David Olofsson: > There is always a risk of bugs and exploits in the code. Having a security > researcher study these gives us better knowledge of the current flaws and > how to correct them. If you truly trust the browsers current security this > should have no downside, otherwise it is the path to improving it. > > //Sidju
It wasn't obvious to me whether OP intends to give their analysis to the Tor Browser devs (seems ethical) or instead keep it for proprietary purposes (seems unethical). Can OP clarify on this point? Cheers, -- -Jeremy Rand Lead Application Engineer at Namecoin Mobile email: jeremyrandmob...@airmail.cc Mobile OpenPGP: 2158 0643 C13B B40F B0FD 5854 B007 A32D AB44 3D9C Send non-security-critical things to my Mobile with OpenPGP. Please don't send me unencrypted messages. My business email jer...@veclabs.net is having technical issues at the moment. -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk