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Just letting people know. I had to update by running the installer. Still doesn't show you if it's up to date.
At one time it passed the test, but it sure isn't now?
What's wrong with google, to put this in without a way to disable it.
also using a dns provider that supports it within proxy
I'm thrilled that the proxy doesn't leak dns. But the dns doesn't appear to support dnssec.
This page shouldn't work. dnssec-failed.org.
just discovered this. Since you can't install extension, this is a great alternative.
Noticed that the plugin exceptions (for flash) has a list of sites where plug in was allowed.
To me this is on one hand a history, but on the other a convenience.
Given this is a privacy browser, I think privacy should win, and it shouldn't keep list of exception sites (which is like a history).
But what's interesting is there doesn't appear to be a way to clear or delete it even if you wanted to.
The learn more takes you here.
So what does one do to clear these out?
or better build it into software.
The umbrella/encrypted data doesn't appear to do anything useful.
Maybe it should work like this extension.
Encrypt any temp files that you are supposed to delete when you shut down.
Use a secure random key that is not saved, such that the contents can't be recovered, and delete it when you start up.
Also I've noticed that if it recovers from a crash, it starts up with the tabs you previously had open.
I don't think this it should do this.
until the software lets you know you have the latest version.
It would be nice if we could set up the "proxy" feature to use our own vpn provider.
After reading the privacy policy at Spotflux (https://www.spotflux.com/policy.php)
That they are willing to give your IP to ad companies tells me all I need to know about them as a vpn company concerned about your privacy.
"These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to send, directly to your browser, the advertisements and links that appear on the Spotflux These third parties may automatically receive your IP Address for the purposes of serving geographically contextual ads. Advertisers may also use other technologies (such as cookies, javascript, or web beacons) to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and to personalize their advertising content."
dnsleaktest passes for me. Good work on that.
this product seems to block webrtc for me.
using https://diafygi.github.io/webrtc-ips/ to test.
It's the only chrome-based solution that has so far.
I couldn't register using this products own "proxy". lol.
Plus, how can a company which purports security not require ssl on it's own forums?
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