Although many users believe that their Web surfing activities are
anonymous, a great deal of identifying information is transmitted to and
from websites that you browse. A history of the sites you've visited is
stored on your computer even after you close your browser, and most
websites keep logs of visitors' IP addresses and other statistical data.
For those who wish to surf the Web anonymously, most of the major
browsers offer secure browsing modes to give users more anonymity as
they travel the Web.
Instructions Internet Explorer
Run Internet Explorer and open the "Tools" menu. Click the
"InPrivate Browsing" option to open a new window that invokes this
secure browsing mode. Alternately, press "Ctrl-Shift-P" on your keyboard
to launch an InPrivate browsing window, or right-click a pinned
Internet Explorer icon on the taskbar and select the "InPrivate
Browsing" option from the context menu.
Browse as you normally would. If you visit websites where
you have accounts, you will need to log in manually because InPrivate
browsing mode does not load any cached information or cookies from
previous browsing sessions. If you return to one of these websites later
in a regular browsing session, your login information will be stored in
the usual manner.
Close the InPrivate browsing window when you are finished.
Make sure that you don't have any content you want to save in other
tabs, as all information will be lost when your close the window.
Mozilla Firefox
Launch Firefox. Click the "Firefox" button in the upper left
corner of the window and select the "Private Browsing" option.
Alternately, press "Ctrl-Shift-P" to start a private browsing session.
Click the "Start Private Browsing" button to begin your
private browsing session when prompted. Any tabs that you currently have
open will be saved and then closed, allowing you to recover your
current browsing session once you have finished browsing privately. The
"Firefox" button will turn purple to indicate that you are browsing
privately.
Browse as you normally would, keeping in mind that no user
data or preferences will be loaded from previous browsing sessions.
Click the "Firefox" button and select the "Stop Private Browsing" option
to return to standard browsing mode and reload your previously saved
session. Alternately, press "Ctrl-Shift-P" again to terminate private
browsing.
Google Chrome
Launch Chrome and click the "Wrench" icon to access the
options menu. Click the "New Incognito Window" option to start browsing
in Chrome's Incognito Mode. A new window will open with an Incognito
Mode icon that looks like a man in a trench coat and fedora.
Alternately, you can launch an Incognito Mode window by pressing
"Ctrl-Shift-N" on your keyboard while in Chrome.
Browse as you normally would. Note that user data and
preferences from previous browsing sessions won't be loaded while you
are browsing in Incognito Mode.
Close the Incognito Mode window to end your private browsing
session. Any cookies or other data produced by the browsing session
will be deleted when the window is closed.
Tips & Warnings
There are other
ways to browse anonymously, such as the TOR browser that was explicitly
designed to mask IP addresses and the Anomymizer.com website that routes
browser traffic through its own servers to hide your IP information.
Plugins can add
encryption features to some popular Web browsers. Firefox users can use
the FoxTOR or Ultrasurf plugins to surf the Web anonymously; the latter
is also available for Internet Explorer users. Chrome users can install
the TOR Button plugin, which adds a toggle button to the browser that
can be used to turn anonymous browsing on and off.
To protect your
personal information, you can manually delete cookies, temporary files
and other data using the "Options" or "Preferences" feature specific to
your browser. Make sure that you manually log out of websites and set
your browser to never remember passwords before doing this to ensure
that login data isn't saved or ignored when clearing cookies and other
files.
Turn off "third
party" cookies to reduce the trail you leave as you surf the Web.
Cookies are often placed on your computer when you browse a website, but
some cookies can be read by other websites for advertising and similar
purposes. In your browser's privacy settings, select "Customize
Settings" or its equivalent and uncheck the box beside "Accept
Third-party Cookies" or a similarly named option.
Web
browsing is often not completely anonymous. Even users who deploy secure
plugins and alternate browsers designed for anonymity can sometimes be
tracked through the websites they visit or activities they perform
online. If you post in chat rooms or on message boards, be aware that
your comments may impart revealing information that defeats your efforts
to surf the Web anonymously.
0 comments:
Post a Comment