For those interested, I'll point to the tor-talk thread:
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2013-August/thread.html#29331

This does seem very focused on bypassing censorship - not providing
anonymity.  The tiny FAQ at the bottom:
"While it uses Tor network, which is designed for anonymous surfing,
this browser is intended just to circumvent censorship — to remove
limits on accessing websites your government doesn't want you to know
about. "

Some other random stats for the curious.

Tor v0.2.3.25 (git-17c24b3118224d65)
Vidalia 0.2.21 (QT 4.8.1)

# Configured for speed
ExcludeSingleHopRelays 0
EnforceDistinctSubnets 0
AllowSingleHopCircuits 1

# Exclude countries that might have blocks
ExcludeExitNodes {dk},{ie},{gb},{nl},{be},{it},{cn},{ir},{fi},{no}

#Selected user prefs
user_pref("browser.startup.homepage", "http://6kkgg7nth3sbuuwd.onion";);
user_pref("general.useragent.override", "PB0.6b Mozilla/5.0 (Windows
NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0");

-tom
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