Archive for the ‘Browsing’ Category

UT-VPN

April 11th, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, Internet

University of Tsukuba Virtual Private NetworkUT-VPN is a free and open source software application that implements virtual private network (VPN) techniques for creating secure point-to-point or site-to-site connections in routed or bridged configurations and remote access facilities. It uses SSL/TLS security for encryption and is capable of traversing network address translators (NATs) and firewalls. It was written by Daiyuu Nobori and SoftEther Corporation, and is published under the GNU General Public License (GPL) by University of Tsukuba.

UT-VPN has compatible as PacketiX VPN product of SoftEther Corporation. UT-VPN developed based on PacketiX VPN, but some functions was deleted. For example, the RADIUS client is supported by PacketiX VPN Server, but it is not supported by UT-VPN Server.

  • UT-VPN uses the OpenSSL library to provide encryption to packets.
  • UT-VPN offers username/password-based authentication.

Operational environment

  • Windows 98 / Millennium Edition
  • Windows NT 4.0
  • Windows 2000
  • Windows XP
  • Windows Server 2003
  • Windows Vista
  • Windows Server 2008
  • Hyper-V Server
  • Windows 7
  • Windows Server 2008 R2

 


 

 

YouTube Wants to Rival TV

April 11th, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, hide ip, Internet, VPN service

Google is dropping $100 million to add original programming to YouTube that will be featured on “channels,” reports the Wall Street Journal. YouTube aims to rival broadcast and cable TV in the hopes of attracting more viewers and advertisers. YouTube will add about 20 channels themed around topics like arts and sports. The overhaul comes at a time when more people watch TV shows on the internet, and the company is under increasing pressure to turn a profit. “YouTube executives say they want people to ‘watch YouTube’ the same way they ‘watch TV,’” with new services beginning before the end of the year, writes the WSJ.

 

Due to copyright,  some of the content might be blocked for non-US users. You might consider subscribing to a VPN service  that will change your IP address and give you instant access.

 

All in all, we’re looking forward to see how everything will develop.

China dismisses allegations over obstruction of Google’s Gmail service

March 29th, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, hide ip, Internet, VPN service

China has dismissed Google’s allegation that Beijing is hampering access to its email service as “unacceptable”. The internet provider said it believed government blocks were responsible for technical problems using Gmail from China.

The problems arose amid a tightening of internet controls that has made it increasingly difficult to use several popular virtual private networks. VPNs allow people to access material hosted overseas even if it is blocked by the Chinese government.

The new restrictions appear to be part of a security clampdown sparked by anonymous online calls for a “jasmine revolution” akin to the recent uprisings in the Middle East. Those messages were posted on an overseas website, but scores of Chinese activists and dissidents have been questioned, harassed and in some cases detained by the authorities for weeks.

A Google spokesman told the Guardian this week: “Relating to Google, there is no [technical] issue on our side. We have checked extensively. This is a government blockage carefully designed to look like the problem is with Gmail.”

Users have reported frequent problems with basic tasks such as sending and searching emails or opening their address books.

But Jiang Yu, a spokeswoman for the foreign ministry, told a regular news conference: “This is an unacceptable accusation.” She declined to comment further. The ministry of commerce and ministry of industry and information technology did not respond to faxed questions.

This month WiTopia, one of the most popular VPNs, asked users to report problems via email rather than its live support service because of an “extraordinary volume [of issues] from China shenanigans“. The architect of the online censorship system had previously said it was“lagging behind” in a battle against VPNs and that further tightening was needed.

“It’s grim. The reality is they can shut off all access if they want to,” said Bill Bishop, a Beijing-based internet specialist.

He added: “You are heading into a two-internet world.”

One Beijing-based industry source – who, like many, did not want to be identified in connection with the subject – said he hoped controls might ease in time. He pointed out that in the past sites such as Wikipedia had become available after having been blocked for years and suggested that blocks might be a temporary measure to encourage Chinese users to switch to local alternatives.

Many users are largely oblivious to the tightening of restrictions, preferring to use domestic email and social media services. But a growing number of activists and dissidents have embraced services such as Twitter, which is blocked and available only with the use of a VPN or other censorship-evasion technology.

Richard Buangan, spokesman for the US embassy in Beijing, said: “As part of our ongoing dialogue with China, we have emphasised to the Chinese government our view on the importance of an open internet. The ability to operate with confidence in cyberspace is critical in a modern society and economy.

“The United States believes that freedom of expression, including on the internet, is a universal right that should be available to all people, whether they are in the United States, China or any other nation.”

Google angered the Chinese government when it announced last year that it was no longer willing to censor search results in the country andmoved its Chinese search service to Hong Kong. It cited increased censorship and a cyberattack which it said appeared to have targeted human rights activists.

