[or-cvs] r15932: explain the dkim stuff better (website/trunk/en)
arma at seul.org
arma at seul.org
Tue Jul 15 08:27:28 UTC 2008
Author: arma
Date: 2008-07-15 04:27:28 -0400 (Tue, 15 Jul 2008)
New Revision: 15932
Modified:
website/trunk/en/finding-tor.wml
Log:
explain the dkim stuff better
Modified: website/trunk/en/finding-tor.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/en/finding-tor.wml 2008-07-15 07:56:46 UTC (rev 15931)
+++ website/trunk/en/finding-tor.wml 2008-07-15 08:27:28 UTC (rev 15932)
@@ -49,21 +49,24 @@
<h2>Fetching Tor via email: gettor</h2>
<hr />
<p>
-It is possible to get a copy of Tor by sending an email to a special email
-address: '<tt>gettor AT torproject.org</tt>'. This email system is a gateway
-that allows anyone who can send email to get a copy of Tor. Currently, we only
-support mail systems that we know
-don't mind large email attachments. Gmail and Yahoo! mail are two such mail
-services that are known to work. This is useful for users who can send email
-but have no other direct method of downloading Tor. Any such email provider
-must implement the <a href="http://www.dkim.org/">DKIM</a> email standard. A
-user only needs to send us a request with 'help' in the body of the email.
-Instructions will be
-sent as a reply. An email with the requested package will be sent shortly.
-If the email is not sent from a supported provider, we will reply once before
-blocking the email address for a twenty four hour period.
+It is possible to get a copy of Tor by sending an email to a special
+email address: '<tt>gettor AT torproject.org</tt>'. Now anyone who can
+send email can get a copy of Tor. Currently, we only support mail systems
+that we know don't mind large email attachments. Gmail and Yahoo! mail are
+two such mail services that are known to work. A user only needs to send
+us a request with 'help' in the body of the email, and instructions will be
+sent as a reply.
</p>
+<p>
+To avoid spamming people accidentally, we only answer emails that are sent
+from email services that support <a href="http://www.dkim.org/">DKIM</a>,
+which is an email feature that lets us verify that the sender in the
+"From" line is actually the one who sent the mail. If we get an email from
+a service that doesn't use DKIM, we'll send a short note and then ignore
+the email address for the next day or so.
+</p>
+
<h2>Fetching Tor via IRC: gettor</h2>
<hr />
<p>
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