commit b52b3170393186d1298b9f4ef20e5605ae7c038e
Author: gus <[email protected]>
Date: Tue Sep 3 11:06:18 2019 -0400
Add missing old FAQ link and oftc.net link
---
.../tor-relay-universities/contents.lr | 19 ++++++-------------
1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
diff --git
a/content/relay-operations/community-resources/tor-relay-universities/contents.lr
b/content/relay-operations/community-resources/tor-relay-universities/contents.lr
index 913f0ce..a3640bd 100644
---
a/content/relay-operations/community-resources/tor-relay-universities/contents.lr
+++
b/content/relay-operations/community-resources/tor-relay-universities/contents.lr
@@ -24,8 +24,8 @@ Of course, you need to understand that without actual clear
precedent (and even
In any case, the key here is to become familiar with the laws and their
implications and uncertainties.
* Third, learn about Tor's design.
-Read the [design overview](https://2019.www.torproject.org/overview.html), the
[design
paper](https://www.torproject.org/svn/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.html),
and the [FAQ](FIXME).
-Hang out on IRC (irc.oftc.net - #tor-relays) for a while and learn more.
+Read the [design overview](https://2019.www.torproject.org/overview.html), the
[design
paper](https://www.torproject.org/svn/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.html),
and the [FAQ](https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/faq.html.en).
+Hang out on IRC ([irc.oftc.net](https://www.oftc.net) - #tor-relays) for a
while and learn more.
If possible, attend a talk by one of the Tor developers.
Learn about the types of people and organizations who need secure
communications on the Internet.
Practice explaining Tor and its benefits and consequences to friends and
neighbors -- the [abuse FAQ](https://2019.www.torproject.org/faq-abuse) may
provide some helpful starting points.
@@ -64,20 +64,13 @@ You might let them know that there are ways you can dial
down the potential for
You'll also want to learn if there are bandwidth limitations at your
organization.
(Tor can handle a variety of rate limiting approaches, so this isn't the end
of the world).
-In some cases, you should talk to the network security people before you talk
to the lawyers; in some cases, there will be yet other groups that will be
critical to educate and bring into the discussion.
-You'll have to make it up as you go.
+In some cases, you should talk to the network security people before you talk
to the lawyers; in some cases, there will be yet other groups that will be
critical to educate and bring into the discussion. You'll have to make it up as
you go.
If the authorities contact your university for logs, be pleasant and helpful.
Tor's default log level doesn't provide much that's useful, so if they want
copies of your logs, that's fine.
-Be helpful and take the opportunity to explain to them about Tor and why it's
useful to the world.
-(If they contact you directly for logs, you should send them to
-your university's lawyers -- acting on it yourself is [almost always a poor
idea](/relay/community-resources/eff-tor-legal-faq/).
-
-If there are too many complaints coming in, there are several approaches you
can take to reduce them.
-First, you should follow the tips in the [Tor relay
documentation](https://community.torproject.org/relay), such
-as picking a descriptive hostname or getting your own IP address.
-If that doesn't work, you can scale back the advertised speed of your relay,
by using the Max``Advertised``Bandwidth to attract less traffic from the Tor
network.
-Lastly, you can scale back your exit policy.
+Be helpful and take the opportunity to explain to them about Tor and why it's
useful to the world. (If they contact you directly for logs, you should send
them to your university's lawyers -- acting on it yourself is [almost always a
poor idea](/relay/community-resources/eff-tor-legal-faq/).
+
+If there are too many complaints coming in, there are several approaches you
can take to reduce them. First, you should follow the tips in the [Tor relay
documentation](https://community.torproject.org/relay), such as picking a
descriptive hostname or getting your own IP address. If that doesn't work, you
can scale back the advertised speed of your relay, by using the
`MaxAdvertisedBandwidth` to attract less traffic from the Tor network. Lastly,
you can scale back your exit policy.
Some people have found that their university only tolerates their Tor relay if
they're involved in a research project around anonymity.
So if you're interested, you might want to get that started early in the
process -- see our [Research Portal](https://research.torproject.org/).
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