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Anonymizer universal none found
Anonymizer universal none found








anonymizer universal none found
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After all, sometimes we actually want to let a merchant know who we are.

anonymizer universal none found

Once the message expires, or if someone tries to tamper with it- poof! The file goes bye-bye, wiped completely from the recipient's hard drive using a technique developed by the Defense Department to erase classified disks.īut not everything we do on the Internet has to be so cloak-and-dagger. The file is then encrypted and dispatched. Once installed, the sender can specify who can open the file, how many times it can be read or printed - even how many minutes or hours it can be used before expiring.

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To use it, both sender and recipient need a copy of the free software. The service protects file attachments - anything from a word processor document to a music file. "It does everything but smoke," says Bob Gomes of Infraworks, which plans next month to unveil the free service, called InTether, which allows you to retain control of an e-mail after it arrives at its destination.

#Anonymizer universal none found how to

Remember the tapes Peter Graves listened to on "Mission: Impossible"? Well, a start-up in Austin, Texas, has figured how to make an e-mail message self-destruct. After the note has been read, ZipLip digitally shreds it.Įven more exotic technologies are on the way.

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To read the message, the recipient punches in a password previously worked out with the sender. Afterward, ZipLip notifies the recipient that a letter is waiting. To use it, you compose an e-mail on the secure ZipLip Web site. Launched this month, a new service called ZipLip offers an alternative for people who want to keep their correspondence private but want recipients to know who sent it. Also, since your recipient has no idea who sent the mail, they may have a hard time replying (which is why this technique is popular among junk e-mailers). To keep your identity secret, you can use a "remailer." These services - Anonymizer and Replay are two good ones - strip away identifying information in the header of your e-mail and bounce the message through several computers to erase all traces of its origin.īecause of the circuitous routing, remailers are slower than sending e-mail directly. And its journey leaves a trail with your name at the beginning. Like a postcard, an electronic message can be read by any competent hacker as it hops from computer to computer to its destination. ( offers a faster service for $50 a year that gives subscribers the option of choosing which cookies they want to keep and which they want to chuck.)Į-mail presents its own privacy dilemmas. Cookies, for example, save you from having to punch in your password repeatedly on a secure Web site and make it possible to customize your Yahoo! home page with local weather and the prices of your favorite stocks. Also, cookies and JavaScripts aren't always bad. Using these services is usually slower than surfing directly.

anonymizer universal none found

The service - and more recent imitators such as Aixs Net Privacy - are simple to use: enter the address of the Web site you want to visit into an on-screen address bar.Īnonymous Web browsing comes at a price, however.










Anonymizer universal none found