Outreach Roadmap Scenarios¶
- Version: v2023.Q2
About¶
This document outlines the outreach strategy for Onion Services adoption and usage.
Improve online guides on Onion Service deployment (on community portal)¶
- Here: https://community.torproject.org/onion-services/setup/
- Currently we have the following guide on the community portal which lays out steps for deploying Onion Services: https://community.torproject.org/onion-services/setup/
- We also guide people who wish to "onionize" their website to Alec Muffet's EOTK repository on GitHub.
- We need to review and improve the first guide to ensure it's comprehensive and easy to follow.
- This guide is also only available in English, Russian, and Turkish. There's an opportunity to invest in localization.
Highlight benefits of Onion Services (on community portal)¶
- Here: https://community.torproject.org/onion-services/talk/
- Above page needs to be elaborated to highlight all arguments for promoting Onion Services.
- Tor is useful especially in places where it is banned / more difficult to use.
- Onion Services as a mean to push content online, not just access.
Publish training resources (on community portal)¶
- Here: https://community.torproject.org/training/resources/
- We already published one general training resource introducing Onion Services very broadly.
- We aim to build more resources to support training for those wishing to deploy Onion Services, as well as those who're maintaining them.
- We also need to cater to user groups of Onion Services, highlighting the benefits of Onion Services for different contexts.
Deliver training and broaden onion support¶
- Supporting media organizations with deploying Onion Services.
- Build conversations with organizations that are already expressing a need for secure and private browsing and information sharing alternatives.
- Training about Tor and Onion Services (high level understanding).
- Work to communicate the benefits of Onion Services and frame these benefits based on the specific audience needs.
- The training resources should be accompanied by on-demand training sessions (or awareness sessions).
- Sessions should be made available for both service operators and users of Onion Services.
- Make it known that we provide onion support: anyone from civil society who wishes to deploy an onion service or onionize their website can reach out.
- We need to ask ourselves: how can Onion Services be useful and relevant in different contexts.
- Offering an user an onion service address is protecting them.
Run campaigns¶
- Onion/Tor = Web 4.
- Brainstorm campaigns around Onion Services, similar to how
#MoreOnionsPorFavor
which encouraged the adoption of Onion-Location. - Reaching out to groups and organizations that we believe can benefit from deploying Onion Services.
- But all this depends on what the future (near or far) of Onion Services will look like: will Onion Services become a norm (e.g. how the web has moved to HTTPS) or mainly reserved for specific use cases (e.g. whistleblowing, file sharing)?
- Online campaigns talking about onions, their features.
- A shift in the discourse: gathering arguments for promoting the technology: anonymity is only one of many interesting Onion Service properties.
- Onion Services 20th Anniversary Campaign? We could think about some "anniversary media campaign" along the year, considering things happening like PoW protection, ACME for Onions etc.
- Changing the narrative around Onion Services going beyond anonymity (e.g. less hijackable / tamperable).
- The more Human Rights organizations adopting, the easier is shifting the discourse to the "good" stuff.
Resources¶
- There's a generic training resource to introduce onion services to human rights and media organizations.
- Idea to have printables for offline trainings.
- Street team kit.
Existing discussions¶
This section contain references on some existing research to improve Onion Services adoption from the outreach perspective.