-<p>Browsing the internet with JavaScript disabled, and only enabling it if needed, goes a long way to protecting user privacy. In addition, JavaScript
- is used to load much of the annoying advertisements and extra cruft that comes along with most modern websites. With it disabled, websites will
- load faster, consume less network traffic, and only contain less annoying advertisements, instead of those that do things like cover up the text of the
- entire web page.</p>
-</body>
+ <p>For privacy purposes, the ideal would be to browse the internet with JavaScript disabled. However, there are some websites that legitimately require
+ JavaScript to accomplish their purposes and others that don’t work correctly without JavaScript even though they could be programmed to do so.
+ Privacy Browser addresses this by making it easy to toggle JavaScript on and off. Tapping the privacy shield will toggle it between blue
+ <img src="images/privacy_browser.png" height="16" width="16"> or yellow <img src="images/warning.png" height="16" width="16"> (both of which indicate
+ that JavaScript is disabled) and red <img src="images/javascript_enabled.png" height="16" width="16"> (JavaScript enabled).
+ Looking at the different information <a href="http://webkay.robinlinus.com">webkay</a> can collect with JavaScript enabled and disabled is informative.</p>
+
+ <p>Browsing the internet with JavaScript disabled, and only enabling it if needed, goes a long way to protecting user privacy. In addition, JavaScript
+ is used to load much of the annoying advertisements and extra cruft that comes along with most modern websites. With it disabled, websites will
+ load faster, consume less network traffic, and contain less annoying advertisements, instead of those that do things like cover up the text of the
+ entire web page.</p>
+ </body>