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Serpo
26th July 2014, 03:49 PM
5 Online Privacy Tools You Can Start Using Now To Bypass NSA Surveillance July 24, 2014 by Eliot Estep (http://www.collective-evolution.com/author/eliote/). 4 Comments. (http://www.collective-evolution.com/2014/07/24/5-online-privacy-tools-you-can-to-start-using-now-to-bypass-nsa-surveillance/#comments)
https://www.google.com/images/cleardot.gifSelect Languagehttps://www.google.com/images/cleardot.gif​https://www.google.com/images/cleardot.gif▼








4 (http://gold-silver.us//www.pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.collective-evolution.com%2F2014%2F07%2F24%2F5-online-privacy-tools-you-can-to-start-using-now-to-bypass-nsa-surveillance%2F&media=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.collective-evolution.com%2Fassets%2Fuploads%2F2014%2F07%2Fpri sm11.jpg&guid=iqCG3h8FGVxz-0&description=5+Online+Privacy+Tools+You+Can+Start+U sing+Now+To+Bypass+NSA+Surveillance)


http://cdn1.collective-evolution.com/assets/uploads/2014/07/prism11-650x400.jpg

Now more than than ever, we need to be smart about how we communicate online. The NSA’s PRISM program is continuously collecting all of our personal data from the world’s top online services including Facebook, Skype, Google, and Apple. If we take no precautionary measures, we should assume that all of our communications are being stored and analyzed in real-time. This is a total violation of our privacy and it’s time we take back our online power and freedom by using some simple tools and expanding our technical awareness. The ultimate goal of the NSA is nothing less than “total population control. (http://www.collective-evolution.com/2014/07/19/the-ultimate-goal-of-the-nsa-is-total-population-control-another-nsa-whistleblower/)” They want to know exactly how you live, what you think, what you’re interested in, what motivates you, who you associate with, what you really know, and what you are against. This occurs regardless if you have done anything wrong or not. Their motto and practice is simple: collect everything. This dragnet surveillance attempts to intercept all digital communications including emails, chat messages, phone conversations, video calls, text messages, browsing history, and more. http://cdn3.collective-evolution.com/assets/uploads/2014/07/PRISM-Collection-Details.jpg
As a result, we really need to be vigilant about our browsing habits and our approach to using the internet. It would be wise to reduce and eventually eliminate our usage of all compromised services, especially when sharing sensitive personal information. In the meantime, here are some helpful and easy-to-use tools that can greatly enhance your online privacy and digital integrity. Search Anonymously Use StartPage (https://startpage.com/) or DuckDuckGo (https://duckduckgo.com/) for all your searches. They are both the world’s most private search engines, allowing you to search anonymously and securely. They do not collect or share any personal information about you, including your IP address. I recommend adding one or both of these search engines to your browser. StartPage even offers you one-click access to search results through a web proxy, giving you further anonymity. Browse Anonymously The easiest way to prevent anyone from learning your location and spying on your internet activity is by using the Tor Browser Bundle (https://www.torproject.org/). The Tor network is run by privacy-conscious volunteers all around the world and is an extremely effective tool against network surveillance. Even the NSA doesn’t like it. (https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20131004/11195124754/nsa-uses-eff-images-to-explain-tor-eff-jokingly-claims-creative-commons-violation.shtml) Using Tor allows you to access sites that have been blocked by certain ISPs and countries and also to hidden parts of the internet. It is important not to use Tor for sites that personally identify you like Facebook or Gmail, as this defeats the purpose of anonymity. The Tor Browser will block browser plugins like Flash, Quicktime, etc as these can be tricked into revealing your IP address. So be aware that you may have to change your browsing habits to maximize the use of this powerful software. Use a VPN Another easy way to browse anonymously is by using a VPN (virtual private network). This essentially encrypts your connection and gives you an anonymous IP each time you browse. There are many VPN providers available but they are not all created equal. What’s important is that the company does NOT keep traffic logs, as these can be turned over to the NSA and other courts upon request. Therefore, I recommend using PrivateInternetAccess (https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/pages/how-it-works/), where you can sign up completely anonymously using Bitcoins and other payment methods. Alternatively, here is a solid list of other seriously private VPN providers (http://torrentfreak.com/which-vpn-services-take-your-anonymity-seriously-2014-edition-140315/). Chat Anonymously One of the best apps for private, encrypted chats is Cryptocat (https://crypto.cat/). It can easily