Cocoon hands on: the one-shot solution to private and secure Firefox browsing
A lot has been said about safe, secure surfing in recent months. Firesheep brought the necessity for HTTPS (and WPA-encrypted WLAN) into the limelight, and the Gawker Media breach reminded all of us that no one is safe.
The truth is, if you want to stay secure on the Web, you have to take a proactive stance. You need to install LastPass or KeePass, and using HTTPSEverywhere is a very good idea too. A good anti-virus suite like Microsoft Security Essentials is a necessity, and get into the habit of regularly scanning with Malwarebytes.
Alternatively, you can scrap everything and just use Cocoon, a service that proposes to solve all of your privacy and security problems in one fell swoop. There is a 45-day free trial, and it requires Firefox 3.6.13. I suggest you install it, and then read on!
Cocoon's implementation is transparent, and it's very nearly lag-free, too. Normally when dealing with proxy servers (or VPNs) the biggest problem is massively-increased latency -- not so with Cocoon.
This is the reason the service will cost $7/month after your 45-day trial, incidentally: all of your surfing traffic goes through Cocoon servers, and that adds up!
To provide a browsing history (which you can search), your visited websites are stored on Cocoon's cloud servers. You can opt out of that, though, if you want to be really secure. Apparently, though, all of your cloud-stored data is encrypted using your account password -- so as long as your password is suitably non-trivial, you should be safe.
Finally, Cocoon provides a built-in 'disposable' email address generator called "Mailslots." Visit any page with a sign-up form and Cocoon automatically generates a random email address (1234asdf1234@cocoonemail.com, for example) that you can use. You can then check your email using a built-in client; very smooth!
Basically, Cocoon doesn't let you download EXE files -- well, it does, but not without giving you a big full-screen warning. It's possible that Cocoon filters every page you visit and physically stops you from downloading malware, but I don't know for sure.
Not all viruses and malware are distributed via EXEs, either -- and I don't see how Cocoon can prevent nefarious JavaScript from messing you up.
If you want to surf safely, at just $55 for a year, using Cocoon is very nearly a no-brainer. Dell and Acer should bundle it with new PCs! Computer technicians the world over, like my cohort Lee, would be be out of a job.
The truth is, if you want to stay secure on the Web, you have to take a proactive stance. You need to install LastPass or KeePass, and using HTTPSEverywhere is a very good idea too. A good anti-virus suite like Microsoft Security Essentials is a necessity, and get into the habit of regularly scanning with Malwarebytes.
Alternatively, you can scrap everything and just use Cocoon, a service that proposes to solve all of your privacy and security problems in one fell swoop. There is a 45-day free trial, and it requires Firefox 3.6.13. I suggest you install it, and then read on!
Proxy
Most of the security added by Cocoon is by way of an SSL-secured proxy, run by parent company Virtual World Computing. While you won't see anything different in the address bar (it will still read http://, rather than https://), rest assured that all of your Web traffic is going via a secure proxy.Cocoon's implementation is transparent, and it's very nearly lag-free, too. Normally when dealing with proxy servers (or VPNs) the biggest problem is massively-increased latency -- not so with Cocoon.
This is the reason the service will cost $7/month after your 45-day trial, incidentally: all of your surfing traffic goes through Cocoon servers, and that adds up!
Anonymity
Cocoon's next big feature is complete anonymity. Your home IP address is never exposed, and Cocoon automatically boots Firefox in Private Browsing mode, meaning your computer stays free of cookies and other temporary Internet files.
To provide a browsing history (which you can search), your visited websites are stored on Cocoon's cloud servers. You can opt out of that, though, if you want to be really secure. Apparently, though, all of your cloud-stored data is encrypted using your account password -- so as long as your password is suitably non-trivial, you should be safe.
Antivirus and anti-malware
One of the slightly more interesting claims Cocoon makes is that it renders you completely immune to viruses and malware. The problem is, I can't seem to work out how Cocoon insulates you -- and I can't find a white paper that details the process on either the Cocoon or Virtual World Computing sites.Basically, Cocoon doesn't let you download EXE files -- well, it does, but not without giving you a big full-screen warning. It's possible that Cocoon filters every page you visit and physically stops you from downloading malware, but I don't know for sure.
Not all viruses and malware are distributed via EXEs, either -- and I don't see how Cocoon can prevent nefarious JavaScript from messing you up.
Very smooth
In conclusion, Cocoon is excellent. It's worth using just for its flawless, secure, seamless and quick web browsing; the throw-away email generator and built-in email client are pure genius, too. If the antivirus and anti-malware protection really work as advertised, this really could be the best all-in-one secure-and-private browsing solution.If you want to surf safely, at just $55 for a year, using Cocoon is very nearly a no-brainer. Dell and Acer should bundle it with new PCs! Computer technicians the world over, like my cohort Lee, would be be out of a job.
















Comments
25
Subscribe to commentsSebastian AnthonyJan 14th 2011 9:15AM
@generic.user45 I am activating this comment manually -- please note that you need to use a real email address to post comments on Download Squad.
DavidKrisJan 14th 2011 2:02PM
@generic.user45 We are getting back to you now via support. This is a new issue, they will probably need to get some info from you. Our Dev team is working on a couple issues that hadn't cropped up during the past year of beta testing. It's likely a conflict with a specific ad-on that you have. We greatly appreciate your patience.
We rolled out without doing any marketing - we told just one blog - because we are trying to do this in as controlled way as possible to not overwhelm our staffing, but word spreads quick (which is a good thing but we're scrambling to manage it). As a small start-up we're doing the best we can to stay on top of everything. Your feedback (and patience) is greatly appreciated!
yang925Jan 14th 2011 4:59PM
The reason the user is warned about downloaded EXE files is because exes files downloaded and run can open a connection to the host website exposing the users IP address and thus ruining the SSL tunnled http traffic privacy. Where as malware distrubuted through javascript / ajax worms would request content over the SSL connection and still remain anonymous.
DonJan 17th 2011 1:16AM
I'll stick to Chrome w/ MSE/Malwarebytes & safe surfing. Works amazingly well. ;)
Oh, and KeePass is truly excellent. I recommend it to everyone.
Derek DominoFeb 1st 2011 9:28PM
You can get the equivalent of the "Mailslots" feature for free at www.mailinator.com.