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The Tor Project is looking for a Browser Hacker!

(Posted 22 Nov 2013)

Your job would be to work on the C++ patches to our Firefox-based browser, writing new APIs and altering functionality for privacy and security, and making improvements to our collection of Firefox and Thunderbird addons. This would be a contract position spanning 9-12 months, with the possibility of future continuation. You will also be working closely with our existing browser hackers, and with the new extension developer. If you also have extension developer experience, please feel free to apply to both positions.

All candidates must:

An ideal candidate would also:

Detailed job description:

Being a Tor Browser Hacker includes triaging, diagnosing, and fixing bugs; looking for and resolving web privacy issues; responding on short notice to security issues; and working collaboratively with coworkers and volunteers on implementing new features and web behavior changes.

We'd also need help making our code more maintainable, testable, and mergeable by upstream. Sometimes, we need to drop everything and scramble to implement last-minute fixes, or to deploy urgent security updates. You'd also be reviewing other people's code, designs, and academic research papers, and looking for ways to improve upon them.

For an even more detailed overview of the full breadth and depth of the work you'd be doing, have a look at The Design and Implementation of the Tor Browser, especially The Design Requirements section.

Other notes:

How to apply:

About the company:
The Tor Project is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to research, development, and education about online anonymity and privacy. The Tor network's 3000 volunteer relays carry 16 Gbps for upwards of half a million daily users, including ordinary citizens who want protection from identity theft and prying corporations, corporations who want to look at a competitor's website in private, people around the world whose Internet connections are censored, and even governments and law enforcement. Tor has a staff of 14 paid developers, researchers, and advocates, plus many dozen volunteers who help out on a daily basis. Tor is funded in part by government research and development grants, and in part by individual and corporate donations.

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