Showing posts with label navigation incognito. Show all posts
Showing posts with label navigation incognito. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Navigation Internet Incognito or Private Browsing on Firefox, Chrome & Explorer



Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer

Private browsing is all the rage with browsers these days. Once you go into private browsing mode, you can traverse the internet without leaving a trail. Your history? Deleted. Your cookies? Destroyed. Your bookmarks and non-private history? Preserved for when you come back to the surface.
Even if you've got a clean conscience, there are advantages in keeping your online activities to yourself. Perhaps you're planning a surprise party for the family member that you share a computer with. Perhaps you're on a computer at the office and don't want your co-workers poking around in your business. Or perhaps you just have concerns about someone sneaking into your top-secret bunker and finding out about your search history ("time travel," "building wormholes," "how to + global domination"). Whatever your reason for going undercover, private browsing will help keep other people from being nosy.
Now, while private browsing is useful, it's not all powerful. Private browsing won't protect you from keyloggers, tracking programs, nasty viruses after your personal info, or government surveillance efforts. But as far as the average Joe is concerned, your private online activities will remain shrouded in mystery.
As with most browser-related things, enabling private browsing is all a matter of knowing where to look. I'm going to show you how to fly under the radar with Firefox 4, Google Chrome and Internet Explorer 9. Each set of instructions has a few handy screenshots to help you along.

Firefox 4

Open up the bright orange Firefox menu in the top-left corner of your browser window. Click "Start Private Browsing."
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
If this is the first time you've used Private Browsing, you'll get the following message. Go ahead and check that box to avoid getting the same message every time.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Once you've got Private Browsing active, the orange Firefox button will turn purple, and the address bar will be marked with an icon of a mask.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
To stop Private Browsing, go back to the Firefox menu and click "Stop Private Browsing". Your non-private tabs will appear right where you left them.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Now, if you've currently got the Menu Bar active within your Toolbar settings, you won't see an orange button in the top-left corner. Instead, you'll find the "Start Private Browsing" option within the Tools menu. Everything else will work exactly the same way.

Google Chrome

Open up the Settings menu. It's the little wrench-shaped icon in the top-right corner. Click "New incognito window." That's right. You're about to go incognito.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Chrome will open up a separate window for your private browsing needs. Your original window will remain in the background. Appropriately enough, Incognito mode is marked with a little fedora-clad gumshoe.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
To return to normal browsing, just close the Incognito window.

Internet Explorer 9

See that little gear in the top-right corner? Click it.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Next, mouse-over the Safety menu. Click "InPrivate Browsing."
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Like Chrome, IE9 will open a new browser window, leaving your open tabs intact. You'll know the InPrivate browsing window by the dark blue "InPrivate" icon to the left of the address bar.
Private Browsing: A How-To for Firefox, Chrome & Internet Explorer
Close the InPrivate window whenever you're ready to stop being sneaky.
Photo by ngiley

See Also

Tails OS, navigation internet incognito used by Edward Snowden, employee of CIA & NSA.


Tails (Operating System)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tails
Tails logo
Tails OS
OS family Unix-like
Working state Active
Initial release June 23, 2009; 4 years ago
Latest release 1.0[1] / 29 April 2014; 9 days ago
Supported platforms x86
Kernel type Monolithic (Linux)
Default user interface GNOME 2
License GPLv3+[2]
Preceded by Incognito LiveCD
Official website tails.boum.org
Tails or The Amnesic Incognito Live System is a security-focused Debian-based Linux distribution aimed at preserving privacy and anonymity.[3] It is the next iteration of development on the previous Gentoo-based Incognito Linux distribution.[4] All its outgoing connections are forced to go through Tor,[5] and direct (non-anonymous) connections are blocked. The system is designed to be booted as a live DVD or live USB, and will leave no trace (digital footprint) on the machine unless explicitly told to do so. The Tor Project has provided most of the financial support for development.[6] Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald, and Barton Gellman have each said that Tails was an important tool they used in their work with Edward Snowden.[7][8][9]

Bundled software

Networking

Stream isolation
Regular and obfsproxy bridges support
The Vidalia graphical frontend
TorBrowser patches
Torbutton for anonymity and protection against JavaScript
HTTPS Everywhere a Firefox extension which transparently enables SSL-encrypted connections to a great number of major websites
All cookies are treated as session cookies by default; the CS Lite extension provides more fine-grained cookie control for those who need it

Encryption and privacy

One may choose at boot time among a large number of languages.

Timeline

Version Release date Notes
0.7 Thursday 7 April 2011 N/A
0.7.1 Saturday 30 April 2011 N/A
0.7.2 Monday 13 June 2011 N/A
0.8 Wednesday 21 September 2011 N/A
0.8.1 Sunday 16 October 2011 N/A
0.9 Friday 11 November 2011 N/A
0.10 Wednesday 4 January 2012 N/A
0.10.1 Monday 30 January 2012 N/A
0.10.2 Monday 5 March 2012 N/A
0.11 Wednesday 25 April 2012 N/A
0.12 Wednesday 13 June 2012 N/A
0.12.1 Wednesday 6 July 2012 N/A
0.13 Monday 17 Sept 2012 N/A
0.14 Tuesday 13 Nov 2012 N/A
0.15 Thursday 28 Nov 2012 N/A
0.16 Saturday 12 Jan 2013 N/A
0.17 Saturday 25 Feb 2013 N/A
0.17.1 Saturday 23 Mar 2013 N/A
0.17.2 Tuesday 9 Apr 2013 N/A
0.18 Saturday 18 May 2013 N/A
0.19 Wednesday 26 June 2013 N/A
0.20 Friday 9 August 2013 N/A
0.20.1 Thursday 19 September 2013 N/A
0.21 Thursday 29 October 2013 N/A
0.22 Thursday 11 December 2013 N/A
0.22.1 Tuesday 4 February 2014 N/A
0.23 Wednesday 19 March 2014 N/A
1.0[1] Wednesday 29 April 2014 N/A
1.1 June 2014 Will be based on Debian 7 (Wheezy) and will bring many new versions of the software included in Tails.[1]
2.0 TBA Will focus on sustainability and maintainability. Most of the work put into this release will aim at reducing the workload of creating new versions of Tails through infrastructure improvements and automated testing. The developers' objective is to be able to release same-day security updates.[1]
3.0 TBA Will focus on changes in the internals of Tails to make it more secure. That includes sandboxing critical applications and software hardening.[1]
Old version
Older version, still supported
Latest version
Future release

See also