Separately, Google reported this month that it had seen “some highly targeted and apparently politically motivated attacks against our users”, exploiting a vulnerability in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser. It did not identify the subjects, but journalists in China reported suspicious messages from users such as “moli hua” – Chinese for “jasmine” – at the same time.

Greg Walton, of cyber intelligence company MetaLab Asia, who analysed those messages, said users were invited to click on links that led to malware hosted on a Hong Kong server. It was apparently designed to download Gmail cookies and email them to several addresses, enabling access to the targets’ Gmail accounts. One piece of malware appears to have been designed to connect the target computer to a command and control server in Heilongjiang, northern China.

Chinese officials have repeatedly said their laws ban hacking and that the country is itself a victim of cyber-attacks.

Still not all VPN services have been affected by the issue and you can very well use VPN to ensure your anonymity while in China. Since PPTP and L2TP connection types have been blocked lately, the best choice is services that provide OpenVPN connection type.

{ via The Guardian }

How to Remove Tracking Cookies to Protect Your Privacy

March 21st, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, Internet

Cookies are bits of text stored on a user’s computer by the Web sites they visit. Cookies can be used for authentication, storing your site preferences or anything else that can be saved as text data. Unfortunately they can also be used by ad tracking services to track the sites you visit online.

One step towards protecting your privacy is to delete the cookies in your browser.  Note that in addition to providing you with privacy from nosy ad tracking services, this will also delete any passwords or login information that you have saved in your frequently visited sites.

 

To Remove Tracking Cookies in Internet Explorer

  • Open Internet Options by clicking the Start button on your computer (bottom left-hand corner of your screen)
  • Select Control Panel
  • Select Internet Options
  • On the General tab, under Browsing history, click Delete
  • Select Cookies and click Delete; you may be asked to confirm that you want to delete them
  • Click OK

To Remove Tracking Cookies in Firefox

  • Open the Tools menu at the top of your browser window
  • Click on Clear Recent History
  • At the top of the pop-up window, set the time range to clear as Everything
  • Click the arrow next to Details to expand the menu and select Cookies from the list
  • Make sure that any items you do not wish to delete are unchecked
  • Click Clear Now

To Remove Tracking Cookies in Google Chrome

  • Click on the wrench icon at the top right of the browser toolbar
  • Select Options
  • Select the Under the Hood tab, usually found in the left hand tool bar
  • Click Content Settings
  • Next to Cookies, selecting “Clear cookies and other site data when I close my browser” will automatically keep cookies from being stored

To maximize privacy, we recommend that you set your browser to block cookies by default. This will, however, cost you a substantial amount of Web browsing convenience. Some sites, like Google, require cookies to function properly. Without them, you will not even be able to properly log in! A good balance between maximum privacy and Web browsing convenience is blocking cookies by default and selectively whitelisting certain sites to allow them to use cookies. If a site stops functioning while cookies are blocked, simply add it to your browser’s cookie whitelist, ensuring full functionality of that site. For Chrome, Vanilla is a browser extension that serves as a whitelist for browser cookies, automatically blocking cookies from sites you don’t explicitly allow. Vanilla puts you in control of the cookies that you create with a simple cookie whitelist. It lives as an icon in the Chrome address bar and indicates whether or not the site is allowed to save cookies.

 

A New Internet Privacy Law ?

March 21st, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, hide ip, VPN service

Considering how much information we entrust to the Internet every day, it is hard to believe there is no general law to protect people’s privacy online. Companies harvest data about people as they surf the Net, assemble it into detailed profiles and sell it to advertisers or others without ever asking permission.

So it is good to see a groundswell of support emerging for minimum standards of privacy, online and off. This week, the Obama administration called for legislation to protect consumers’ privacy. In the Senate, John Kerry is trying to draft a privacy bill of rights with the across-the-aisle support of John McCain.

Microsoft, which runs one of the biggest Internet advertising networks, said it supports a broad-based privacy law. It has just introduced a version of its Explorer browser that allows surfers to block some tools advertisers use to track consumers’ activities online.

It is crucial that lawmakers get this right. There is strong pressure from the advertising industry to water down rules aimed at limiting the data companies can collect and what they can do with it.

Most oppose a sensible proposal by the Federal Trade Commission for a do-not-track option — likely embedded in Web browsers. They have proposed self-regulation instead, and we applaud their desire to do that, but the zeal to self-regulate tends to wane when it is not backed by government rules and enforcement.

