{"id":9,"date":"2026-04-06T21:27:07","date_gmt":"2026-04-06T21:27:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/faq\/"},"modified":"2026-05-21T04:08:15","modified_gmt":"2026-05-21T02:08:15","slug":"faq","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/faq\/","title":{"rendered":"FAQ"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<style>\n.op-page * { margin: 0; padding: 0; box-sizing: border-box; }\n.op-page {\n    background-color: #C0C0C0;\n    color: #000;\n    font-family: 'Courier New', Courier, monospace;\n    font-size: 16px;\n    line-height: 1.6;\n}\n.op-header {\n    background: linear-gradient(135deg, #B896D6 0%, #7B5FA3 100%);\n    color: #fff;\n    border-bottom: 5px solid #000;\n    padding: 30px 20px;\n    text-align: center;\n    box-shadow: 0 5px 0 #FFB3D9;\n}\n.op-logo-row {\n    display: flex;\n    align-items: center;\n    justify-content: center;\n    gap: 20px;\n    margin-bottom: 15px;\n}\n.op-tagline {\n    font-family: 'Courier New', Courier, monospace;\n    font-size: 16px;\n    color: #fff;\n    text-shadow: 2px 2px 0px #000;\n    font-weight: bold;\n}\n.op-nav {\n    background: #000;\n    padding: 15px;\n    text-align: center;\n    border-bottom: 3px solid #B896D6;\n    box-shadow: 0 3px 0 #FFB3D9;\n}\n.op-nav a {\n    color: #E8D9C5;\n    text-decoration: none;\n    padding: 10px 15px;\n    display: inline-block;\n    border: 2px solid transparent;\n    font-weight: bold;\n    text-transform: uppercase;\n    font-size: 14px;\n    font-family: 'Courier New', monospace;\n}\n.op-nav a:hover, .op-nav a.active {\n    background: #7B5FA3;\n    color: #fff;\n    border: 2px solid #FFA500;\n}\n.op-faq-layout {\n    max-width: 1200px;\n    margin: 0 auto;\n    padding: 20px;\n    display: flex;\n    gap: 30px;\n}\n.op-faq-sidebar {\n    width: 240px;\n    flex-shrink: 0;\n    position: sticky;\n    top: 20px;\n    align-self: flex-start;\n    max-height: calc(100vh - 40px);\n    overflow-y: auto;\n}\n.op-faq-sidebar ul {\n    list-style: none;\n    border: 3px solid #000;\n    background: #fff;\n    box-shadow: 5px 5px 0px rgba(0,0,0,0.2);\n    padding: 15px;\n}\n.op-faq-sidebar li {\n    margin: 8px 0;\n}\n.op-faq-sidebar a {\n    color: #7B5FA3;\n    text-decoration: none;\n    font-size: 13px;\n    font-family: 'Courier New', monospace;\n    font-weight: bold;\n    line-height: 1.4;\n    display: block;\n}\n.op-faq-sidebar a:hover {\n    color: #FFA500;\n}\n.op-container {\n    max-width: 900px;\n    flex: 1;\n    min-width: 0;\n    padding: 20px;\n}\n.op-page-title {\n    font-family: Impact, 'Arial Black', sans-serif;\n    font-size: 36px;\n    color: #7B5FA3;\n    text-transform: uppercase;\n    margin: 30px 0 20px 0;\n    text-align: center;\n}\n.op-faq-item {\n    border: 3px solid #000;\n    background: #fff;\n    margin: 20px 0;\n    box-shadow: 5px 5px 0px rgba(0,0,0,0.2);\n}\n.op-faq-q {\n    font-family: Impact, 'Arial Black', sans-serif;\n    font-size: 18px;\n    color: #fff;\n    background: #7B5FA3;\n    padding: 15px 20px;\n    text-transform: uppercase;\n}\n.op-faq-a {\n    padding: 20px;\n    font-size: 15px;\n    line-height: 1.8;\n}\n.op-faq-a a {\n    color: #7B5FA3;\n    font-weight: bold;\n}\n.op-footer {\n    background: #000;\n    color: #E8D9C5;\n    border-top: 5px solid #B896D6;\n    padding: 40px 20px;\n    text-align: center;\n    font-family: 'Courier New', Courier, monospace;\n    font-size: 14px;\n    margin-top: 60px;\n}\n.op-footer a { color: #FFA500; text-decoration: underline; }\n.op-footer a:hover { color: #FFB3D9; }\n\n@media (max-width: 960px) {\n    .op-faq-sidebar { display: none; }\n    .op-faq-layout { max-width: 900px; }\n}\n@media (max-width: 768px) {\n    .op-logo-row { flex-direction: column; gap: 10px; }\n}\n<\/style>\n\n<div class=\"op-page\">\n\n<div class=\"op-header\">\n    <div class=\"op-logo-row\">\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/construction.gif\" alt=\"Under Construction\" width=\"77\" height=\"107\" style=\"image-rendering: pixelated;\">\n        <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/logo.png\" alt=\"OnionPress\" style=\"max-width: 280px; width: 100%; height: auto; filter: drop-shadow(5px 5px 0px rgba(0,0,0,0.3));\">\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/construction.gif\" alt=\"Under Construction\" width=\"77\" height=\"107\" style=\"image-rendering: pixelated;\">\n    <\/div>\n    <div class=\"op-tagline\">Your Decentralized Social Blog Site<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"op-nav\">\n    <a href=\"\/onionhome\/\">Home<\/a>\n    <a href=\"\/onionhome\/faq\/\" class=\"active\">FAQ<\/a>\n    <a href=\"\/onionhome\/about\/\">About<\/a>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"op-faq-layout\">\n<div class=\"op-faq-sidebar\">\n    <ul>\n        <li><a href=\"#what-is-onionpress\">What is OnionPress?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#what-is-tor\">What is Tor?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#is-it-safe\">Is it safe?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#do-i-need-to-be-technical\">Do I need to be technical?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#install-linux\">How do I install on Linux?