UnPlug is an extension which lets you save video and audio which is embedded on a webpage - it's a video download tool.
UnPlug scans web pages and tells you where media players are getting their data from, and displays it as a simple hyperlink: in most cases, you can then follow the simple download link to save the media file.
UnPlug works for lots of sites including youtube.com, ifilm.com, current.tv, revver.com, peekvid.com, video.google.com, mobuzztv.com and lots, lots more.
Unlike many other extensions, UnPlug scans the page, and if it doesn't know there the data comes from it can guess - correctly most of the time.
UnPlug your Plug-Ins and view media however you want!
More details at http://unplug.mozdev.org
Sunday, January 13, 2008
UnPlug
Sunday, January 6, 2008
hideBad
Hides bad things. Saves all the tabs in the current window, closes them, and replaces them with the homepage tabs. Saved tabs can later be recovered. Can clear the following at the user's choice...
Hides bad things. Saves all the tabs in the current window, closes them, and replaces them with the homepage tabs. Saved tabs can later be recovered. Can clear the following at the user's choice:
• History
• Recently Closed Tabs list
• Saved form info
• Saved passwords
• Download history
• Cookies
• Cache
• Searchbar
-
Firefox: 1.0 – 2.0.0.*
Friday, November 30, 2007
Protect your web searches
"My goodness, it's my whole personal life," she said. "I had no idea somebody was looking over my shoulder." -Thelma Arnold, AOL Searcher No. 4417749
AOL's recent "doh!" release of more than 500K user search records has prompted many people to examine their search methods. While no one approach is absolutely foolproof, using a combination of common sense searching strategies will make it harder for engines (or anyone else) to put together a detailed profile of you. Keep reading today's feature for a few ways to protect yourself from search engines.
AOL: shock and awe

The biggest problem with AOL's search records release is not what the individual queries revealed (although some of them were pretty disturbing); it was the fact that any search could be tied to one unique user ID. Looking at someone's individual searches is not necessarily invasive - however, tie all those searches to one unique user ID and we've got a problem. For example:
User 7777155 searched for 1974 Silverado truck parts, Sportsline, and Yahoo fantasy baseball. Sounds like a nice guy, eh? Maybe - he also searched for "free MILF hunter password", "you knw when your a mexican when" jokes, and something called "assparade."
Or how about these: individual users searched for "suspended lisence due to child support" along with "chapter 1 of reaching your potential", "the incredibles by pixar" and "cheap liquor" (?), or "battlefield 2 torrent", "fake doctor note", "custom gold grills", and "ice cream shoes" (sounds like this person's got a full day of non-stop fun planned).
A savvy data miner could use this data - which does include personal information such as SSN's, phone numbers, names, addresses, etc. - and go crazy: targeted spam, identity theft, the possibilities are endless.
Big Brother is watching
Here are a few things your search engine knows about you:
- If you've logged into services-Gmail, Yahoo Mail, etc.-they've got your user name and passwords at the very least. For example: if you've taken advantage of Google's integrated stable of services, you've pretty much given over the keys to the privacy kingdom, so to speak. I am NOT advocating that everyone quit Google, just giving you a heads-up.
- All your IP addresses are belong to us. Your IP address coughs up quite a bit of relevant info, such as your ISP, city, state, region, and more.
- Cookies, yum! Your individual searches and repeat visits to the same site can be tied together by cookies.
In addition, all search engines keep at least some of your searches for an undetermined period of time...that means that your search for the NKOTB back in the day might come up again. What's a searcher to do? Actually, there's quite a bit you can do to make your searches more private-note that I didn't say "completely private", because no one method is foolproof. However, if you mix up these tips you stand a much better chance of keeping your search records to yourself.
Keep it secret, keep it safe
Tweak your browser. This is the first and easiest step that any privacy-conscious surfer should take to increase security. There's quite a few ways that you can configure your browser to be more private.

Proxy: Using a proxy - think of it as a search prophylactic - is a great way to hide your tracks. Here are a few good ones:
- Anonymouse
- Privoxy
- Scroogle (not a proxy so much as it's a Google alternative that disables some of the more insidious data storage processes)
- BlackBoxSearch
- 250+ working proxies for safe access from work and school
A word of caution: do NOT use a proxy for online banking or to send sensitive information. Your computer's address might be shielded from search engines, but if you're not absolutely sure of the source of the proxy, you shouldn't trust it with your info.
Ixquick and Generic A9: In light of the recent AOL troubles, Ixquick is promoting itself as the privacy lover's search engine; in fact, from June 27 onwards, "Ixquick will permanently delete all personal search details gleaned from its users from the log files."
You can also search without logged search details over at Generic A9.com, an Amazon-owned search engine. When you search in "generic" mode, none of your personal information is recorded.