Senator Kerry has not yet proposed specific legislation, but he has laid out sound principles. Companies that track people’s activities online must obtain people’s consent first. They must specify what data they are collecting and how they will use it. They need consumers’ go-ahead to use data for any new purpose. They are responsible for the data’s integrity. And consumers should have the right to sever their relationship with data collectors and ask for their file to be deleted.

But there are potential areas of concern. Senator Kerry so far has not called for a do-not-track option. He would allow companies to write their own privacy plans and submit them to the F.T.C. for approval.

That would give companies flexibility to adapt their solutions as technology evolved, but it lacks the simplicity and universality of a do-not-track feature. It could yield a dizzying array of solutions that would confuse consumers about their rights and options and make it more difficult to enforce clear standards. Moreover, it would make it tougher for consumers to keep track of how their information is used and to whom it is sold.

Advertising firms still argue that privacy protections could undermine the free Internet, depriving it of ad revenue by reducing advertisers’ ability to target consumers. This is overstated. Advertisers will still need to advertise. If many people opt out of behavioral targeting, the firms will find other ways to do it. Why not keeping your online life anonymous ? You can use a VPN service and protect  your ID on the Web.

Privacy protections are long overdue. We hope the swell of support will lead to significant legislation.

source :  The New York Times

 

Protect our privacy

March 11th, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, Internet

Amidst new concerns over the safety of personal data on the web, Mozilla CEO Gary Kovacs argued that technological tools, rather than government regulation, should be used to better safeguard users’ privacy online.

“I never rely on the government to lead something, it just takes too long,” he said in an interview with The Huffington Post. “Capitalism works.”

Yet privacy experts counter that regulators must intervene to ensure consumers’ interests are taken into account together with companies’ priorities.

“The FTC and a bunch of other folks asked industry to self-regulate over the last several years and it’s actually gotten exponentially worse,” said Mary Hodder, chairman of the Personal Data Ecosystem Consortium. “I don’t think companies can control themselves and do the right thing in the face of getting all this user data.”

Mozilla is one of several companies taking note of renewed government efforts to tackle online privacy: In a report released late last year, the FTC chastised companies for their failure to more quickly address privacy issues–warning “this could be the last clear chance to show that self-regulation can…protect consumers’ privacy”–andendorsed a “do not track” system that would allow users to disable targeted advertising.

Mozilla, along with companies like Microsoft and Google, responded by providing a “do not track” tool that lets people opt out of online behavioral tracking.

The organization is also working on a feature that helps users identify who’s tracking them: as they browse the web, individuals will be able to monitor, in real-time, any companies watching their activity, with the option to block them.

“Our position isn’t that any of this behavior should not exist,” Jay Sullivan, Mozilla’s vice president of products, said in reference to targeted advertising. “It’s that the user should understand what’s happening and be in control of it.”

Kovacs noted that online privacy has taken on new urgency as more aspects of our identities–from our movie preferences to our relationships to our purchases–migrate to the web. Companies have played fast-and-loose with such consumer data, fueling privacy concerns.

“What we used to do on the web is search for information. We don’t do that exclusively anymore,” Kovacs explained. “The problem is there have been some pretty egregious instances of privacy breaches that have caused lot of folks to lift their heads…People are stepping up and saying, ‘What’s happening to my identity up there?’ It’s probably long overdue.”

ust as our behavior on the Internet has changed drastically, the web itself has also been reshaped by the rise of apps running on separate operating systems, such as Apple’s iOS, Google’s Android, Microsoft’s Windows Mobile, and others.

“The Internet is being fractured,” said Kovacs.

Kovacs warned the shift creates new challenges for developers, who must build apps for the disparate ecosystems, while consumers may also be losing out.

“Users don’t get the power of millions of web developers,” he explained. “Now they have to choose: do I live in an Apple world or in a Google world?”

 

 

Easy Hide IP

March 6th, 2011 by vitalie | No Comments | Filed in Browsing, hide ip

This is a tool provided by easy-hide-ip.com which I found to be very interesting. It works as an add-on to Firefox. This way you can hide your real IP address and guarantee anonymity of your actions while surfing on the internet, but I strongly recommend to read their terms of service first in order to avoid any future problems.

Pros:

  • Access to Netflix,  Amazon video,  Hulu,
  • Choose your IP  ( 6 server countries & over 50 IP addresses )

 

Cons:

  • When switching IP, you are disconnected for a min and your true IP shows
  • Cannot use Amazon download as it can tell your true location still despite IP change
  • No P2P/ Torrent  allowed
  • Personally I’ve had speed issues , but it could have just been my ISP

 

Try their demo version to make an evaluation of your own.

 

All in all , it’s a good service if you need to visit your favorite sites while you’re abroad and keep anonymity that is very important nowadays.