be added to your web browser and even your iPhone. The app offers individual or group chat, file sharing and even Facebook chat — all encrypted. Keep in mind that both users need to be using Cryptocat for encrypted chat to work properly over Facebook Messenger. Also note that using Cryptocat does not anonymize your connection, so you’ll have to mask your IP address using Tor or a VPN to be truly anonymous. Check this list (https://prism-break.org/en/all/#instant-messaging) for more secure instant messaging options. If you’re looking for Skype alternatives, I recommend checking out Jitsi (https://jitsi.org/) or Linphone (http://www.linphone.org/). See more voice & video chat options here (https://prism-break.org/en/all/#video-voice). Store & Share Files Anonymously One of the most popular file storage services in the world is Dropbox and, unfortunately, they are a “targeted wannabe PRISM provider”, according to Edward Snowden (http://www.businessinsider.com/edward-snowden-dropbox-2014-7). This means their services have been potentially compromised and cannot be trusted. Fortunately, there is a better alternative. SpiderOak (https://spideroak.com/) is a tool that enables you to have completely private file storage, backup, and syncing across all your devices. They have a “Zero Knowledge” policy — which means even their servers do not have access to the plaintext contents of the data being stored. They do not store your password and everything is encrypted. SpiderOak has been recommended by Snowden (http://boingboing.net/2014/07/18/snowden-dropbox-is-an-nsa-sur.html) himself as a secure alternative. All new users are offered 2GB for free, a generous starting point. Email Anonymously Everyone uses email and these can be the most revealing and compromising communications. Using providers like Gmail, Outlook, Hotmail and Yahoo virtually guarantees that your emails are being recorded and stored against your will. Therefore, it is important to consider switching to a privacy-conscious email provider (http://prxbx.com/email/). Additionally, it is recommended to learn how to use encrypted email by using PGP (Pretty Good Privacy). Essentially, PGP uses public-private key cryptography, which allows you to send emails and files that only a trusted third party can open and view. You will need to generate a public and private key pair and have some technical knowledge to use it effectively. Here is an easy startup guide (http://www.deepdotweb.com/2013/11/11/pgp-tutorial-for-newbs-gpg4win/) and there are some good tutorials (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mvf8VwVjJY) on YouTube that can show you how to get started. There is a nice Chrome extension called Mailvelope (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ro3MSBS9w-A) that can integrate PGP with Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo if you must continue using these. I also highly recommend using Enigmail (https://enigmail.net/home/index.php) if you use Thunderbird as an easy integrated PGP solution. Useful Browser Plugins All of these are available for Chrome, Firefox, and other browsers.
Adblock Plus (https://adblockplus.org/) – unblock annoying ads, including on Facebook and YouTube. The internet’s most popular browser extension.
DoNotTrackMe (http://www.abine.com/index.html) – a simple extension that blocks companies and websites from tracking you
HTTPS Everywhere (https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere) – tries to force all sites to use an encrypted HTTPS connection
NoScript (http://noscript.net/) – Blocks active content and scripts so that you decide what to trust.
Self-Destructing Cookies (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/self-destructing-cookies/) – Immediately deletes cookies as soon as you close a tab or your browser. Extremely useful and customizable.
Keep in mind that these are all just tools that can assist us in maintaining our privacy and integrity online. They are not foolproof magic bullets and we must use them responsibly and effectively in order for them to work. Please continue to educate yourself on why privacy matters and spread the word to family and friends who can also benefit from this. If you have any more useful privacy tips, please share them in the comments below. We need to keep the internet open, free, and secure for all! For a comprehensive list of verified privacy tools for all platforms, please visit PRISM-BREAK.org
http://www.collective-evolution.com/2014/07/24/5-online-privacy-tools-you-can-to-start-using-now-to-bypass-nsa-surveillance/ (https://prism-break.org/en/)

Ares
26th July 2014, 04:14 PM
All good suggestions. I even have a subscription to a Private VPN service that accepts Bitcoins. Signed up with a fake name and throw away email address.

Dogman
26th July 2014, 04:32 PM
Thing is no mater what you do , you do leave footprints. Do not never kid yourselfs. If you are on the net you are open if they want to find you. Recent net history is a good example or not so recent. If you are using a provider at or near what could be called the copper last mile. Your isp provider can bust you and you can not hide from them if you are fixed.

