1. Setting expectations

Newcomers are often cautioned that TorZon is not a “service provider” with customer‑rights in the usual sense. At best, it is an unstable marketplace where rules, uptime and staff can change abruptly.

2. Emphasis on OPSEC first

Many responsible introductions insist that readers understand OPSEC, Tor, PGP and crypto basics before they even think about interacting with a market. This site mirrors that by pointing heavily to our OPSEC and safety sections.

3. Recognising red flags

Sudden admin changes, unexplained withdrawal issues, aggressive marketing and too‑good‑to‑be‑true vendor offers are all framed as reasons to treat TorZon or any market as being at elevated risk of an exit or infiltration.

4. Understanding that “official” is fragile

Onboarding texts also try to demystify the idea of “official” links and mirrors. Without a central authority, “official TorZon site” simply means “the one people currently believe to be real” – a status that can flip overnight.