Anonymous browser
Anonymity on the Internet is important to everyone. Whether you're concerned about protecting your identify from online predators; and, lets face it, if you're assuming that the credit card companies are watching out for you then you're in for a rude awakening; or, if you're one of those people that live in the gray area of of the law for which the general population has little sympathy, then hiding who you are is something that has at least crossed your mind.
Our bureaucratic legal system takes time. While it's wrestling over such clearly morally ambiguous issues such as whether sex toys should be legalized, the citizens of this "free" country are being convicted of acts which many of us have engaged in at least once.
Furthermore, there will always be a need to protect against forces which stand contrary to the beliefs of this country such as when a leader, domestic or otherwise, challenges the basic idea that we should secure the blessings of liberty, and be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures.
So it stands to reason that as we evolve technologically, we implement failsafes to protect the very freedom which makes a country great. One such innovation has been the introduction of anoymizing software to the ubiquitous internet program: the web browser in a simple to use package. The xbBrowser (save as) combines the technology of the Onion Router (Tor) with a portable version of the Firefox browser.
When you visit a website, your activity on that website is recorded. The information is logged for a variety of reasons including, web site analysis. When a web browser makes a web requests it often gives the server information about the web browser itself, the operating system its running on and the add-ons that are installed on the browser. It also gives the web server the address of the machine that's making the request. This address, the IP address, can be used to determine the location of client's machine and can even disclose the organization and user responsible for that address.
The onion router helps obscure the identify of the client by routing the request through other peers on the onion network.

