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Best Browser for Safe, Anonymous & Secure Surfing

Do Son February 10, 2023 4 minutes read
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The Internet has changed us completely. The way we live, communicate, work, and even go to sleep – it’s everywhere. The comfort is quite real, however, with all the convenience comes the inevitable matter of personal data privacy.

You might not know, but your regular browser collects a ton of your personal information that can later be sold to anyone interested – sometimes for enormous money. Your information is tracked, collected, and stored into a profile called browser fingerprint: we will touch on the technical issues later and talk about the usefulness of anti-detect technology and the anonymous browser.

Security Is Not Anonymity

Most people don’t mind sharing personal information with corporations like Google or Facebook. Their services are free, but it doesn’t mean you’re not paying for them: they sell your personal data to anyone interested, earning billions on ads you see there. This simple fact, however, is widely neglected – a new study showed regular Americans trust corporations way more than they should. Indeed, tracking might seem harmless: the world just works that way.

Your personal data may be claimed secure on Meta or Google servers when you give it to them, but don’t mix security and anonymity. You’re anonymous only when they don’t get your personal data in the first place. Being anonymous online is not an easy task: to do it right, you need to know certain rules.

Browser Fingerprints

Aside from cookies and IP address, your regular browser tracks and stores a ton of information about you into a profile. These information profiles are called browser fingerprints, and they are a real gold mine of your personal data.

Curious about what is collected from you right now? Check out Iphey. Besides checking your identity to be real, it shows the massive amount of your information that websites store.

Β Anonymous web browsers change your fingerprint in a sophisticated way, so even advanced websites naturally think you’re someone else. That’s why they’re also called antidetect browsers. If you look at one, it’s just like a regular browser – even your favorite extensions can show up automatically. But when you go to Facebook or Google, your personal data is safe: nothing will be collected, and you can browse freely. That’s called true anonymity.

Anonymous Web Browsers For Business

True anonymity opens up unlimited opportunities for online businesses. You might not know this, but there are businesses that rely on antidetect tools completely, and they are not dark web activities. For example, a small social media or advertising agency will likely use one of these on a daily basis.

There are more specific uses of this technology, like web scraping. Here’s what it is in brief words: massive amounts of chaotic data are extracted from websites to be later interpreted and used for business purposes or sold. A good legitimate example of how that data is used is a flight aggregator. It collects data from other flight websites and compiles them into offers for you.
Web (or data) scraping has recently turned into a career on its own: pro scrapers charge $30-$40 per hour, and that’s not the limit.

Is It Legal And Safe To Use?

At this moment anonymous web browsers are completely legal according to US and EU laws. Antidetect tech provides unrivaled personal data protection. It does not compare to VPN services and proxies that still give away a whole lot of your personal data to websites, hiding only your IP address.

Anonymous web browsers are widely used in countries that limit or close down the internet. For example, Twitter was blocked in Turkey after the recent earthquake. When the public raised their voices online, the authorities began limiting the internet.

Unfortunately, sometimes true anonymity is used for purposes which are not always ethical, like scraping from websites that don’t allow it. We don’t encourage that. The antidetect technology itself was originally created for personal data protection and is in no way illegal or dangerous. It’s always up to the end user exactly how to apply it.

You Have A Right To Be Anonymous

Basic personal anonymity is a human right we have almost lost today. In today’s climate, with increasing concern over online privacy and data protection, an anonymous web browser is not a new curious option anymore. It is becoming a critical tool, especially for online businesses.

It doesn’t seem like the internet world will get safer or easier to navigate. If you want to stay safe and keep your personal information private – be sure to catch up with the latest tools like anonymous web browsers.

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