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index.wml
make it clearer that a tor gui entry does not *need* to use the controller protocol.
Roger Dingledine
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at 2006-05-11 06:30:01
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## translation metadata # Revision: $Revision$ #include "head.wmi" TITLE="GUI Competition" <div class="main-column"> <!-- LEFT HAND MENU FOR GUI CONTEST PAGES --> <div class="guileft"> <div class="guimenu"> <div class="curveleft"> <div class="curveright"> </div> </div> <div class="guimenuinner"> <h1>Tor GUI Competition</h1> <a class="on" href="index.html">Overview & Goals</a> <a href="categories.html">What to Submit</a> <a href="submit.html">How to Submit</a> <a href="criteria.html">Judging & Timeline</a> <a href="technotes.html">Technical Notes</a> <a href="legal.html">Licensing</a> <h1> </h1> <a class="wiki" href="http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/ContestFAQ">Wiki/FAQ</a> </div> <div class="curvebottomleft"> <div class="curvebottomright"> </div> </div> </div> </div> <h2>News:</h2> <p> Apr 2006: Phase two is now underway — developing actual interfaces for Tor. It's open to all who want to participate. We've set the new deadline to May 31 2006. </p> <p> Feb 2006: The <a href="http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/ContestEntries">first design phase</a> is over, and we have two winners. The <a href="http://cups.cs.cmu.edu/pubs/TorGUIContest113005.pdf">CMU Usable Privacy and Security Laboratory</a> won "Best Overall," and <a href="http://www.april3rd.com/tor/">the April3rd team</a> won "Most Aesthetically Pleasing." Feel free to use their ideas if you like them.</p> <p> Dec 2005: We're excited to have just added <a href="criteria.html">Edward Tufte and Bruce Schneier</a> to our already impressive list of judges. And don't forget the free <a href="http://tor.eff.org/tshirt.html">Tor T-shirt</a> for every submission! </p> <h2>Tor: GUI Competition Overview</h2> <p> Tor is a decentralized network of computers on the Internet that increases privacy in Web browsing, instant messaging, and other applications. We estimate there are some 200,000 Tor users currently, routing their traffic through about 500 volunteer Tor servers on six continents. However, Tor's current user interface approach — running as a service in the background — does a poor job of communicating network status and security levels to the user. </p> <p> The Tor project, affiliated with the <a href="http://www.eff.org/">Electronic Frontier Foundation</a>, is running a <b>GUI competition</b> to develop a vision of how Tor can work in a user's everyday anonymous browsing experience. Some of the challenges include how to make alerts and error conditions visible on screen; how to let the user configure Tor to use or avoid certain routes or nodes; how to learn about the current state of a Tor connection, including which servers it uses; and how to find out whether (and which) applications are using Tor safely. </p> <br /> <h2>Goals</h2> <p>Submitters for phase two will produce a work of <a href="http://www.opensource.org/">Open Source Software</a> that will provide a user interface to the Tor system, perhaps by way of the <a href="/cvs/control/doc/howto.txt">Tor Controller Protocol</a>.</p> <p>We are looking for a vision of how Tor can work in a user's everyday anonymous browsing experience.</p> <p>Entries may:</p> <ul> <li>Allow the user to fully configure Tor rather than manually searching for and opening text files.</li> <li>Let users learn about the current state of their Tor connection (for example, how well the current Tor connection is working), and configure or find out whether any of their applications are using it.</li> <li>Make alerts and error conditions visible to the user.</li> <li>Run on at least one of Windows, Linux, and OS X, on a not-unusually-configured consumer-level machine.</li> </ul> <p>Other ideas include:</p> <ul> <li>Provide detailed information about which applications, ports, or packets are (or are not!) passing through Tor, including accounting for both Tor- and non-Tor traffic.</li> <li>Provide additional statistics about the Tor connection.</li> <li>Give users more control over how their Tor behaves at certain times of day or in other contexts (like operating as a server).</li> </ul> <p>More examples of useful features include:</p> <ul> <li>How much bandwidth is Tor using? How does this compare to the overall network traffic to/from the computer?</li> <li>Is there network traffic from ports or applications that the user intended to be anonymized?</li> <li>What Tor servers does the user know about on the network? Where are they? How available are they?</li> <li>An interface for displaying or controlling Tor paths: "show me the network from Africa by way of Asia". Think of the global satellite map from the movie <i>Sneakers</i>.</li> <li>Configure other running applications to use Tor (for example, by modifying or working through the network stack, and/or by altering application configurations).</li> <li>Provide an elegant installer for Tor, your GUI submission, and other supporting applications.</li> <li>Make your GUI manage the Tor process and other supporting applications -- start them, stop them, realize when they've died.</li> <li>Provide meaningful defaults for a good Tor experience.</li> <li>Provide application-level anonymity -- that is, not just paying attention to transport anonymity on the level of Tor, but also paying attention to the anonymity of the http headers, cookies, etc.</li> <li>Let the user specify different Tor config option sets depending on time of day (e.g. daytime vs. nighttime).</li> <li>Provide useful controller functions for Tor servers too -- for example, walk the user through recommended bandwidth configurations and exit policies.</li> <li>Have a "minimized view" of your GUI for common use, and then a more detailed view or set of windows when the user wants more detail.</li> <li>Provide a button or some automatically updating interface to let the user learn whether Tor is working currently, perhaps by accessing an external what's-my-IP site and seeing if it thinks you're a Tor server; and give useful messages and recommendations if it doesn't seem to be working.</li> <li>Provide a way to automatically configure local firewalls (ipchains, Windows firewalls, etc) to let Tor traffic out (and in, for Tor servers). As a bonus, configure it to prevent non-Tor traffic from leaving (and notify when it tries).</li> </ul> <p>We're interested to see submissions that don't achieve all of the above goals -- if it's useful to Tor or Tor users in any way, please submit it!</p> </div><!-- #main --> #include <foot.wmi>