New Web Browser Leaves No Footprints
eastbayted writes "InfoWorld reports a new web browser designed to protect users privacy is available for download. Called Browzar, it 'automatically deletes Internet caches, histories, cookies and auto-complete forms.' It also boasts a search engine, which the company will use to generate income. The 264KB application is the brainchild of Ajaz Ahmen, known for creating the U.K.'s first ISP Freeserve. The forthcoming version is for Windows only, but Mac and Linux versions will be available eventually."
This will be on work laptops across the world.
Surfing for porn on the company's own hardware is a difficult problem to solve because you know that the machine's going to hang up on you right in the middle of some huge download and you're going to have to take that dead machine down to IT where they will come to know all about your little addiction.
With this software, you can be sure you're clean even when the PC crashes.
They selling stock?
Safari has a 'Private Browsing' mode that creates no history, cookies, cache.
Freeserve was far from the UK's first ISP. There were hundreds of ISPs, including large players like Pipex, Demon, Compuserve and AOL in the UK, along with much smaller ones like Eclipse before Freeserve came along.
Freeserve was the first ISP not to charge a monthly fee, but not the first to exist.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heatseek
;P
At least they are more upfront with their mission...
One that hath name thou can not otter
I'm not trying to be an OSS zealot here (honestly), but how does this do anything that Firefox doesn't do already? Preferences/Options, Privacy, Clear Private Data tool settings button. (The way to get there might be different in the Windows version, but you get the idea.) You can have it blow away history, forms, passwords, download history, cookies, cache data, and authenticated HTTP sessions automatically when you quit. And a few of those can be disabled outright from the start. And of course, Safari has a similar option too.
Freeserve is a name I have not heard since the .com boom and hoped I would not hear again.
That is great that privacy is protected provided you dont mind:
server logs
ISP logs
upstream proxy logs/cache
dns cache
any identifiable information you give out to websites
Nice idea for the 'hide-it-from-your-wife' crowd, but other than that not too much use for this, and not really anything that is not provided by extensions for existing browsers already.
Warhammer forums
This reminds me of what happened to me once, when I was manning a booth at a conference trying to convince people to use Linux. We tried to get people to buy a Knoppix LiveCD from us to try it out. So, two people came and were mostly intersted in the fact that if they use the LiveCD to browse the web, none of their data is saved anywhere.
Regarding this "Browsar", does it delete all caches/cookies, or not save them at all? Because just deleting can be not secure enough unless you do it very carefully. Also, what about the swap? Is it deleted or avioded?
Make even shorter URLs - 8LN.org
It is unlikely that they developed a modern web browser from scratch.
e mes.www.navigateurs/browse_frm/thread/19f96a99deb3 0fc1/76965389104729e7?lnk=st&q=browzar&rnum=2#7696 5389104729e7
There is no indication on their web site that it is based on anything though.
http://www.browzar.com/
I found this one message on google groups (in french) which indicates it is based on Internet Explorer.
http://groups.google.co.uk/group/fr.comp.infosyst
Anyone know any better?
Every man for himself, all in favour say "I"
Ok. I just posted this to them as an example of why people should be very, very careful, but it's funny enough I should share it here.
A few years ago I was doing IT consultancy in London, and a client had a problem with her PC all acting funny.
I went along, it was the secretary/receptionist's PC so she moved over, and sat next to me watching what I was doing as I investigated.
I found a suspicious DLL beginning with 'S' running on the system, so I did what you would normally do, do a google search and see what it comes up with.
As soon as I typed the first 'S', up pops good old google autocomplete:
"STD clinic london"
I typed as fast as I could and hoped she didn't notice!
Turned out her PC had a virus too.
Jolyon
Please read my Canon EOS tech blog at http://www.everyothershot.com
There's a Firefox plugin that does the same thing. Stealther claims to do the same thing, but what I don't know is how well it really covers its tracks. A forensic investigation into a hard drive can easily reveal browsing history, even if one cleans his or her history and deletes cookies, etc. I have heard of a browser that actually "shreds" this information (similar to Eraser but I can't seem to find any information on this browser.
-Arthur
Cave ne ante ullas catapultas ambules
Protect my privacy, but sell my search results?
This guy's the limit!
Smells like it's using the IE engine to render the pages.
There's no way you could pack a full graphical browser into 264K on a windows box.
And, without graphics, a porn browser is hardly useful.
Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
Not the same: In Safari, you don't create a footprint of what you don't want recorded frst, just to later erase it together with the rest of your browsing history, it just doesn't write anything about your web-surfing onto the disk while in "private surfing" mode.
Since it requires IE 5.5 or above, I expect it uses IE for most functions. Not bad in itself, but it will probably be vulnerable to all the exploits IE is, and users being unaware of that, especially visiting the seamier websites infested with drive-by installers, may be seriously screwed. Nevertheless, if you have to use a PC temporarily and only IE is installed, it would be better than just trying to clean up IE.
..... and I can't find a link to download the source code.
So-called "security" software without source code is worse than useless -- and would be outlawed if we had a sensible Minister for Information Technology. The information it's claiming to be hiding could be valuable, so there's a clear motive to lie about what it's doing -- and hiding the source code provides an obvious means. I, for one, wouldn't give it the opportunity.
I have set Firefox to ask me every time about cookies. As soon as I see a "__utma" or a "h2" cookie, I know at once the owners of that site have absolutely no concern for my privacy, and simply block all cookies from that site. Otherwise I usually accept cookies for the session only.
I also keep my day-to-day login password as secret as any of my root passwords, and always set up a brand new user account if anyone ever wants to use one of my computers for anything.
Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
I already have a browser that leaves no footprints - Firefox Portable. Loaded on my 1GB Swiss Army knife the only thing it leaves on the host machine is a pluginreg.dat - which contains nothing about my internet use.
we see things not as as they are, but as we are.
-- anais nin
1. Enter IE, go google.com, logoff if necessary, close IE
2. open browzar, go google.com, autheticate with your gmail account
3. close browzer
4. open IE, go google.com.... still authenticated!!!
perhaps it needs some more debugging.
hth
SSH into your own box, and surf p0rn sites with lynx. what? you don't go there just to read the articles?