Hide My IP
Tilgore Kraut - March 2, 2010nternet today has become quite pervasive in our lives and increasingly every detail of our daily activities gets detected on to the web. It is not surprising to come across marketing emails that were based on the purchases we made or the sports site we visited. While many us do not mind receiving promotional offers, the surveillance of our visits by websites can posses a direct privacy risk as they can be exploited by potential business rivals or malicious individuals. In such a scenario one needs to mask their IP addresses, which essentially is our identity on the internet, and software like Hide My IP 2008 allows us to achieve precisely the same. The application utilizes a proxy server to hide your IP and allows you to change the allocated IP multiple times to guarantee you a full online anonymity.
The Hide My IP displays a compact light grey colored interface that sports a set of easy to use options to hide your IP address from potential threats. A user friendly design assists the user to configure settings simply and quickly to browse the web stress free. The software enables the user to hide his/her IP address and choose from hundreds of fake IP on the web and automatically installing the same into your e-mail, web browser or game application. The software feature list includes changing the settings of your IP frequently as desired, encrypting the internet connection to prevent hackers from sneaking into your account, and send anonymous e-mails with high speed servers; and securing yourself from any online threat.
The Hide My IP offers a great way to hide your online activities from malicious websites and comes across as a handy application for many executives in the banking and financial sector who need to zealously guard their privacy.
This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010 at 8:19 am and is filed under Main. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
August 27th, 2010 at 11:01 am
Usually you should know if you’re connecting to a VPN, because you have to specifically set up a VPN. It’s not something that happens when you go to a website, its something you configure intentionally. A secure https connection is not a VPN connection.