community Night</a>. July 24, 2018. Barcelona, Spain. </span></p>
-</li>
-<li>
-<p class="title"><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/events/roger-and-steph-and-others-def-con-las-vegas";>Def
 Con</a>. Las Vegas, USA. August 8-12, 2018.</p>
-</li>
-</ul>
+                                                                               
                <ul>
+                                                                               
                        <li>
+                                                                               
                        <p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/events/criptofesta-sao-paulo";>CriptoFesta</a>.<span
 class="quickedit-field" data-quickedit-field-id="node/1641/title/en/full"> 
S&atilde;o Paulo</span>. December 1, 2018.</p>
+                                                                               
                        </li>
+                                                                               
                        <li>
+                                                                               
                        <p><a 
href="https://blog.torproject.org/events/criptocerrado-brasilia";><span 
class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1649/title/en/full">Criptocerrado</span></a>. 
<span class="quickedit-field" 
data-quickedit-field-id="node/1649/title/en/full">Bras&iacute;lia.</span> 
December 15, 2018.</p>
+                                                                               
                        </li>
+                                                                               
                </ul>
 
-<hr />
-<h2>Join Our Community</h2>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <h1>Join Our Community</h1>
 
-<p>Getting involved with Tor is easy. You can help us make the network faster 
and more decentralized by&nbsp;<a 
href="https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/TorRelayGuide";>running a 
relay</a>.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Getting involved with Tor is easy. <a 
href="https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/TorRelayGuide";>Run a 
relay</a> to make the network faster and more decentralized.</p>
 
-<p>You can learn about each of our <a 
href="https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/WikiStart#Teams";>teams 
</a>and start collaborating.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p>Learn about each of our <a 
href="https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/WikiStart#Teams";>teams 
</a>and start collaborating.</p>
 
-<p>If you want to make a contribution but don&rsquo;t have the time to 
volunteer,&nbsp;<a href="http://donate.torproject.org/";>your 
donation</a>&nbsp;will help&nbsp;keep Tor fast, strong, and secure.</p>
+                                                                               
                <p><a 
href="https://torproject.org/donate/donate-sin-tn2";>Donate</a> to help keep Tor 
fast, strong, and secure. Mozilla is matching <em>every</em> donation through 
2018. If you&#39;ve never given before, another donor will be matching all 
first-time donations up to $20,000, so give today, and your donation will be 
matched twice:</p>
 
-<div style="background-color: #68b030; padding: 6px 8px 6px 8px;
--webkit-border-radius:3px; border-radius:3px; margin: 0 auto; width:150px; 
text-align: center;"><a href="https://donate.torproject.org"; style="font-size: 
16px; font-family: Source sans pro, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: 
bold; color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; display:inline-block;" 
target="_blank">DONATE NOW</a></div>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="padding:0 15px;">
-<p>The Tor Project is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit organization advancing human 
rights and freedoms by creating and deploying free and open-source anonymity 
and privacy technologies, supporting their unrestricted availability and use, 
and furthering their scientific and popular understanding.</p>
+                                                                               
                <div style="background-color: #68b030; padding: 6px 8px 6px 8px;
+-webkit-border-radius:3px; border-radius:3px; margin: 0 auto; width:200px; 
text-align: center;"><a href="https://torproject.org/donate/donate-sin-tn2"; 
style="font-size: 24px; font-family: Source sans pro, Helvetica, Arial, 
sans-serif; font-weight: bold; color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; 
display:inline-block;" target="_blank">DONATE</a></div>
+                                                                               
                </td>
+                                                                               
        </tr>
+                                                                               
        <tr>
+                                                                               
                <td style="padding:0 15px;">
+                                                                               
                <p>The Tor Project is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit organization 
advancing human rights and freedoms by creating and deploying free and 
open-source anonymity and privacy technologies, supporting their unrestricted 
availability and use, and furthering their scientific and popular 
understanding.</p>
 
