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  2. IronVest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IronVest

    The IronVest consumer security and privacy app and browser extension evolved from Blur, a privacy product designed to block trackers and provide masking tools, developed by Abine, a privacy company headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, and first released for Firefox in March 2011. [3] There is a free version, and a paid one with more features.

  3. Chrome Web Store - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrome_Web_Store

    Chrome Web Store was publicly unveiled in December 2010, [2] and was opened on February 11, 2011, with the release of Google Chrome 9.0. [3] A year later it was redesigned to "catalyze a big increase in traffic, across downloads, users, and total number of apps". [4]

  4. Video DownloadHelper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_DownloadHelper

    In the second quarter of 2015, version 5 of the extension for Firefox was rebased using Mozilla's Add-ons SDK (previous versions used XUL). Firefox Quantum ceased support for extensions that use XUL or the Add-ons SDK [6] so the extension was rebased using WebExtensions APIs. As a result of Mozilla's changes, reliance upon the companion ...

  5. Browser extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_extension

    Internet Explorer was the first major browser to support extensions, with the release of version 4 in 1997. [7] Firefox has supported extensions since its launch in 2004. Opera and Chrome began supporting extensions in 2009, [8] and Safari did so the following year. Microsoft Edge added extension support in 2016. [9]

  6. Signal (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_(software)

    The group chat protocol is a combination of a pairwise double ratchet and multicast encryption. [151] In addition to the properties provided by the one-to-one protocol, the group chat protocol provides speaker consistency, out-of-order resilience, dropped message resilience, computational equality, trust equality, subgroup messaging, as well as ...

  7. Google Safe Browsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Safe_Browsing

    Google Safe Browsing is a service from Google that warns users when they attempt to navigate to a dangerous website or download dangerous files. Safe Browsing also notifies webmasters when their websites are compromised by malicious actors and helps them diagnose and resolve the problem.

  8. Internet privacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_privacy

    Internet privacy involves the right or mandate of personal privacy concerning the storage, re-purposing, provision to third parties, and display of information pertaining to oneself via the Internet.

  9. Zoom (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoom_(software)

    [22] [23] Features include one-on-one meetings, group video conferences, screen sharing, plugins, browser extensions, and the ability to record meetings and have them automatically transcribed. [24] On some computers and operating systems, users are able to select a virtual background, which can be downloaded from different sites, to use as a ...