War driving gives some anonymity, using others accounts. But if you have one they can track you!

Small bears can be clueless, big bears will find you and knock on your door if they want to.


Edit:

The internet uses a common language and protocols, the platform you use is irrelevant.

End game you can be tracked if there is interest in your activity's by big brother bear.

PatColo
26th July 2014, 05:57 PM
^ IOW, parroting the message of Agent Snowden (http://www.tomatobubble.com/snowden_fake.html): Be afraid, big bro knows everything, they're omnipotent! Snowden also told us how scary moozlems did 911 (http://vidrebel.wordpress.com/2013/09/16/resurrecting-israel-did-911-all-the-proof-in-the-world/) coz of alphabet agency failure... lol :D


6th privacy tool: LOSE WINDOWS!



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8Tiz6INF7I


It's surely the NSA's baby, and rolls out the red carpet for them. Hell I wouldn't be surprised if windoze proactively fires off a daily activity report to them... URLs visited, apps used, keystroke log, screencaps, webcam snapshots of YOU, etc. It could surely be queried for same by the spooks, and it would politely cough up the already continuously compiled care package.

Thread: Going Ubuntu Linux. Advice? (http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?78236-Going-Ubuntu-Linux-Advice)


^ and no I haven't made good on that threat yet; been dragging my heels! :(

Horn
26th July 2014, 06:49 PM
Horn is saving up for his very own proxy nano-store satellite and internet server.

It will be equipped with a laser beam to discourse any other satellites seen approaching.

Shami-Amourae
26th July 2014, 07:53 PM
The best defense against high tech is low tech...
http://philosophicallydisturbed.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/letter-to-ken-wyatt.jpg

Dogman
26th July 2014, 07:55 PM
The best defense against high tech is low tech...
http://philosophicallydisturbed.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/letter-to-ken-wyatt.jpg

Truth!

And getting rarer in this instant gratification society.

Snail mail is dying because people do not write anymore.

Ares
26th July 2014, 08:11 PM
Truth!

And getting rarer in this instant gratification society.

Snail mail is dying because people do not write anymore.

It's more efficient and cost effective. Think of how many times you email someone. Now do that with snail mail, and tack on 0.49 cents. I write when the occasion calls for it. But most of my communication is electronic because of simplicity and efficiency. Just because I send something electronically its not an open invitation to the government to read everything that I say.

I use encryption and have even set up my own cryptographic communication system for family members to keep in touch and have no worries about ease dropping.

Dogman
26th July 2014, 08:21 PM
It's more efficient and cost effective. Think of how many times you email someone. Now do that with snail mail, and tack on 0.49 cents. I write when the occasion calls for it. But most of my communication is electronic because of simplicity and efficiency. Just because I send something electronically its not an open invitation to the government to read everything that I say.

I use encryption and have even set up my own cryptographic communication system for family members to keep in touch and have no worries about ease dropping. Instant or compared to the old way dam near it!

Stamps are not all of it, paper, envelopes, ink/pins, etc!

why wait weeks when you can get in near real time!

But you can not save an email in a box, etc for multiple years/century s .

Electronic media has a fatal flaw persistence, tho compared to paper and ink, the media is still in diapers. Tech moves on and some is not backwards compatible for reading old media.

Hard copy rules,

Rules longer when acid free paper is used!

Just a thought!

Horn
26th July 2014, 08:33 PM
Hard copy rules,

Rules longer when acid free paper is used!

Just a thought!

The Postman was sooo last year,,,


The year is 2013 and the future isn't what it used to be. There are no highways, no I-ways, no dreams of a better tomorrow-only scattered bands of terrorized survivors in what was once called the United States. Into this apocalyptic wasteland


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IhoSJbKbJQ

PatColo
11th August 2014, 01:00 PM
All of these are available for Chrome, Firefox, and other browsers.
Adblock Plus (https://adblockplus.org/) – unblock annoying ads, including on Facebook and YouTube. The internet’s most popular browser extension.
DoNotTrackMe (http://www.abine.com/index.html) – a simple extension that blocks companies and websites from tracking you
HTTPS Everywhere (https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere) – tries to force all sites to use an encrypted HTTPS connection
NoScript (http://noscript.net/) – Blocks active content and scripts so that you decide what to trust.
Self-Destructing Cookies (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/self-destructing-cookies/) – Immediately deletes cookies as soon as you close a tab or your browser. Extremely useful and customizable.