-<hr />
-<p><a href="https://facebook.com/torproject";><img alt="" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-facebook.png";
 style="width: 25px; height: 25px; margin: 3px;" /></a><a 
href="https://twitter.com/torproject";>&nbsp;<img alt="tor-twitter" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-twitter.png";
 style="width: 25px; height: 25px; margin: 3px;" /></a></p>
+                                                                               
                <hr />
+                                                                               
                <p><a href="https://facebook.com/torproject";><img alt="" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-facebook.png";
 style="width: 25px; height: 25px; margin: 3px;" /></a><a 
href="https://twitter.com/torproject";>&nbsp;<img alt="tor-twitter" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/tor-twitter.png";
 style="width: 25px; height: 25px; margin: 3px;" /></a><a 
href="https://instagram.com/torproject";>&nbsp;<img alt="tor-insta" 
src="https://blog.torproject.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/instagram-tor-icon_0.jpg";
 style="width: 25px; height: 25px; margin: 3px;" /></a></p>
 
-<p><br />
-<a href="https://torproject.org";>torproject.org</a></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
+                                                                               
        <br />
+                                                                               
                <a href="https://torproject.org";>torproject.org</a></small></p>
+                                                                               
                </td>
+                                                                               
        </tr>
+                                                                               
</tbody>
+                                                                       </table>
+                                                                       </td>
+                                                               </tr>
+                                                       </tbody>
+                                               </table>
+                                               </td>
+                                       </tr>
+                               </tbody>
+                       </table>
+                       </td>
+               </tr>
+       </tbody>
 </table>
 
 <table bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
id="backgroundTable" st-sortable="left-image" width="100%">
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td width="100%">
-<table align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" 
cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
-<tbody><!-- Spacing -->
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
+       <tbody>
+               <tr>
+                       <td>
+                       <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" 
cellspacing="0" class="devicewidth" width="650">
+                               <tbody>
+                                       <tr>
+                                               <td width="100%">
+                                               <table align="center" 
bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" 
class="devicewidth" width="650">
+                                                       <tbody><!-- Spacing -->
+                                                               <tr>
+                                                                       
<td>&nbsp;</td>
+                                                               </tr>
+                                                       </tbody>
+                                               </table>
+                                               </td>
+                                       </tr>
+                               </tbody>
+                       </table>
+                       </td>
+               </tr>
+       </tbody>
 </table>
-<!-- Spacing -->
\ No newline at end of file
+<!-- Spacing -->}
diff --git 
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--- 
a/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents.lr
+++ 
b/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/contents.lr
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ _template: newsletter.html
 ---
 author: [email protected]
 ---
-pub_date: 2018-21-01
+pub_date: 2018-12-01
 ---
 title: New Board Member, Internet Freedom Threats, Events, New Releases
 ---
diff --git 
a/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/text/contents+en.lr
 
b/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/text/contents+en.lr
index 15e13d9..137a853 100644
--- 
a/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/text/contents+en.lr
+++ 
b/content/archive/new-board-member-internet-freedom-threats-events-new-releases/text/contents+en.lr
@@ -4,80 +4,40 @@ _template: post.html
 ---
 author: [email protected]
 ---
-pub_date: 2018-06-28
+pub_date: 2018-12-01
 ---
-title: Censorship Circumvention, Trackers, Onion Protections, New Releases, 
Events
+title: New Board Member, Internet Freedom Threats, Events, New Releases
 ---
 body:
 
-## Breaking Through Censorship Barriers, Even When Tor Is Blocked ##
+We're in the middle of our year-end education and fundraising campaign, 
Strength in Numbers. Learn more about it or support our work: 
https://torproject.org/donate/donate-sin-tn2
 
-Last week, Venezuela blocked access to the Tor network. Prior to the block, 
there were over 30,000 people in Venezuela enjoying the privacy and security 
protections Tor provides: 
https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/59qvwz/venezuela-maduro-tor-network-censorship
+// Growing Our Board of Directors //
 
-Connecting to Tor is a luxury, but we have developed ways for people where Tor 
is blocked to continue to connect to the network. Using bridges and pluggable 
transports, people can break through censorship and continue to access the open 
web. For more information about using bridges, see:
+Like most nonprofit organizations, the Tor Project relies on its Board of 
Directors to provide fiscal and corporate oversight to our important work. Over 
the past two years, the Tor Project has been focused on growing our board to 
reflect the diversity of cultures of people who build and use Tor.
 