Cookies. Cookies are small pieces of identifying data that websites use to track your visits and your unique preferences. In order to be more private on the web, you're going to want to either use a cookie manager extension or program, or, just dump your cookies once a week.
CookieCuller for Firefox is a modified version of Firefox's built-in Cookie Manager. You can also try Junkbuster, Burnt Cookies, or Cookie Cruncher. I also highly suggest Lost in the Crowd, a service that "automatically and over time places a number of random queries through the search engines you use from your actual tracking cookie."
Don't feel like downloading anything? No problem - just set a reminder for yourself to clean out your cookies about once a week. You don't want to completely turn your cookies off, because then you can't take advantage of personalized services,local searches get messy, search results become less relevant, and shopping searches aren't as convenient. Disable your cookies selectively, depending on the nature of the website.
Tor: Tor, a service from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, is "a toolset for a wide range of organizations and people that want to improve their safety and security on the Internet." The EFF are search privacy nuts (in a very good way), so Tor is the security tool of choice for many privacy-conscious people.
Mix your services. Try to vary your service providers on the web; for instance, get your mail at Yahoo, search with Ask, use Google Calendar for time management, etc. If you allow just one provider to service all your needs, you're giving them a free lunch as far as privacy is concerned - for instance, if your email is provided by the same search engine that you search with, your emails and search queries can be used together to find out more about you (read your particular search engine's privacy policy to see if this is the case).
Privacy extensions. Here's a quick round-up of good search engine privacy extensions:
- TrackMeNot: for Firefox; basically creates a bunch of search "noise" so that your real searches are obfuscated.
- BlackBox Greasemonkey extension: an extension that reroutes your searches at Google, Yahoo, or MSN through BlackBoxSearch, a secure proxy. Hat tip to the always educational Google Tutor for this one.
- SwitchProxy: "Switch between multiple standard and anonymous proxy configurations quickly and easily with the SwitchProxy Tool for Firefox, Mozilla and Thunderbird."

Fake it. Create a disposable email address with Dodgeit, Pookmail, or even Hotmail. Avoid identifying registrations with Bugmenot or the Fake Name Generator. Go nuts with the mega-privacy list over at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. In short, there are many options available to you.
Personal computer health. In addition, there's always the standard cleaning out your cache, temp. Internet files, history, disabling auto-complete, etc. This is a pretty basic way to keep your search tracks at least semi-covered.
There's no perfect solution
None of these tips will keep you anonymous from a search engine 100%. The best way to keep your information private would be to get off the webernets completely, but as that's not an option for most of us, the second best is to use a combo of security methods to cover as much of your virtual booty as possible. What are your best search privacy tips? Just comment and share them :)
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Firefox Identity Selector
There is a prototype identity selector for firefox, which allows you to login to infocard enabled sites, without infocard, or even windows.
You can download it here: http://xmldap.org/xmldap.xpi
In order to get started, download and install the extension, and then browse over to one of the public relying parties. It also requires that you have a JVM installed, which you can pick up from java.com if need be.
Please note that this is of alpha quality. It only supports Self Asserted tokens, and many other desireable features have not been implemented. However, it should provide the based for some interesting discussions at IIW this week.
Enjoy, and please send feedback.
There seems to be a small bug with selecting cards. If you click on a card to select it, and its values do not fill in on the right side of the screen, then click it again until they do. If you attempt to submit with blank values it won't work
Also - keep in mind that Firefox will warn that a plugin to handle the infocard object isn't installed. Simply ignore this.
Firefox Extensions That You Thought Were Safe
Chris Soghoian has proved that some very popular Firefox add-ons, including Google Toolbar, Google Browser Sync, Yahoo Toolbar, Del.icio.us, Facebook Toolbar, AOL Toolbar, Ask.com Toolbar, LinkedIn Browser Toolbar may pose a security threat.
By design, each Firefox extension is hard-coded with a unique Internet address that will contact the creator’s update server each time Firefox starts. This feature lets the Firefox browser determine whether a new version of the add-on is available.
Mozilla has always provided a free hosting service for open-source extensions at addons.mozilla.org. But many third-party makers opt to serve updates on their own, using servers that often transmit the updates via insecure protocols (think http:// instead of https://).
As a result, if an attacker were to hijack a public Wi-Fi hot spot at a coffeehouse or bookstore — a fairly trivial attack given the myriad free, point-and-click hacking tools available today — he could also intercept this update process and replace a Firefox add-on with a malicious one.
Learn to Create a Firefox Search Plugin in Less Than 2 Minutes
Almost every blog has a site search form where you just type in the search query and press enter to digg through the archives of that blog. The only drawback here is that you first have to visit the site homepage to locate the search box. And there's also a possibility that the site has no search form at all.
This tutorial will show you a very simple Firefox hack that allows you to search any blog straight from the Firefox search bar without having to visit the actual blog. And there's something for IE users as well.
First the not-so-good approach though it works with IE: Type the following query in the Google IE toolbar or in the Firefox Search Box with Google selected as the default engine:
site:labnol.blogspot.com adobe captivate
This query will retrieve all documents about Adobe Captivate on Digital Inspiration. You can replace labnol.blogspot.com with any site URL that you intend to search.
You may have know the above trick already but it's tedious since you have to type lot of information for even a one word query. Hence, the simplest way is to add the site search feature to your Firefox search bar itself. Here's how you do it.
Open the Firefox search plugins directory [generally C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\searchplugins]. Create a new text file using Notepad and paste the following code:
<search
name="Firefox Facts"
method="GET"
action="http://www.google.com/search"
queryCharset="utf-8"
>
<input name="q" user>
<input name="sitesearch" value="fffacts.blogspot.com">
</search>
You can change Firefox Facts and fffacts.blogspot.com depending on which site you want to search from the Firefox search bar.
Save the above file with an src extension in the same directory [like "di.src"]
If you like to see a nice icon next to the search name, add a 16x16 gif file with exactly the same name in the same location where you placed the di.src file.
That's it - Restart firefox, type Ctrl+K or Ctrl + E to reach the Firefox Search Box, choose the above engine from the drop-down list and start searching. It makes searching your favorite blogs so much simple and fast.