Introduction
The four major browsers (Internet Explorer, Firefox,Chrome and Safari)
recently added private browsing modes to their user interfaces. Loosely
speaking, these modes have two goals. First and foremost, sites visited
while browsing in private mode should leave no trace on the user’s computer.
A family member who examines the browser’s history should find no evidence
of sites visited in private mode. More precisely, a local attacker who takes
control of the machine at time T should learn no information about private
browsing actions prior to time T. Second, users may want to hide their
identity from web sites they visit by, for example, making it difficult for
web sites to link the user’s activities in private mode to the user’s
activities in public mode. We refer to this as privacy from a web
attacker.While all major browsers support private browsing, there is a great
deal of inconsistency in the type of privacy provided by the different
browsers. Firefox and Chrome, for example, attempt to protect against a
local attacker and take some steps to protect against a web attacker,while
Safari only protects against a local attacker


Download pdf:
http://crypto.stanford.edu/~dabo/pubs/papers/privatebrowsing.pdf<http://crypto.stanford.edu/%7Edabo/pubs/papers/privatebrowsing.pdf>

-- 
Regards,
kishore sangaraju

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