I just briefly went searching for an android version of Lynx.
I just briefly went searching for an android version of Lynx.
Interesting. CEO is former co-founder of Opera, and he started this browser two years after he left opera (most tech companies have a two year noncompete agreement, so this could be reason for the timing).
Yes he says the track Opera was taking wasn't to his liking, so he decided to go anew.Interesting. CEO is former co-founder of Opera, and he started this browser two years after he left opera (most tech companies have a two year noncompete agreement, so this could be reason for the timing).
Great idea, but I can't get a straight answer on if any extensions there (or default with it) that it blocks and/or you can remove SuperCookies. Everything else is 100%, so that's the closest so far.Isn't Vivaldi supposed to be the new hotness browser?
I usually take whatever browser and then add Disconnect/Ghostery/uBlock (or some combination) to it.Great idea, but I can't get a straight answer on if any extensions there (or default with it) that it blocks and/or you can remove SuperCookies. Everything else is 100%, so that's the closest so far.
Sure, but those are concerned with getting stuff on to your browser in the first place. I'm concerned with that, but I also want to be able to (automatically) nuke the few that manage to get on, because some will, sooner or later.I usually take whatever browser and then add Disconnect/Ghostery/uBlock (or some combination) to it.
--Patrick
To that end, I generally nuke all downloaded content every so often while using my browser. Yes, that's right, that means I have to log back into everything, even right after I leave it. I don't save passwords, history, bookmarks, cookies, or anything else for that matter. Shopping on Amazon/NewEgg? Close windows, nuke all content, go to Amazon, finish transaction, nuke content again. Done with Halforums? Close all windows, nuke all content. Wandered through reddit/Wikipedia/TVTropes/tech sites on a curiosity binge and want to go somewhere else? Close all windows, nuke all content. You get the idea. The sites I visit may record my IP, but my computer records nothing that it ever gets to share with someone else. Oh, and I have multiple computers, so my profile is not consistent. Also I occasionally make stupid changes to my user agent string, and actually wish there were a browser add-on that would add random noise to your browser agent just for this purpose.Sure, but those are concerned with getting stuff on to your browser in the first place. I'm concerned with that, but I also want to be able to (automatically) nuke the few that manage to get on, because some will, sooner or later.
You're right DA, which is why I set my "paranoia" level to a certain point. Beyond that it's too much of a pain in the ass. But below it I could live happily. But no longer, which is... WTF? For an organization like Mozilla to claim to be so freedom/privacy oriented, and then snatch such a valuable tool... it's just frustrating.If your browser can still be fingerprinted to match it to a user, you're still screwed no matter what you do with your so-called "security settings". If you're that paranoid, you're better off running a different linux live CD every day and running the browser off of that.
That's what they want you to think. Right up to the time the men come knocking at your door.I guess I subscribe to the "no one actually cares enough to bother tracking me" school of anonymity. That and nothing I do on the internet is special enough to warrant any extra steps of privacy.
Plus I feel sorry for the poor bastard who has to go through my Internet history, I'll tell you that.
Well, I've learned a few... ah crap. I shouldn't have said that.Does anyone really give that much of a shit about all the Pokemon stuff I google?
I think the Futurama busy street analogy is pretty apt. I just assume everyone can see me as I walk down the street in public, be it Evil Inc or Average Joe. It's not so much that I have nothing to hide as it is that I'm in a public place. If I don't want someone to see what building I enter, I get sneaky.I understand that "I have nothing to hide so I don't care about privacy" is a dangerous mentality, but it's hard to overcome the inertia of inaction. My life is fine right now as it is, so it's difficult to make myself care.
Plus I feel sorry for the poor bastard who has to go through my Internet history, I'll tell you that.
Depends on the men.That's what they want you to think. Right up to the time the men come knocking at your door.
If you've ever said an unkind word about a politician in an electronic medium, this becomes false, and you could potentially disappear, under the worst of circumstances.Add me to the "life is boring; have fun with that, nosy people!" list.
Truthfully? Nothing I wouldn't say to their face. I generally don't put things online I wouldn't want to be traced back to me. That kind of venting I say in person, and only to certain people.If you've ever said an unkind word about a politician in an electronic medium, this becomes false, and you could potentially disappear, under the worst of circumstances.
I wasn't implying you were "braver" online, just that online interaction leaves a record that is more easily searched, catalogued, and used as pretense for action.Truthfully? Nothing I wouldn't say to their face. I generally don't put things online I wouldn't want to be traced back to me. That kind of venting I say in person, and only to certain people.
Just because you're comfortable saying it doesn't mean it's not of use to someone with less than your best interests in mind.If I think it could possibly be traced back to me, I don't say it unless I'd be comfortable saying it in person. Leftover caution from being on so many MUDs, I guess.
--Patrick
My tattoo artist must have a different browser than me though because when we searched Pikachu at the end of my last session together, some disturbing things popped up in there among the cute stuff.Well, I've learned a few... ah crap. I shouldn't have said that.
My tattoo artist must have a different browser than me though because when we searched Pikachu at the end of my last session together, some disturbing things popped up in there among the cute stuff.
Possibly, but I wasn't meaning to imply I'm "braver". I just usually am very conscious about what I share/state online. I've always been a bit paranoid about people I don't know/didn't consent to being privy to any of my personal information or thoughts. Since I started using the Internet back in '98-'99, I never believed that we were truly anonymous, and that if someone tried hard enough, they could trace you eventually. I guess you could use anything against a person if you really try hard enough. I wouldn't put it past this administration or other bully types (say, Gamergate et al) to try something if I got in their crosshairs.I wasn't implying you were "braver" online, just that online interaction leaves a record that is more easily searched, catalogued, and used as pretense for action.
And anything even as innocuous as "I don't agree with the president" can become sedition.
Aussie and I both are pretty sure we've said/searched for/looked at things that have gotten us on some agency's watch list.
But you are probably going to steer clear of active construction sites and areas known for high incidences of violent crime.Under the worst of circumstances, I could trip on the sidewalk this morning and break my neck, end up with my head in my shorts, and drown in my own filth. But I'm not going out of the house in a plastic bubble.