67 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
67 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
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# Webmasters: Please, Don't Block Tor
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[Tor][] is a privacy and anonymity tool that [helps users to defend
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themselves][tor-about] against traffic analysis online.
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Some people, like me, use it as an important tool to help defend against
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[various online threats to privacy][sapsf].
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[Others use it][tor-users] to avoid censorship,
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perhaps by the country in which they live.
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Others use it because their lives depend on it---they
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may live under an oppressive regime that forbids access to certain
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information or means of communication.
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[Tor]: https://www.torproject.org/
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[tor-about]: https://www.torproject.org/about/overview.html.en#whyweneedtor
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[tor-users]: https://www.torproject.org/about/torusers.html.en
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[sapsf]: /talks/sapsf
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Unfortunately, some people also hide behind Tor to do bad things,
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like attack websites or commit fraud.
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Because of this,
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many website owners and network administrators see Tor as a security threat,
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and choose to block Tor users from accessing their website.
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<!-- more -->
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But in doing so,
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you aren't just keeping out some of the malicious users:
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you're also keeping out those who [use Tor for important, legitimate
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reasons][tor-users].
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Malicious users have other means to achieve anonymity and often have the
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skill and understanding to do so.
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But average Tor users aren't necessarily technology experts,
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and certainly don't have the extra (often maliciously-acquired) resources
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that bad actors do,
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so they are disprortionally affected by blocks.
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A particularly unsettling problem I often encounter is that a website will
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outright prohibit access by Tor users _even on read-only resources like
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articles or information_.
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I've even seen this on informational resources on United States Government
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domains!
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Blocking access to interactive website features---like
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posting comments or making purchases---can
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be understandable,
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or maybe even necessary sometimes.
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For example,
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Wikipedia prohibits page edits over Tor.
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But Wikipedia _does not block reading_ over Tor.
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If you are considering threats that may mask themselves behind Tor and you
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are running a blog, news site, or other informational resource,
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please, consider how your actions [may affect innocent
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users][tor-users].
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Allow users to read over Tor,
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even if you decide to prohibit them from interacting.
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For users of Tor who do find themselves stuck from time to time:
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I will often prepend `https://web.achive.org/` to the URL of a page that
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is blocked,
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which allows me to view the page in the Internet Archive's [Wayback
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Machine][].
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For example,
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to view my website in the Wayback Machine,
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you'd visit `https://web.archive.org/https://mikegerwitz.com/`.
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[Wayback Machine]: https://web.archive.org/
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