proxy web surfing

IfReborn

Member
Nov 21, 2003
111
0
0
Was looking for a good program or website that can fill me in on what a proxy is and how I can use one to surf the web privately.

Thanks
 

Goosemaster

Lifer
Apr 10, 2001
48,775
3
81
anonymizer or soem service liek that is probably your best bet.

ANd yes, there is no privacy, as address-to-address information rely is what the internet is designed for....

 

pcthuglife

Member
May 3, 2005
173
0
0
three reasons why someone would setup a proxy server:
1. Monitor network traffic
2. Block web sites and setup access control lists
3. Conserve bandwith

There are other reasons why people use proxies but those are the 3 reasons why i setup one up at the small office I work for. I'll give you a brief explanation of how those 3 functions work.

First of all my proxy server is the gateway for the network. So the setup is as follows
DSL >> Proxy >> Switch >> LAN
In order to access the web all computers on the lan must pass through the proxy.

1) The proxy server logs all incoming and outgoing traffic. The logs are very detailed and can be helpful. They also let me track all of the inbound connections.

2) I setup a URL blacklist that will prevent office users from viewing certain websites (mostly porn, aim, and yahoo)
2) The proxy server I use lets me setup access control lists, this means that I can specify a type of user by IP address. All of the IPs in my office are static, which makes it easy for me to setup ACL's. I can say that my ip 192.168.x.x is an administrator ip, while someone else's ip is a user ip. Once I break the office ips down into users and administrators I can setup rules for each list. For example, you could configure your proxy to prevent users from downloading exe or zip files, while the administrators have full access to all online content. It's a nice feature to have if the people you work with have a habbit of clicking on pop up ads.

3) Finally, proxy servers conserve network bandwith because they cache content from the pages you view. Once the content is cached, the next time a network user browses to a web site the content is loaded from the proxy instead of from the remote web site. An easy example of this is google.com. The first time a user on the network goes to google the google image is loaded from google.com, the image is then cached on the proxy, so the next user to go to google will load the google logo from the proxy instead of google.com. This will make web browsing seem noticeable faster to network users, and it will conserve the bandwith the users used to use by retrieving content over the web.

Hope this message helps.
 

Garion

Platinum Member
Apr 23, 2001
2,331
7
81
He's not looking for a local proxy or why to use one - He's looking for an open proxy that allows him to surf the web without being able to be tracked back to his local IP by the web server.

There are some out there, but not very many.. Some are free (and worth it) and others are a paid service. I haven't used them for years, but it's a real pain and slows things down a fair amount.

- G