An intermediary which prevents Web sites from seeing a user's Internet Protocol (IP) address. Anonymizers are often used to circumvent company network acceptable use policies to potentially hide non-appropriate behavior, however in the home setting they may be used to provide additional layers of anonymity and protect privacy.
Comment
From the author:
" * Fell free to surf the web pages.
* Supporting HTTP/S and FTP protocols.
* Supporting AJAX enabled and Web 2.0 sites.
* Supporting HTTP and FTP authentications.
* Download tool to let the user download files regardless of their type.
* Resume-supported downloading.
* The capability of page compression for fast receiving.
* Supporting Basic, Digest and Integrated Windows Authentications.
* Supporting submission forms for sending registration data and uploading files.
* Supporting cookies and JavaScript cookies.
* The capability of displaying the pages of unknown encoding and forcing. them to be displayed in UTF-8 encoding.
* Supporting JavaScript and Cascade Style Sheet (CSS) files.
* The capability of displaying the original URLs and pictures on a float bar.
* Displaying the page title on the browser caption.
* Supporting dynamic content created with JavaScript.
* Automatic update to make proxy current.
* Password protection against strangers; good for personal use."