Monday, August 12, 2013

Posted: 12 Aug 2013 03:35 AM PDT
Many countries (such as Iran, North Korea, United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, Denmark, Italy, Ireland etc.) and ISP's block file-sharing websites like ThePirateBay, to get over the censorship numerous TPB proxies are already there. But celebrating their 10th birthday, TPB released the PirateBrowser - a single-click, portable web-browser which circumvents censorship and blockades and makes the site instantly available and accessible everywhere. The browser is 100% safe and comes without any bundled ad-ware, toolbars or other crap.

Download PirateBrowser

Version 0.6b

FAQ

Does it make me surf the net anonymously?

No, it's not inteneded to be a TOR Browser, while it uses the Tor network, which is designed for anonymous surfing, this browser is ONLY intended to circumvent censorship.
The Tor network is used to help route around the censoring / blocking of websites your government doesn't want you to know about.

If you are looking for something more secure you may want to try a VPN like PrivacyIO.

Does this contain any viruses or trojans?

There have been no modifications to any of the packages used, no adware, trojans, toolbars, etc. This is simply a tool to help people get around censorship.

Getting Started

  • 1) Download PirateBrowser and save it to your computer:

  • 2) Run the downloaded .exe file

    You may be prompted to verify the application, press "Run":
  • 3) Select the desination folder and press "Extract":


    (It will create a PirateBrowser folder in the path you assign)
  • 4) Go to the new directory and run the "Start PirateBrowser.exe" file:

  • 5) The application will start up. Once connected to the Tor Network the standalone Firefox browser will open up and you can start browsing:


  • TIP: If you want to create a icon on your desktop to start the PirateBrowser, you can right click on "Start PirateBrowser.exe", choose "Send to" and then "Desktop (create shortcut)".
 
source :Megaleecher.Net PirateBrowser

No comments:

Post a Comment