-https://blog.torproject.org/rompiendo-barreras-de-censura-incluso-cuando-tor-esta-bloqueado
 [Spanish]
+We are proud to welcome the newest member of our Board of Directors, Nighat 
Dad. Nighat is the founder and Executive Director of Digital Rights Foundation, 
Pakistan. She is an accomplished lawyer and human rights activist, and she is 
one of the pioneers campaigning for access to a safe and open internet in 
Pakistan. Watch her TED talk to hear the amazing story of how she set up 
Pakistan's first cyber harassment helpline to support women who face serious 
threats online--a major problem in Pakistan: 
https://www.ted.com/talks/nighat_dad_how_pakistani_women_are_taking_the_internet_back
 
-https://blog.torproject.org/breaking-through-censorship-barriers-even-when-tor-blocked
 [English]
+\'93Nighat brings an abundance of expertise and experience campaigning for 
digital rights in Pakistan and beyond,\'94 said Isabela Bagueros, Executive 
Director of the Tor Project. \'93She has strong ties to the communities we 
serve and our most at-risk users.\'94
 
-If you have basic command line experience, you can help out people in 
countries with heavy censorship by becoming a bridge operator: 
https://www.torproject.org/docs/pluggable-transports#operator
+Our board has eight members representing four continents: North America, 
Europe, Africa, and now Asia. Over the past year, the board held 16 official 
meetings plus several committee meetings during our searches for a new 
Executive Director and new board members.
 
-## Don't Let Facebook or Other Trackers Follow You on The Web ##
+In the coming year, we hope to continue to grow our board in number and in 
diversity. Like everyone involved with Tor, our Board of Directors all share a 
common commitment to internet freedom and human rights.
 
-In the early age of the internet, people enjoyed a high level of privacy. 
Webpages were just hypertext documents; almost no personalization of the user 
experience was offered (or forced). The web today has evolved into a system of 
surveillance capitalism, where advertising networks follow users while they 
browse the web, continuously collecting traces of personal data and surfing 
patterns to create profiles of users in order to target them.
+As we challenge major threats to internet freedom around the world, there is 
strength in numbers -- our numbers keep us strong as we challenge those 
threats. And our diversity gives us the understanding to fight with compassion.
 
-Using the web today, you are a target. And because of the rampant tracking 
across websites, each time you use the internet, you become an easier target.
+// Internet Freedom Is on the Line //
 
-By tracking you across different applications and sites through cookies or 
open web sessions, your personal preferences and social connections are 
collected and often sold. Even if you do not accept cookies or are not logged 
into a service account, such as your Google, Twitter, or Facebook accounts, the 
web page and third-party services can still try to profile you by using 
third-party HTTP requests or other techniques.
+The Tor Project believes that everyone should have private access to an 
uncensored web, but digital authoritarianism is on the rise. For the 8th year 
in a row, internet freedom has declined around the world, including in the 
United States.
 
-Within the HTTP request, various selectors can be included to communicate user 
preferences or particular features, in the form of URL variables. Personalized 
language or fonts settings, browser extensions, in-page keywords, battery 
charge and status, and more can be used to identify you by restricting the pool 
of possible candidates among all the visitors in a certain time frame, 
location, profile of interests. You can then be distinguished, or 
fingerprinted, across multiple devices or sessions and then the profile the 
tracker has on you is expanded.
+"Of the 65 countries assessed, 26 have been on an overall decline since June 
2017," reveals a new report by Freedom House: 
https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-net/freedom-net-2018
 
-By the sites and applications themselves, the story is spun to sound as if 
they’re doing you a favor: they say this collection allows them to customize 
your experience. You see ads more relevant to you, Facebook and others say.
+A huge factor in this decline is government censorship, a growing problem in 
many countries. Freedom to publish, share, and access information online is 
critical for a healthy society, yet governments and entities around the world 
are denying people this universal human right, and their tactics for doing so 
are becoming more advanced.
 
