A redesigned Tor Launcher interface significantly increased success rates (Pearson χ² = 2.808, p < 0.047) and reduced median connection time in E3 from 40:08 to 20:25 (Mann–Whitney Z = −1.84, p < 0.0328, r = 0.172); configuration time also dropped significantly (Z = −3.28, p < 0.0005, r = 0.307). Changes included eliminating yes/no bridge and proxy question screens, adding auto-detection for proxies, consolidating options, and surfacing meek bridges as a fallback recommendation.
From 2017-lee-usability — A Usability Evaluation of Tor Launcher
· §6.2, §7.3.1–7.3.3, Table 2
· 2017
· Privacy Enhancing Technologies
Implications
Eliminate yes/no decision screens that require users to know technical terms (relay, bridge, proxy, transport) — replace with auto-detection and progressive disclosure that assumes users know only their country and desired risk level.
Expose the hardest-to-block bridge type (e.g., domain-fronting / meek) as an explicit fallback recommendation when built-in bridges fail, not buried in an alphabetical list of equivalent-seeming options.