Access any web site from work

#1
Access any web site from work at your own RISK

Bypass firewalls and access blocked sites anonymously from work, school or college.

You can access blocked sites such as MySpace and even pornographic sites all anonymously.

www.prockster.com

Advice from Moderator:

PLS USE THESE SITES AT YOUR OWN RISK. CHANCES ARE STILL HIGH GETTING CAUGHT. GET A FREAKING PHONE THAT HAS INTERNET IF YOUR GETTING CONSTANTLY HORNY AT OFFICE. (NOTHING PERSONAL AGAINST ELMO16 JUST A WARNING FOR READERS.)
 
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#2
There have been many posts about discreet browsing; this might be the most discreet. You can browse anything you want, and one will be any wiser. Of course, if someone actually goes to this site, they probably will suspect that you are doing something that you want to hide, but they won’t be able to prove anything. Organizations will probably add this web site to their forbidden list of web addresses just to be on the safe side.
If the owners of this web site wanted to make this fool-proof, they could have given it a totally innocuous name like “United States Occupational Statics for the years 2000-2005” or “National Government Service Agencies List”. What organization would be suspicious of a web site like that?
 
#4
This is very interesting.

How does that anonymous e-mail sending works?
Evidently prockster.com is a remote proxy server. You go there, and then you direct it to take you to the web site you really want to go to. As far as your IT department is concerned, you never went to utopiaguide.com or any other forbidden web site. As long as your IT department doesn't catch on and add prockster.com to the list of forbidden web sites, you're golden.
 
#6
There is a link on that page that says: "Send e-mails anonymously." I am trying it with a couple of e-mail accounts that I have. Just to see how it works.

The link is right bleow the textbox where you type the address of the sites you want to see.

By the way. In my Firefox 3, the sites showed up in my History: "prockster.com - utopiaguide"
 
#7
There is a link on that page that says: "Send e-mails anonymously." I am trying it with a couple of e-mail accounts that I have. Just to see how it works.

The link is right bleow the textbox where you type the address of the sites you want to see.

By the way. In my Firefox 3, the sites showed up in my History: "prockster.com - utopiaguide"
I tried the anonymous email by sending email to my main account, but couldn't make it work.

I was able to surf web sites from my office that are usually blocked.

As for Firefox recording utopiaguide, well Firefox allows you to erase your history which would solve that problem.
 
#8
Not my personal problem, but a few guys here have mentioned that erasing the history would seem suspicious.

I wonder if there is a browser or if they are planning to make one which allows the user to delete selectively part of the history.

Is it too hard to program it? Maybe someone should propose this to the "authorities".
 
#9
In IE7 and Firefox, you can manually delete the browsing history. You'll have to delete the corresponding temporary internet files, cookies, saved links in the address bar and possibly autosaved text as well but that would be way too tedious and it's not 100% safe.
 
#10
Not my personal problem, but a few guys here have mentioned that erasing the history would seem suspicious.

I wonder if there is a browser or if they are planning to make one which allows the user to delete selectively part of the history.

Is it too hard to program it? Maybe someone should propose this to the "authorities".
Firefox is open source, which means that anyone is free to modify the code. Extensions for Firefox are plentiful, perhaps there exists an extension that does just this. If not, how are your C++ skills?
 
#11
Amateurish. 10 years ago you would have been surprised with this autodidact, but I moved to other hobbies. So, no, don't expect me to solve this. But you are right that maybe someone has already thought about this.
 
#12
Ahh exalibur's thread on discreet browsing mentioned the use of mobile Firefox that can be run from a flash drive stick. That would solve your problem.
 
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#13
That does seem like the best idea. One more object to hide or to not forget when leaving the office or the home computer. (Actually it is in the office where I am more concerned.)
 
#16
Lot of the companies use web filtering software and most of them can disable proxy sites. We use websense and it can filter proxies and can identify new ones with in minutes. And one should be real dumb to access pron sites or illegal sites from work during these high unemployment situations.
 
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billyS

Reign of Terror
#18
Tried it this morning. My company already has it blocked. I'm working from home using a VPN connection and unfortunately it takes over the internet connection. I need to disconnect to view my favorite websites or use the house computer.
 
#19
Not my personal problem, but a few guys here have mentioned that erasing the history would seem suspicious.

I wonder if there is a browser or if they are planning to make one which allows the user to delete selectively part of the history.

Is it too hard to program it? Maybe someone should propose this to the "authorities".
Safari, let you browse with a privacy button, it doesn't mark anything in your history or save any cookies, auto fill forms..
 
#20
Wouldn't it be just easier to use LogMeIn or GoToMyPC and log into your own pc at home to do your web browsing? All your company would see would be this access to their web portal and not all the other pages you visit. Unless they block access to these type of remote log in pages.
 
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