Brave, a browser unknown to the wider world, has released a new version that enables you to surf thenetwork anonymously via Tor.
The Browser Brave, however, is famous in anonymous browsing circles for its original privacy features. It now comes with the new “Private Tabs with Tor” feature, to confirm its security reputation.
Η ομάδα Βrave αναφέρει ότι η νέα λειτουργία “Private Tabs with Tor” θα είναι χρήσιμη στους χρήστες που αναζητούν πρόσθετη προστασία πέρα από όση μπορούν να έχουν από τον τοπικό υπολογιστή τους. Οι ιδιωτικές περίοδοι περιήγησης (Private Browsing sessions) επινοήθηκαν για να σκουπίζουν τα δεδομένα από το πρόγραμμα περιήγησης μετά την ολοκλήρωση μιας περιόδου περιήγησης. Αλλά αυτός ο τρόπος περιήγησης δεν είναι αδιαφανής για τους ISPs και τους ιστοτόπους στους οποίους επισκέπτεται ένας χρήστης, οι οποίοι μπορούν να καταγράψουν τις κινήσεις του χρήστη.
The built-in Tor technology now in Brave enables you to surf the web anonymously by changing the address IP of the user, since it diverts the browser's traffic through the Tor network.
Although Brave does not yet have a stable version as it is under development and whatever version has been released so far is in beta, it is particularly popular in circles interested in protecting personal data. This is because Brave's default configuration blocks ads, tracking scripts, and encryption mining scripts.
Brave's private browsing tabs do not save users' browsing history or cookies and also use the engine searchs DuckDuckGo (a search engine that does not log the user) as the browser's default search provider.
The version of Brave released today, including Tor support, is v0.23 beta. You can download it from Brave website. It runs on Windows 32 and 64 Bit, macOS10.9 +, and in 64 bit linux for Debian-Ubuntu-Mint-Fedora-OpenSUSE. Runs on a smartphone on Android and iOS.