-Even if you think of an advertising network as a recommendation system, this 
same system is also influencing what you see. It’s changing your experience 
of the internet.
+In many countries around the world, people are only permitted to access 
state-sponsored news, where the stories always spin a nation's government and 
leadership in favorable lights.
 
-But at what cost is this customization? When confronted with transparency 
around what this “customization” takes, it “poisons” the ad. So of 
course these companies are pushing back against transparency, but we need to 
keep pushing them and doing what we can to prevent them from continuing to 
exploit us online.
+Internet controls in China have reached new extremes, and China is exporting 
its methods to other governments. China, Egypt, Iran, Venezuela, Ethiopia, 
Turkey, and a few other countries now block the Tor network.
 
-Learn about how Tor Browser can help: 
https://blog.torproject.org/dont-let-facebook-or-any-tracker-follow-you-web
-
-## Privacy International Protects Partners with Its Onion Address ##
-
-This guest post is written by Ed Geraghty, Technologist, Privacy International.
-
-> No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with [their] privacy, 
family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon [their] honour and 
reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such 
interference or attacks.
-> - United Nations Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) 1948, Article 12
-
-The right to privacy is a qualified, fundamental human right. We at Privacy 
International (PI) work hard with our network of partners to ensure this 
fundamental right is protected - it is essential to autonomy, the protection of 
human dignity, and is the foundation upon which many other human rights are 
built.
-
-This is becoming ever-more important in an age of ubiquitous, indiscriminate 
mass surveillance, especially as more and more aspects of our daily lives - 
interactions with friends, family, companies, and the state - are dependent 
upon technology. In order for individuals to fully participate in the modern 
world, developments in law and technologies must strengthen and not undermine 
the ability to freely enjoy this right.We challenge governments' powers by 
advocating and litigating for stronger protections. We lead research and 
investigations to shine a light on powers and capabilities, and to instigate 
and inform debate. We advocate for good practices and strong laws worldwide to 
protect people and their rights. We equip civil society organisations across 
the world to increase public awareness about privacy. We raise awareness about 
technologies and laws that place privacy at risk, to ensure that the public is 
informed and engaged.
-
-Tor is an important tool in our arsenal - a technology which allows people to 
communicate, use the internet, and browse the web in a manner which evades 
censorship.
-
-Many of our partners work in challenging environments, with massive state 
surveillance and/or ongoing censorship programmes. Giving them an ability to 
securely browse the web (both clear and onion) in a way which allows them to 
evade dragnet surveillance also allows them to conduct investigations securely.
-
-Find out what else running an onion address provides the Privacy International 
community: 
https://blog.torproject.org/privacy-international-protects-partners-its-onion-address
-
-## New Releases ##
-
-Tor 0.3.3.7
-This release backports several changes from the 0.3.4.x series, including 
fixes for bugs affecting compatibility and stability. Full changelog: 
https://blog.torproject.org/tor-0337-released
-
-Tor Browser 7.5.6
-This release features important security updates to Firefox, updates Firefox 
to 52.9.0esr, and includes newer versions of NoScript and HTTPS Everywhere. 
Moreover, we added the latest Tor stable version, 0.3.3.7. Full changelog: 
https://blog.torproject.org/tor-browser-756-released-
-
-## Upcoming Events with Tor ##
-
-HOPE. New York City, USA. July 20-22, 2018.
-https://hope.net/
-
-The 18th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium (PETS). Barcelona, Spain. 
July 24-27, 2018.
-https://petsymposium.org/2018/index.php
-
-Tor Community Night. Barcelona, Spain. July 24, 2018.
-https://blog.torproject.org/events/tor-community-night-barcelona
-
-Def Con. Las Vegas, USA. August 8-12, 2018.
-https://blog.torproject.org/events/roger-and-steph-and-others-def-con-las-vegas
 
 ## Join Our Community ##
 

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