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#system-requirements\">System requirements<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#who-can-see-my-site\">Who can see my site?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#computer-off\">When my computer is off?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#move-site\">Move to a different computer?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#cost\">Does it cost anything?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#onion-address\">What&#8217;s a .onion address?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#own-domain\">Use my own domain name?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#hosting-this-site\">Is OnionPress hosting this site?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#onionheaven\">What is OnionHeaven?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#multisite\">Multiple users on one machine?<\/a><\/li>\n        <li><a href=\"#mac-multi-user\">Multiple Mac users?<\/a><\/li>\n            <li><a href=\"#import-tweets\">Preserve my tweets?<\/a><\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"op-container\">\n    <div class=\"op-page-title\">Frequently Asked Questions<\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"what-is-onionpress\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What is OnionPress?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            OnionPress turns your Mac or Linux computer into a web server running WordPress, accessible via the Tor network. Your site gets its own permanent .onion address that no one can take away from you. It&#8217;s backed up automatically by the Internet Archive&#8217;s Wayback Machine.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"what-is-tor\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What is Tor?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Tor is a privacy network used by millions of people worldwide. It encrypts your traffic and routes it through multiple relays so no one can trace it back to you. OnionPress uses Tor&#8217;s &#8220;onion service&#8221; feature to make your blog reachable without exposing your IP address or location. Learn more at <a href=\"https:\/\/www.torproject.org\/\">torproject.org<\/a>.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"is-it-safe\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Is it safe?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes. OnionPress runs inside isolated Docker containers on your computer. Your site&#8217;s private key is generated locally and never leaves your machine. Database passwords are randomly generated per install. The Tor network protects your IP address from being discovered. All containers are sandboxed with minimal access to your files.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"do-i-need-to-be-technical\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Do I need to be technical?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            No. OnionPress installs like any Mac app &#8212; download the DMG, drag to Applications, and launch. There are a few security prompts to work through on first launch (macOS wants to make sure you trust the app), but we guide you step-by-step. After that, you&#8217;re writing in WordPress, which is the same interface used by 40% of the web.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"install-linux\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">How do I install OnionPress on Linux?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Open a terminal and paste:\n            <div id=\"op-install-curl\" data-op-copy=\"1\" style=\"background:#1a1a2e; border:2px solid #333; padding:15px 20px; margin:15px 0; font-family:Courier New,monospace; font-size:14px; color:#43e97b; border-radius:4px; word-break:break-all; cursor:pointer;\"><div class=\"op-copy-hint\" style=\"font-size:11px; color:#888; margin-bottom:8px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; user-select:none;\">\ud83d\udccb click to copy<\/div>curl -sSL https:\/\/raw.githubusercontent.com\/brewsterkahle\/onionpress\/main\/linux\/install.sh | bash<\/div>\n            Works on Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, Arch, and Raspberry Pi OS. After install, manage your site with:\n            <br><br>\n            <code style=\"background:#eee;border:1px solid #ccc;padding:2px 6px;font-family:Courier New,monospace;font-size:13px;\">onionpress status<\/code> &#45;&#45; check if it is running<br>\n            <code style=\"background:#eee;border:1px solid #ccc;padding:2px 6px;font-family:Courier New,monospace;font-size:13px;\">onionpress address<\/code> &#45;&#45; show your .onion address<br>\n            <code style=\"background:#eee;border:1px solid #ccc;padding:2px 6px;font-family:Courier New,monospace;font-size:13px;\">onionpress logs<\/code> &#45;&#45; stream container logs<br>\n            <code style=\"background:#eee;border:1px solid #ccc;padding:2px 6px;font-family:Courier New,monospace;font-size:13px;\">systemctl --user restart onionpress<\/code> &#45;&#45; restart<br>\n            <br>\n            <strong>Prefer a .deb package?