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Safeweb Turns Off Free Service

An Anonymous Coward writes: "Seems like Safeweb was the last one to cancel providing free anonymizing service. Rest in peace, Safeweb, I loved you a lot. With Anonymouse down and Anonymizer.com restricted, are there any free services left for those suffering from corporate oppression?"

13 of 316 comments (clear)

  1. Sweet Irony by yatest5 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I totally dig the fact that the submitter of this story was 'anonymous coward'...!

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    • Mod parent up! [a] by Anonymous Coward (Score:5) Thurs, June 31, @13:37
    1. Re:Sweet Irony by Mwongozi · · Score: 5, Informative
      This is what Safeweb provided,

      Actually, it didn't. SafeWeb kept logs for seven days.

  2. noproxy by DMDx86 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Noproxy still works. There is also a list of free services at antiproxy. I personlly run my own CGI Proxy on my home server while I am at school.

  3. Gee, big surprise there, another free site down by Brento · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems like Safeweb was the last one to cancel providing free anonymizing service. Rest in peace, Safeweb, I loved you a lot.

    Hmm, you loved it a lot, but you're not willing to pay, eh? Sounds like the tombstone of every other dot-com. What's the surprise here? When people realize that you have to pay to play, maybe the dot-com economy will change. News flash, folks, if there's something good, and you love it, you need to chip in and contribute. If you don't, as they say on public radio, nobody else will.

    --
    What's your damage, Heather?
  4. CIA Investors by rsimmons · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Isn't it funny that one of Safeweb's main investors is a company controlled by the CIA called In-Q-Tel. Here is Safeweb's investors page.

  5. SilentSurf are by Jon+Chatow · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... avaliable from here and here.

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    James F.
  6. Aren't they mostly small services? by Ratface · · Score: 5, Interesting

    AFAIK the majority of anonymiser services have gone underground to the extent that they tend not to want to advertise their services, working instead by word of mouth. Personally I wouldn't even want to be a user of an anonymising service where the operator/s weren't in some way known to be to be trustworthy.

    There's possibly more safety in diversity when it comes to anonymising services. (Though that is debatable)

    --

    A little planning goes a long way...
  7. Hiding in crowds by iamcadaver · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is still work being done with AT&T's crowds. Basically, the caveat is that you have'ta share the load if you wanna use the service. Good karma there.

    --
    Before I part with'em: two pennies weigh ~4.996+/-0.014g, have a zinc core, and the face of Lincoln. You can keep 'em.
  8. If you're paying, it's not anonymous by tony_gardner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you're sending your credit card details to an anonymising service. How long will you stay anonymous?

  9. ssh by Spock+the+Vulcan · · Score: 5, Informative
    You could do what I do - run squid+sshd at home, set up a tunnel with ssh port forwarding from your office to home:
    ssh -C -L 3128:<home-ip>:3128 -N <home-ip>
    and then set localhost:3128 as your proxy. Of course, this is assuming you have an always-on connection at home.
  10. Re:Orangatango by stevey · · Score: 5, Funny

    Orangatango is based on a pretty cool idea: Rather than my computer negotiating a connection with every site I want to connect to, my computer negotiates a connection with Orangatango, and Orangatango does the rest. To the outside world, it looks as though Orangatango is making all of the requests. Maybe it's not a unique idea, but they have implemented it extremely well.

    That's what us computery people call a Proxy, or Proxy Server ...

  11. SSH to your house? by brunes69 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm surprised no one's mentioned this, since I've ben doingit forever. Anyone with broadband (cable/dsl) has a fast enough connection to simple SSH to their house, and forward ports over the conneciton. Thus, I have my web browser proxy set to 127.0.0.1:8000, whihc is forwarded to my home PC proxy over the SSH connection.

  12. Fundamentalist oppression needs a break! by MadAhab · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I put up an anonymizing proxy somewhere and ran it for a year or so. Threw out the logs after analysis. But found out that most of my traffic was from United Arab Emirates. They used the site for surfing porn, which is blocked by their country. They also used it for reading news that I doubt they can easily get there.

    So if all it means is that some rich Arabs can get easy access to porn, so what. It might just mean that someone from a religiously repressive and sexually repressed society learns that if you look at porn, it doesn't make you blind, it doesn't turn you into a rapist, and if your spouse/SO shares your tastes, it could even enhance your sex life. And the 5% of the time they were reading news sites might just give them a wider view of the world. All of which might make their country, eventually, more tolerant. So you can whine all you want, but sometimes the inability to surf porn is the man smacking people down, and sometimes the ability to surf porn is a sign that freedom exists, regardless of whether exercising that freedom at any given time is wise or tasteful.

    --
    Expanding a vast wasteland since 1996.