Privacy Web

Purists maintain that anonymous surfing through a privacy web site service is not very anonymous, as all of your requests and IP(s) are stored on their server. This could easily lend itself to profiling. Contrast this with using random privacy web networks around the world as proxy servers. The administrators have no interest in public privacy web Internet traffic per se. If they notice anonymous surfing, they will simply close the port. This actually keeps this type of privacy web anonymous surfing even more anonymous, because your computer's requests are not all located on one server.

  • Your IP address is visible to the anonymization service: that's required for your connection to work. You are trusting that they are not logging your privacy web connection and logging who you're connecting to. You're further trusting that they won't reveal any of that privacy web to anyone else.
  • The service's IP address is visible: possibly making it obvious that you are using a privacy web anonymization service. That might make it look like you have something to hide.
  • You may not need an IP address to be identified. Many individuals were identified solely by the search queries that they made on privacy web. As always, be careful with what information you provide as you browse; search terms, URLs, form information - individually they might mean nothing, but taken in aggregate you might be leaving an identifiable privacy web trail.
  • The very nature of adding a computer "in the middle" of your privacy web requests adds time and makes things slower. I've tried several anonymous surfing tools over the past few years, and each has been noticeably, if not unacceptably, slow.

Basic One paragraph text here mentioning what, who we are etc. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.