<\/strong> Download from <a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/brewsterkahle\/onionpress\/releases\/latest\">GitHub Releases<\/a>, then open a terminal in your Downloads folder and run:\n            <div id=\"op-install-deb\" data-op-copy=\"1\" style=\"background:#1a1a2e; border:2px solid #333; padding:15px 20px; margin:15px 0; font-family:Courier New,monospace; font-size:14px; color:#43e97b; border-radius:4px; word-break:break-all; cursor:pointer;\"><div class=\"op-copy-hint\" style=\"font-size:11px; color:#888; margin-bottom:8px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; user-select:none;\">\ud83d\udccb click to copy<\/div>sudo apt install .\/onionpress_*.deb<\/div>\n            <script>\n(function(){\n  document.addEventListener(\"click\", function(e){\n    var el = e.target;\n    while (el && el !== document.body && !(el.hasAttribute && el.hasAttribute(\"data-op-copy\"))) {\n      el = el.parentElement;\n    }\n    if (!el || el === document.body) return;\n    \/\/ Copy just the command text \u2014 exclude the hint child.\n    var hint = el.querySelector(\".op-copy-hint\");\n    var text = el.innerText;\n    if (hint) text = text.replace(hint.innerText, \"\");\n    text = text.trim();\n    try { navigator.clipboard.writeText(text); } catch(_) {}\n    el.style.borderColor = \"#43e97b\";\n    if (hint) {\n      var orig = hint.textContent;\n      hint.textContent = \"\\u2713 Copied!\";\n      setTimeout(function(){ hint.textContent = orig; }, 1500);\n    }\n  });\n})();\n<\/script>\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"system-requirements\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What are the system requirements?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            <strong>Mac:<\/strong> macOS 13 (Ventura) or later, Apple Silicon or Intel, 4 GB RAM, 2 GB free disk space.<br>\n            <strong>Linux:<\/strong> Docker and Docker Compose installed. Any modern x86_64 or ARM64 distribution.<br>\n            No special network configuration needed &#8212; Tor works through firewalls, NATs, and campus Wi-Fi.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"who-can-see-my-site\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Who can see my site?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Anyone with a Tor-enabled browser: Tor Browser (Windows\/Mac\/Linux), Brave Browser (has built-in Tor), Onion Browser (iPhone\/iPad), or Tor Browser for Android. You share your .onion address with whoever you want. When you&#8217;re offline, the Wayback Machine serves an archived copy.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"computer-off\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What happens when my computer is off?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Your site is automatically archived by the Internet Archive&#8217;s Wayback Machine. When your computer is off or asleep, visitors are redirected to the archived version. When you come back online, they see the live version again. Your site is always available.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"move-site\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Can I move my site to a different computer?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes. OnionPress includes backup and restore. Your .onion address (private key) travels with your backup, so your address stays the same on the new machine.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"cost\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Does it cost anything?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            No. OnionPress is free and open source (AGPL 3). No hosting fees, no subscriptions, no ads. You run it on your own computer, so there are no ongoing costs. The Tor network and Wayback Machine archiving are free public services.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"onion-address\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What&#8217;s a .onion address?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            A .onion address is a permanent address on the Tor network, like <code>abc123...xyz.onion<\/code>. It&#8217;s generated from a cryptographic key that only you have. No domain registrar, no DNS, no one can take it from you or redirect it. It&#8217;s your address for as long as you want it.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n<div id=\"own-domain\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Can I use my own domain name instead?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes! You can make your OnionPress site reachable at a regular domain like <code>www.example.com<\/code> using a free Cloudflare Tunnel. Your .onion address keeps working too.\n\n            <div style=\"border:3px solid #FFA500; background:#FFF3CD; padding:15px; margin:15px 0;\">\n                <strong style=\"color:#856404;\">Privacy Note:<\/strong> Your .onion address keeps your server location hidden.\n                A clearnet domain with Cloudflare Tunnel reveals your Mac&#8217;s IP address to Cloudflare.\n            <\/div>\n\n            <strong>What you need:<\/strong> OnionPress running, a domain name, and a free <a href=\"https:\/\/dash.cloudflare.com\/sign-up\">Cloudflare account<\/a>.