6 private links
Block unwanted sites from your Google, DuckDuckGo, Startpage.com, Bing and Yahoo search results.
Where Am I Right Now, Asking 'Where Am I?' or 'My Current Location?'. This web detects your location, and display your location on google map (latitude, longitude, and LOCATION NAME).
Inox patchset tries to provide a minimal Chromium based browser with focus on privacy by disabling data transmission to Google.
We show how third-party scripts exploit browsers’ built-in login managers (also called password managers) to retrieve and exfiltrate user identifiers without user awareness. To the best of our knowledge, our research is the first to show that login managers are being abused by third-party scripts for the purposes of web tracking.
Finally, one of the major browsers is doing something about canvas fingerprinting
Who placed the JavaScript code on two primetime dot-coms? So far, it's a mystery
Firefox respects your desire to do other things while you browse the web. Firefox doesn’t use as much RAM as Chrome. And it doesn’t hog your ability to do more things at once. Instead, Firefox strikes a balance by using four content processes at any given time. Why four? Because four is the right number for many internet users: an amount that apportions enough RAM for superior browser performance, while also leaving more RAM for other apps and programs to use.
Fluxfonts is a specialized tool that attempts to tackle the privacy concerns raised by the possibility to collect information about the fonts installed on a system. Such information can be used to uniquely identify a system. With Fluxfonts, new fonts are randomly created and removed to prevent the same fingerprint from being recreated.
Font fingerprinting is a technique which is difficult and usually inconvenient for users to circumvent by other means. Fluxfonts is fully automated and runs in the background. By effectively always having a new unique fingerprint, it should prevent a system from being (re‐)identified between applications and web sites/‐browsers.
Chrome, Safari, Opera and extensions such as LastPass can be tricked into leaking private information using hidden text boxes, developer finds