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|    alt.privacy    |    Discussing privacy, laws, tinfoil hats    |    112,125 messages    |
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|    Message 111,580 of 112,125    |
|    Marion to Marion    |
|    Re: What are the current free proxy brow    |
|    11 Sep 25 17:41:33    |
      XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-10, alt.comp.freeware       From: marionf@fact.com              Marion wrote:       > If something takes three clicks, we should drop it by a third to two and if       > it takes two clicks we should drop it in half to one click. I'm still       > debugging as I have to make sure I don't already have an iconified Aloha       > session already running 'cuz it can write to its cache of the Preferences.              UPDATE.              The Aloha VPN browser is now opening well with autohotkey hitting a couple       of buttons so that cookies are cleared & the VPN is turned on in 1 click.              I invested a bit of time in free SOCKS5 proxies but I don't recommend them       for Chromium browsers. Proxies work great in Mozilla browsers though.              The advantage of the free SOCKS5 proxies over free VPN servers is speed.              There is a huge disadvantage in complexity though - only for Chromium       browsers since Mozilla browsers are designed well to use proxy settings.              A SOCKS proxy routes all types of traffic, whether that's web, email, file       transfers, etc., through a remote server without inspecting or modifying       the data, making it protocol-agnostic and ideal for broad application       support.              Unlike VPNs (which encrypt all traffic) or HTTP proxies (which only handle       web traffic), SOCKS proxies give you quick anonymity without VPN overhead.              However, I've learned the hard way that Chromium browsers are a bitch when       it comes to proxies, and they're paired with Windows which is their bitch.              Windows has THREE (yes, 3!) proxy mechanisms, and you can't be sure at any       given time what mechanism any given application is gonna want to be using.              Why do 3 different proxy mechanisms exist?       Hell if I know.              Windows evolved over decades, and different components use different       networking stacks, each with its own proxy logic I guess.              1. WinINET (Windows Internet API)        Used by: Internet Explorer, legacy Edge, MS Office, "and more".        Proxy set via: Internet Options > Connections > LAN Settings.        Behavior: Reads settings from the registry and supports automatic        configuration via PAC files and WPAD.        Psiphon sets up a proxy here so apps using WinINET use it.              2. WinHTTP (Windows HTTP Services)        Used by: System services like Windows Update, Background Intelligent        Transfer Service (BITS), and some enterprise apps.        Proxy set via: netsh winhttp set proxy or via Group Policy.        Behavior: Doesn't automatically inherit WinINET settings        unless explicitly copied over.        If WinHTTP isn't configured, system services bypass Psiphon's tunnel.              3. PAC/AutoDetect (Proxy Auto-Config)        Used by: Modern browsers like Chrome, Firefox, & Chromium-based Edge.        Proxy set via: Browser-specific settings or via system-wide auto-detect.        Behavior: Uses JavaScript-based PAC files or WPAD to dynamically        choose proxy per URL.        Browsers may ignore WinINET/WinHTTP and rely solely on PAC,        so Psiphon must ensure PAC settings are correctly applied.              If any layer is missed, traffic could leak outside the tunnel - defeating       the purpose of Psiphon's censorship circumvention or privacy protection.              Sigh. And I thought I knew how Windows works after all these years...       --       Sharing knowledge - because helping is its own reward.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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