\n\n            <br><br><strong>Step 1: Add your domain to Cloudflare<\/strong><br>\n            Log in to <a href=\"https:\/\/dash.cloudflare.com\/\">dash.cloudflare.com<\/a>, click <strong>Add a site<\/strong>, enter your domain, select the <strong>Free<\/strong> plan. Cloudflare will give you two nameservers \u2014 update them at your domain registrar.\n\n            <br><br><strong>Step 2: Create a tunnel<\/strong><br>\n            In Cloudflare, go to <strong>Zero Trust &rarr; Networks &rarr; Tunnels<\/strong>. Click <strong>Create a tunnel<\/strong>, choose <strong>Cloudflared<\/strong>, name it (e.g. <code>onionpress<\/code>).\n\n            <br><br><strong>Step 3: Copy the tunnel token<\/strong><br>\n            Cloudflare shows a command like <code>cloudflared service install eyJhIGxvbmcg...<\/code>. Copy just the long token string at the end.\n\n            <div style=\"border:3px solid #FFA500; background:#FFF3CD; padding:15px; margin:15px 0;\">\n                <strong style=\"color:#856404;\">Do NOT run that install command on your Mac.<\/strong>\n                OnionPress runs cloudflared automatically inside Docker. Installing it on your Mac creates a second connector that causes intermittent 502 errors. Just copy the token.\n            <\/div>\n\n            <strong>Step 4: Set the public hostname<\/strong><br>\n            In the tunnel setup, click <strong>Public Hostname &rarr; Add a public hostname<\/strong>. Set your domain, and under <strong>Service<\/strong> set Type: <code>HTTP<\/code>, URL: <code>wordpress:80<\/code>. (This works because the tunnel agent runs inside Docker alongside WordPress.)\n\n            <br><br><strong>Step 5: Paste the token in OnionPress<\/strong><br>\n            Click the OnionPress icon in your menu bar &rarr; <strong>Settings<\/strong> &rarr; paste your token into the <strong>Cloudflare Token<\/strong> field &rarr; <strong>Save<\/strong>. OnionPress restarts and your site is live at your domain with HTTPS.\n\n            <br><br><strong>Cost:<\/strong> Cloudflare Tunnel and DNS are free. You only pay for the domain name (~$10-15\/year).<br>\n            <strong>When your Mac is off:<\/strong> The clearnet domain shows a Cloudflare error, but your .onion address falls back to the Wayback Machine as usual.<br>\n            <strong>To remove:<\/strong> Clear the token in OnionPress Settings and restart. Your site goes back to .onion-only.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"hosting-this-site\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Is OnionPress hosting this website?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes! This site is running on OnionPress on a Mac mini. It&#8217;s the same software you download &mdash; nothing special, no extra servers. What you&#8217;re reading right now is a WordPress blog served over a Tor onion service, backed up by the Wayback Machine, just like yours would be.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"onionheaven\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">What is OnionHeaven?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            OnionHeaven is a community backup network built into OnionPress. It keeps your site reachable at the same .onion address even when your computer is off, asleep, or disconnected.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>How it works:<\/strong> While your computer is running, OnionPress sends a quiet heartbeat to the OnionHeaven network to say &#8220;I&#8217;m online.&#8221; If your computer goes offline and the heartbeats stop, another OnionPress node in the network steps in and serves a cached copy of your site at your .onion address. When you come back online, OnionPress automatically reclaims your address and serves the live site again. The whole process is seamless &mdash; your visitors always see your site.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>What about my onion service key?<\/strong> Your key is shared with the OnionHeaven network so that a backup node can serve your address while you&#8217;re away. The network is run by the Internet Archive, the same nonprofit that runs the Wayback Machine. Your key is only used to keep your site available &mdash; nothing else.\n            <br><br>\n            OnionHeaven is automatic &mdash; there&#8217;s nothing to configure. It starts working as soon as your OnionPress site is up.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"multisite\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Can I host multiple users on one machine?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes! WordPress has a built-in feature called <strong>Multisite<\/strong> that turns a single WordPress installation into a network of sites. Each user gets their own blog with their own posts, themes, and settings &mdash; all running under your one .onion address.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>How it works:<\/strong> WordPress Multisite is enabled by default in OnionPress. The administrator invites users to create their own blogs from the WordPress dashboard. Each blog lives at a subpath like <code>your-address.onion\/alice\/<\/code> and <code>your-address.onion\/bob\/<\/code>. Users manage their own content independently, while the administrator controls the overall network.