[or-cvs] r19805: {website} hey look, now that i simplified, i noticed it was redundant (website/trunk/docs/en)
arma at seul.org
arma at seul.org
Wed Jun 24 03:28:45 UTC 2009
Author: arma
Date: 2009-06-23 23:28:45 -0400 (Tue, 23 Jun 2009)
New Revision: 19805
Modified:
website/trunk/docs/en/tor-doc-relay.wml
Log:
hey look, now that i simplified, i noticed it was redundant
Modified: website/trunk/docs/en/tor-doc-relay.wml
===================================================================
--- website/trunk/docs/en/tor-doc-relay.wml 2009-06-24 03:17:35 UTC (rev 19804)
+++ website/trunk/docs/en/tor-doc-relay.wml 2009-06-24 03:28:45 UTC (rev 19805)
@@ -29,9 +29,10 @@
people who run relays, the faster the Tor network will be. If you have
at least 20 kilobytes/s each way, please help out Tor by configuring your
Tor to be a relay too. We have many features that make Tor relays easy
-and convenient, including rate limiting for bandwidth, exit policies so
-you can limit your exposure to abuse complaints, and support for dynamic
-IP addresses.</p>
+and convenient, including <a href="<page faq>#RelayFlexible">rate limiting
+for bandwidth, exit policies so you can limit your exposure to abuse
+complaints, and support for dynamic IP addresses</a>.
+</p>
<p>Having relays in many different places on the Internet is what
makes Tor users secure. <a
@@ -40,10 +41,6 @@
since remote sites can't know whether connections originated at your
computer or were relayed from others.</p>
-<p>Setting up a Tor relay is easy and convenient: <a href="<page
-faq>#RelayFlexible">Tor supports rate limiting, will guess its own IP
-address, doesn't need to run 24/7, etc.</a>
-</p>
<p>You can run a Tor relay on
pretty much any operating system, but see <a
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