If it really matters that they not be aware of each other, I recommend accessing each one in a separate VM. But that will seriously eat up resources. Unless you're using Tor, you'll also want to use VPN services so VMs don't share the same IP address.
On 20/01/12 05:32, grarpamp wrote: > There is a need to be logged into multiple popular sites at the same > time (facebook, google, yahoo, twitter, etc). These sites tend to > have all sorts of cross links between them (image embeds, cookies, > etc) that I don't want. I want none of them to be aware of the other. > So I can't just open up a browser and tab them all out. > > Two options seem to fit: > > 1 - Create separate Firefox profiles for each, start them all up. > This eats a ton of cpu/ram as it has to be one process per login. > And it runs out of desktop space too. > > 2 - Find a browser that firewalls the tabs from each other (SSL > session keys, cookies, DOM, scripting, data, metadata, etc)... > everything compartmented within its own tab. > > AFAIK, firefox is not capable of this, at all. > > I read Google Chrome treats tabs as processes, but I don't know if > their isolation is considered safe? ie: On the same guaranteed par > as Firefox profiles seem to be. > > For that matter, I don't know how good Firefox profiles are. But > so far it seems clean. But XUL, XPC? > > Any thoughts on Chrome or a better model than [1] above. > _______________________________________________ > tor-talk mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