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>What you get:<\/strong>\n            <br>&bull; One OnionPress instance, many blogs\n            <br>&bull; Each user has their own login, posts, and media\n            <br>&bull; Shared hosting resources (one Tor connection, one database, one .onion address)\n            <br>&bull; The administrator can add or remove sites at any time\n            <br><br>\n            This is the recommended approach for hosting a community of bloggers on a single machine, whether it&#8217;s a family, a classroom, a newsroom, or an organization.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>On a Mac?<\/strong> You can also give each person their own macOS account &mdash; each gets a completely independent OnionPress with its own .onion address. See <a href=\"#mac-multi-user\">&#8220;Can multiple Mac users run OnionPress at the same time?&#8221;<\/a> below.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"mac-multi-user\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Can multiple Mac users run OnionPress at the same time?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes. On a Mac with multiple user accounts, each user can launch OnionPress from the same <code>\/Applications\/OnionPress.app<\/code> and get their own independent site with its own .onion address.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>How it works:<\/strong> Each macOS user gets a completely separate OnionPress environment &mdash; their own virtual machine, Docker containers, database, onion key, and data directory (<code>~\/.onionpress\/<\/code>). OnionPress automatically detects when another user is already running and shifts its network ports so there are no conflicts. Up to about 5 users can run simultaneously.\n            <br><br>\n            <strong>Key difference from Multisite:<\/strong> WordPress Multisite gives multiple blogs under one .onion address. Multiple Mac users give each person their own independent .onion address and WordPress installation, fully isolated from each other. Neither user can see the other&#8217;s data.\n            <br><br>\n            No configuration needed &mdash; just log in to your Mac account and launch OnionPress.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n\n    <div id=\"import-tweets\" class=\"op-faq-item\">\n        <div class=\"op-faq-q\">Can I use OnionPress to preserve my tweets and make them searchable?<\/div>\n        <div class=\"op-faq-a\">\n            Yes. OnionPress has a <strong>Social Archive<\/strong> importer that turns your Twitter \/ X data export into WordPress posts on your own onion, with the original dates preserved, media copied into your own storage, and search over everything you&rsquo;ve posted. The imported archive lives only on your computer &mdash; no cloud service, no third party, no further dependency on Twitter staying up or keeping your account active.\n            <br><br>\n            <a href=\"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/help-import-twitter\/\">Walkthrough: Import your Twitter \/ X archive into OnionPress<\/a>\n            <br><br>\n            Support for Mastodon, Bluesky, and other platforms is in progress &mdash; they&rsquo;ll appear in the Social Archive admin page as each importer ships, with a unified timeline view combining your posts across every imported platform.\n        <\/div>\n    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"op-footer\">\n    <div style=\"margin-bottom: 15px;\">\n        <strong style=\"font-size: 18px; color: #B896D6;\">Your Decentralized Social Blog Site<\/strong>\n    <\/div>\n    <div style=\"margin-bottom: 15px;\">\n        Free and Open Source (AGPL 3)\n    <\/div>\n    <div style=\"margin-bottom: 15px;\">\n        <a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/brewsterkahle\/onionpress#readme\">How it Works<\/a> |\n        <a href=\"http:\/\/brewster.kahle.org\/2015\/08\/11\/locking-the-web-open-a-call-for-a-distributed-web-2\/\">Locking the Web Open<\/a> |\n        <a href=\"https:\/\/donate.torproject.org\/\">Donate<\/a>\n    <\/div>\n    <div style=\"margin-top: 15px; font-size: 12px;\">\n        <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/4.0\/\">CC BY 4.0<\/a>\n    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<\/div>\n\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Your Decentralized Social Blog Site Home FAQ About What is OnionPress? What is Tor? Is it safe? Do I need to be technical? How do I install on Linux? System requirements Who can see my site? When my computer is off? Move to a different computer? Does it cost anything? What&#8217;s a .onion address? Use [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"page-blank-canvas.php","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-9","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/9","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=9"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/9\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":114,"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/9\/revisions\/114"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/onionpress.org\/onionhome\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=9"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}