I had been running DoNotTrackMe (http://www.abine.com/index.html) and NoScript (http://noscript.net/) before on my old Win7 box (plus routine CCleaner (https://www.piriform.com/CCLEANER) enemas). That box burned out (a keyboard drowned in Thunderbird (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clK25-fhMvw) will do that but I digress LOL) and I went with a new Ubuntu box (http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?78236-Going-Ubuntu-Linux-Advice&highlight=ubuntu). I've recently been loading up firefox with the privacy essentials above (BleachBit (https://apps.ubuntu.com/cat/applications/precise/bleachbit/)= CCleaner, but for linux flavors), although now I'm adding on the Self-Destructing Cookies (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/self-destructing-cookies/) add-on into the mix :D

It's early and off-hand, but I'm enjoying the cookies-thingee's notifications of the cookies which just "self-destructed". It would seem to all-but-negate the DoNotTrackMe add-on, but I'm still sorting out how all that works. Amazing how many google & gootube cookies get whacked, long after you've left the pages. :o

Add these add-ons and let's share experiences :D

Dogman
11th August 2014, 01:04 PM
I had been running DoNotTrackMe (http://www.abine.com/index.html) and NoScript (http://noscript.net/) before on my old Win7 box (plus routine CCleaner (https://www.piriform.com/CCLEANER) enemas). That box burned out (a keyboard drowned in Thunderbird (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clK25-fhMvw) will do that but I digress LOL) and I went with a new Ubuntu box (http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?78236-Going-Ubuntu-Linux-Advice&highlight=ubuntu). I've recently been loading up firefox with the privacy essentials above (BleachBit (https://apps.ubuntu.com/cat/applications/precise/bleachbit/)= CCleaner, but for linux flavors), although now I'm adding on the Self-Destructing Cookies (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/self-destructing-cookies/) add-on into the mix :D

It's early and off hand, but I'm enjoying the cookies thingee's notifications of the cookies which just "self-destructed". It would seem so all-but-negate the DoNotTrackMe add-on, but I'm still sorting out how all that works. Amazing how many google & gootube cookies get whacked, long after you've left the pages.

Add these add-ons and let's share experiences :D If a laptop, which it sounds like. It usually is beyond simple to replace a bad laptop keyboard. The web is your friend, have replaced several over the years one got a beer bath that fully recovered with a swap.

Edit: If the keyboard uses flexible flat ribbon connectors, they can be tricky, easy to screw up.

PatColo
23rd October 2014, 08:06 PM
anyone who actually opens, reads, and deploys dis EFF shite, pls report back with ur findings! :D


Protect Yourself from Electronic Spying with 'Surveillance Self-Defense' (https://ssd.eff.org/)

http://codesign.mit.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/ssd_logo.jpg (https://ssd.eff.org/)



Modern technology has given the powerful new abilities to eavesdrop and collect data on innocent people. Surveillance Self-Defense (https://ssd.eff.org/) is EFF's guide to defending (https://ssd.eff.org/) yourself and your friends from surveillance by using secure technology and developing careful practices.

Posted by WHOOLI (http://www.blogger.com/profile/12745432266860223770) at 8:33 PM 1 comment: (http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=5440450620561193447&postID=3725451470299586175)

Buddha
23rd October 2014, 08:26 PM
Whoa, Thunderbird Pat? Wouldn't have thunk you the type, nice. Peerblock is great for those that torrent, maybe for those that don't as well. On an old rig where I torrented quite a bit I would always have it running in the background. It would block connections from my ISP and from universities and research institutes. I was creeped out at first when on the block list it would say "Tel Aviv University", 'Beijing Research Institute" and such.

crimethink
23rd October 2014, 08:37 PM
anyone who actually opens, reads, and deploys dis EFF shite, pls report back with ur findings! :D

I've been running EFF's HTTPS Everywhere for sometime, and hope it's screwing with some of the kooks watching me. Can I prove it has a benefit? No, but it also doesn't interfere with what I do. It may not stop the NSA, but it will give Google and other data vacuum sites some extra work.

I do not advocate use or at least reliance upon PGP, as it's had a backdoor ever since Zimmermann made a deal with the Federal regime to avoid prison. His chosen-ness didn't hurt, either. TrueCrypt actually worked, and that's why it was National Security Lettered out of existence.

crimethink
23rd October 2014, 08:41 PM
Whoa, Thunderbird Pat? Wouldn't have thunk you the type, nice. Peerblock is great for those that torrent, maybe for those that don't as well. On an old rig where I torrented quite a bit I would always have it running in the background. It would block connections from my ISP and from universities and research institutes. I was creeped out at first when on the block list it would say "Tel Aviv University", 'Beijing Research Institute" and such.

I advocate using a full-fledged VPN for Torrents. Based in a "neutral" country that doesn't give a shit about what the Copyright Cartel demands, such as Hong Kong.

The Jew shysters are getting wiser and more rabid in attacking file sharers, and a VPN is pretty much required at this point. And don't trust using an American-based one, no matter how much people endorse it (like PIA - Private Internet Access).

Buddha
23rd October 2014, 09:20 PM
I advocate using a full-fledged VPN for Torrents. Based in a "neutral" country that doesn't give a shit about what the Copyright Cartel demands, such as Hong Kong.

The Jew shysters are getting wiser and more rabid in attacking file sharers, and a VPN is pretty much required at this point. And don't trust using an American-based one, no matter how much people endorse it (like PIA - Private Internet Access).

You're right, my knowledge is a little bit dated. 7ish to 3 years ago I just did what ever I wanted, then got rid of the internet all together. It's funny how one can do without things. Best to stay in practice with that I guess.

Horn
24th October 2014, 07:51 AM
Anything short of owning your own cellular nano satalitte,

will not prevent Harrp beams laced with MKultra from focusing on your general locale.

mick silver
24th October 2014, 11:27 AM
why hide who do you fear but fear itself . when fear gets this great I will unplug from everything

Glass
10th November 2014, 02:31 AM
I'm trying to get this phone to do something and I end up on a setting screen for Yandex. Not sure what is this is. I find it's a phone loader?? So basically it's what I see as the phone. The GUI from when it starts up. I was messing in the phone part but it seems it's all the same thing, the desktop/wallpaper icons and the way is goes from screen to screen is this Yandex and the phone keypad and contacts/texting.

Yandex do other things. Its Russian, They are a alternative web search engine. They have their own browser, I think for phone and windows. They don't have to answer NSA requests. Their privacy policy seems to be written in english. I haven't tried their browser yet but I will.

They also have a freemail service.

The phone interface is pretty good. I think it's almost a ROM but not quite. I did delete something from the bottom icons bar and I can't see how to put something there. And it adds everyone to the same contact group. Otherwise no issues. So anyway. putting it out there. If anyone has used or can say to stay away.

PatColo
5th December 2014, 04:55 AM
http://www.redicecreations.com/ul_img/32101detekt_small.jpg
Detekt: A New Malware Detection Tool That Can Expose Illegitimate State Surveillance (http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=32102)
2014 11 21

Recent years have seen a boom in the adoption of surveillance technology by governments around the world, including spyware that provides its purchasers the unchecked ability to target remote Internet users’ computers, to read their personal emails, listen in on private audio calls, record keystrokes and passwords, and remotely activate their computer’s camera or microphone. EFF, together with Amnesty International, ...









http://www.redicecreations.com/ul_img/32100hanniganGCHQ_small.jpg
New UK spy chief says tech giants aid terrorism, privacy not ‘absolute right’ (http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=32101)
2014 11 21

Robert Hannigan, the new head of GCHQ The new head of Britain’s GCHQ, the UK equivalent of the NSA in the U.S., said he believes privacy is not an absolute right and that tech giants must open themselves up to intelligence agencies. “GCHQ is happy to be part of a mature debate on privacy in the digital age,” Hannigan said. “But privacy ...







^ heh, pretending "tech giants" aren't already in bed with the JWO spook agencies! :D -PC

Glass
8th February 2015, 07:06 PM
With the latest update of Firefox it becomes even more stupified and unusable. I'm tired of the history tiles. THe fact that delete all history on exit doesn't delete all history.

that the back and forward options are now stupid context icons that clutter up the screen. And the newest version has a ton of useless search engines pre installed AND finally that it keeps trying to auto complete my URLS and my search commands and then starts down loading that same shit before even asking me what I want.

Firefox is now Fuckedfox and we're done.

Trialing Yandex. It's similar to an early chrome or some such.

Cons: Doesn't do home pages. Doesn't auto delete history on exit. Has crappy tableau which is the same as tiles of FF.

Pros: designed by Russians who I hope told the NSA to GFTS.

I can't find anything that really suits my needs but it will have to do. The Firefox development team seems to have been captured by retards.

Cebu_4_2
8th February 2015, 07:10 PM
I'm stable at Firefox 28.0

Java wants me to throw my shit in the trash and get an Intell system that is built by________. To work properly.
I will not up/downgrade my XP.

Glass
8th February 2015, 07:20 PM
I also just ran this Detekt App on my PC for shits and giggles.

http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=32102

Nothing found.

I've got another one which I think is compromised. Took a full day and a half of battling someone to gain control of it. Freaky when you can see them trying to stop you clean a system. I still think it's beaconing when I connect it to something that has Internet access but no one is grabbing control like before. There were some other things which I talked about before. Anyway will be interesting to scan and see if it actually has anything on it.

Glass
8th February 2015, 07:23 PM
I upgraded my firefox again because the flash plugin stopped working and updating it didn't fix the problem. So FF ver 32 was what I had and it was when most of the annoying crap was deployed. Then it wen to 35 or 36 or something.

Anyway I'll persist with Yandex. I will put that browser on the personal tracking device as well. I am already running the Yandex shell and that seems very stable.

Glass
8th February 2015, 07:28 PM
fortunately I just discovered that Adblock plus is available for Yandex since december 2014. good news as I just opened a news web site.... and it's full of ads.

Cebu_4_2
8th February 2015, 07:33 PM
Still on 28. Only thing is youtubes are a pain, nothing else. I can't upgrade.

Glass
8th February 2015, 07:37 PM
Still on 28. Only thing is youtubes are a pain, nothing else. I can't upgrade.

The only thing I could suggest is that if you really need something, get 1 PC and upgrade that or get windows 8 or what you need on it. Then connect to it on Remote Desktop if you need to do anything that requires that PC or it's software.

I have 1 x 8.1 PC for troubleshooting and helping people but I don't use it and only refer/connect to it when I need to know how to do it on Win 8.1. I also modified that install so that it has a proper Start menu and I can navigate it more easily. Not ideal but it works.

The next windows I think is going to be 10. Hopefully it will fix a lot of the mistakes. Who knows. I think Microsoft outsource the development to India these days.

Glass
20th February 2015, 10:18 PM
After some more time using Yandex as the primary browser I'm not that happy with it. It is based on Chrome and is limited in what you can do. Everything you type into the URL address bar gets submitted as a search to what ever primary search engine you have selected. So if you type in a web address it will search in say google for it then jump you there. So the search engine knows every site you go because it's either a real search result or the URL you typed was searched on.

Address bar submits everything you type to the search engine. can't be disabled.
No separate search box
No auto clear/delete of session history when exiting. Manual only
You are always logged into what ever sites you logged into on reopening the browser. symptom of previous.
You can't set a home page or pages
Blank pages have a thumbnail grid showing all the sites you have visited
You can't get rid of the thumbnail page but you can disable thumbnails showing
Its fast
Popup blocker works well

Because this browser is based on chrome and is basically a skinned chrome browser there is not much difference in how it works. I am pretty sure the chrome browser does not auto submit everything typed into the address bar to a search engine. Nearly every other feature or limitation is the same for both.

I'll keep looking for something else but I'll stop using yandex.

Glass
22nd June 2015, 09:31 PM
watching UK column today/yesterdays show by the time it gets to me.

They are suggesting people look at a couple of useful tools to encrypt your communications. I have not looked at them yet. I thought I would post them here and see if anyone has used them.

Also so I remember them.

Jitsi (https://jitsi.org/) is like skype. Has encrypted video conferencing.
https://jitsi.org/

Cryptocat (https://crypto.cat/) is a private chat app. You can group chat and share files. Is a browser plugin. You can also go into facebook and see who you know who is already using it and hook up to them.
https://crypto.cat/

Peerio (https://peerio.com/) is a Secure messaging and file sharing app. Not sure about this one. It seems to be a cloud based file sharing system with Chat. No support for IOS or Droids. Seems to have a few good features. You can share files and it will encrypt them to the people you are sharing them with. If you decide to delete any file the system will also delete them from the people you shared the file with. I assume there are limits to what this feature can achieve.
https://peerio.com/

Serpo
22nd June 2015, 11:39 PM
I dont think anything is secure , if they can see what you say before you send it.....Need encrypted computers.

I thought this was the biggy that came out this week............encrypted facebook type thingy

https://www.minds.com/



Chrome Bugs Allow Sites to Listen to Your Private Conversations

http://talater.com/chrome-is-listening/


<a href="http://talater.com/chrome-is-listening/" target="_blank">
https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=37&amp;v=s5D578JmHdU
(http://talater.com/chrome-is-listening/)

Glass
22nd June 2015, 11:44 PM
yes I think if they have some of those spy tools on your PC you will never know. Still I think it's worth doing what ever you can.

The Chrome thing actually turns out to be a feature now. Google included it permanently in their latest release. All users are eavesdropped and voice printed. Uploaded to the googtrix for free access by spaghetti agencies world wide.

Horn
23rd June 2015, 12:56 AM
Unplug the usb mic, and turn off your cell phone.

Serpo
23rd June 2015, 01:10 AM
yes I think if they have some of those spy tools on your PC you will never know. Still I think it's worth doing what ever you can.

The Chrome thing actually turns out to be a feature now. Google included it permanently in their latest release. All users are eavesdropped and voice printed. Uploaded to the googtrix for free access by spaghetti agencies world wide.

Sounds almost too good to be true

Glass
29th May 2016, 07:34 PM
This is as good as anywhere to post this:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4LOyi3EMWU

PatColo
30th May 2016, 12:18 AM
Interesting article at MHB with reco's in both the article & reader comments.



Public Service Announcement from IMS: Unauthorized Access
Posted by tyrannynews
Evidence suggests “lpozner@gmail.com” gained access to Independent Media Solidarity’s Google Drive. But how?

IMS (Independent Media Solidarity), the independent collective of citizen journalists was recently the victim of theft. Thankfully for them, the experience wasn’t entirely negative. The community of people skeptical of the Sandy Hook narrative can now see the lengths to which the opposition will go to halt their efforts. Factors to better assess the true situation they find themselves in. But for the most part, what transpired was disruptive, unsettling and criminal.

More https://memoryholeblog.com/2016/03/13/public-service-announcement-from-ims-unauthorized-access/

Cebu_4_2
24th May 2018, 01:16 PM
Just got a notice from my IP provider. Apparently peerblock didn't block Echelon even though it is listed in Peerblock and blocked. WTF? Out of thousands of movies one was singled out and saw me. My IP, port and P2P. Looks like PB is done with no updates, is there an easy alternative?

Horn
24th May 2018, 02:17 PM
What notice did your IP send you?

Cebu_4_2
24th May 2018, 02:22 PM
Copyright notice.

Copyright infringement may have taken place using your internet service. This is your first alert.

Blah blah...

We received a notice from the copyright owner claiming that the internet protocol (IP) address for your account was used for this purpose.

Horn
24th May 2018, 04:01 PM
hmmm, i received a message from IP a few years back that i was virused with a bandwidth eater.

Other than that I just get billed by them. While associating with any number of blacklisted address.

Ares
24th May 2018, 04:52 PM
Just got a notice from my IP provider. Apparently peerblock didn't block Echelon even though it is listed in Peerblock and blocked. WTF? Out of thousands of movies one was singled out and saw me. My IP, port and P2P. Looks like PB is done with no updates, is there an easy alternative?

Private Torrent trackers, but they're usually by invitation only.

Cebu_4_2
24th May 2018, 06:13 PM
Never looked into that, on my list after a proxy of some sort.

PatColo
6th October 2019, 11:32 AM
something I saw Cynthia McKinney retweeted; mainly interesting that there are adapters to connect your phone's USB port to a hardwired ethernet cable.

11 mins
Snowden says don't use Wifi, I explain why (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXEe2kqiYIM)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXEe2kqiYIM
103,031 views
•Premiered Sep 28, 2019
18.8K subscribers

Half Sense
7th October 2019, 07:14 PM
I use various privacy tools, but then I post whatever the fuck I want on this board and others. I also have a very frank and open phone conversation with my 93-year-old pappy every week, and he is as "woke" as anybody here. We joke that there's probably a team of 20 spook analysts parsing our weekly calls, trying to discern the mindset of America.