On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 07:24:58PM +0600, Roman Mamedov wrote: > On Tue, 18 Jun 2013 14:36:50 +0200 > Eugen Leitl <eu...@leitl.org> wrote: > > > Why not FB or G+, or whatever. > > Well for one, because it will be kind of hilarious when you won't be able > to use the Tor forum/group/circle/whatever _via Tor_.
The presumed case is whether a Tor user has a problem, which likely means she can't can't use Tor, so you'll need a legacy channel for support. Forums aren't all that bad for support, as more advanced users will support less advanced ones thus easing your support load. But you still need at least a few clueful parties who constantly monitor the forum and prime the pump by providing high-quality answers. I've personally used forums to look for support, but I almost never give support there due to too high friction. Hundreds of tabs, unlike email where everything is serialized, forcing you to deal with it. > Google already does hassle Tor users with their constant captchas in the > search engine, I would not be too surprised if those centralized social > networks that you mentioned will soon ban all connections from Tor (if they > already didn't). _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list tor-talk@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk