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Science/Tech
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Title: Tweaked Firefox Lets You Surf Internet Without a Trace
Source: PC World
URL Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20060920/tc_pcworld/127200
Published: Sep 22, 2006
Author: Jeremy Kirk
Post Date: 2006-09-22 12:58:24 by a vast rightwing conspirator
Keywords: None
Views: 69

Tweaked Firefox Lets You Surf Internet Without a Trace

Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service Wed Sep 20, 3:00 PM ET

A tweaked version of Firefox that makes Web browsing anonymous has been released by a group of privacy-minded coders.

Every few minutes, the Torpark browser causes a computer's IP address to appear to change. IP addresses are numeric identifier given to computers on the Internet. The number can be used along with other data to potentially track down a user, as many Web sites keep track of IP addresses.

Hackers Promote Privacy

Torpark's creators, a group of computer security gurus and privacy experts named Hactivismo, said they want to expand privacy rights on the Internet as new technologies increasingly collect online data.

The browser is free to download at torpark.nfshost.com. It's a modified version of Portable Firefox, an optimized version of the browser that can be run off a USB memory stick on a computer.

The Torpark browser uses encryption to send data over The Onion Router, a worldwide network of servers nicknamed "Tor" set up to transfer data to one another in a random, obscure fashion.

Internet traffic, such as Web site requests, carries information on where it came from and where it's going. But that's muddled using Tor, which has been endorsed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and is hard to trace back to a source.

Encryption Still Important

One minor downside is that surfing with Torpark is slower than with a typical browser over the same connection.

Torpark cautions that data sent from the last Tor server to the Web site is encrypted. Since only the user's connection is anonymous, Torpark advises that sensitive data such as username and passwords should only be used when the browser displays a golden padlock, a sign that a Web site is using encryption.

Torpark's user interface appears similar to Firefox with a few changes. It shows the current IP address that would be seen by Web sites in the lower right hand corner, and features a special "Flush Tor" button to reset a new, random server connection.

A test of Torpark using a computer in London employed IP addresses of servers registered in Berlin and Madison, Wisconsin.


Poster Comment:

I am using the darn thing right now and it's great. Except for it being a bit slow. The IP addressese keep changing and, it seems like the packets you sent out are doing some dance macabre between Tokyo, Sydney and Tampa. I installed the whole thing on a memory stick - 10 MB of installation file - and it does not require you to actually install it on a computer. You click on the executable and you run the browser. It took it a while to do the initial handshake with the TOR and it timed out once but that happened some 20-30 minutes ago. It's been good, even though slow ever since.

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