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by gesantioge1980 2020. 3. 22. 18:24

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There are a number of reasons you may want to delete your browsing history. From searching for a surprise birthday present for a loved one to surfing sites you shouldn’t while at work. It’s not just a case of removing the evidence from the History menu in your browser – that won’t stop Google highlighting search results you’ve clicked on in purple, for example.

Nor will it stop adverts for products you’ve researched appearing when you, or your spouse or boss, visit a completely different site. To get rid of every trace of your surfing you need to securely delete your history and get rid of all the evidence. It’s worth noting that if you invoke Private Browsing in Safari or Incognito mode in Chrome, your browsing history will be deleted when you close the browser window, along with cookies and the contents of any forms you filled in while you were browsing. Here’s how to securely delete your browsing history.

How to delete search history manually How to view and clear your browsing history in Safari 1. Click on the Safari menu and click Clear History. Choose an option from the dropdown menu and click Clear History again. All the sites you’ve visited in the period specified by the option you chose will disappear from the History menu.

That won’t remove all traces, however. To get rid of data stored by sites you’ve visited, click on the Safari menu again and click Preferences. Click the Privacy tab and click Manage website data.

You’ll see a window with a list of sites you’ve visited and notes on what data they have store on your Mac. If you want to remove all traces of every site you’ve visited, click remove all.

Otherwise, scroll through the list or search for a site whose data you want to delete, then click on it an click Remove. To make sure everything has been deleted, click on the Go menu in the Finder, click Go to Folder and paste this: /Library/Safari/ Delete the file named: HistoryIndex.sk Also, delete the contents of the Local Storage and Databases folders. These are used by websites you’ve visited to store data relating to your activity on those sites. Clear browsing data in Chrome. The first thing to note about using Chrome is that Google wants you to be logged in whenever you use it.

That’s because, whenever you’re logged in, Google can collect your browsing data and use it to serve you adverts. So, if you don’t want Google to know where you go on the web, make sure you’re not logged in when you use it. To clear browsing data, click on the History menu and click Show Full History. Now click on Clear browsing data in the left hand sidebar. A new web page will open with the options to ‘Clear the following items from’ Choose a time period for which you want to clear data and then tick the boxes next to the data you want to delete.

Click Clear Browsing Data. Delete browsing history in Firefox. Click on the History menu and click ‘Clear History.’. In the window that opens, click Details and then choose a time period for which you want to delete data. Click the tick-box next to the data you want to delete and click Clear Now.

To prevent Firefox ever storing history data, click on the Firefox menu and choose Preferences. Under the History heading, choose ‘Firefox will:’ and then ‘Never remember History.’ How to clear search history from all your browsers in few minutes Thankfully, there is a much easier way to delete your browsing history on a Mac, using, available in Setapp. Launch CleanMyMac and click Privacy in the Protection section, then click Scan.

Click on the first web browser whose history you want to delete and then click the box next to each of the items you want to delete. If you only want to remove history for specific sites, click the dropdown arrow next to Browsing History and check the site whose history you want to remove. Repeat that process for each browser whose history you want to delete from your Mac. When you’re done, click the Remove button at the bottom of app's window. And that’s it!

Told you it was easy! Has now removed the history from the web browsers you chose, along with any other data you specified, with just a few clicks. If you want to remove traces of servers you have connected to, rather than websites you’ve visited, you can do that too. Click on Recent Items List in the Privacy section of CleanMyMac and check the box next to Recently accessed servers – or click on the dropdown arrow and click the box next to specific servers – and click Remove. VPN for secure surfing Removing your browsing history from your Mac doesn’t make it go away completely.

As we said above, if you use Chrome while you’re logged in to a Google account, Google will still have access to your history data. Your internet service provider can to the highest bidder.

That's the creepy truth, and it's motivate users to check out tools that can hide their browsing histories and disguise their internet traffic. If you want to surf the web completely anonymously, you should use a virtual private network, or VPN. VPNs work by masking your IP address from the websites you visit and preventing your ISP from seeing where you go on the web. It also encrypts information you send across the internet, making it unreadable to anyone who intercepts your traffic. We'll, now instead of your ISP the VPN has your search history and traffic. What's to stop the VPN from selling your information to the highest bidder?

Of course, there are reputable VPN services out there. In addition to making sure the VPN will actually keep your data private, you'll want to make sure there's nothing shady in the terms and conditions.

To use a VPN, you need two things, an account with a VPN service and a VPN client to set it up. Is an excellent client and makes it very easy to set up and connect to most VPN services. Specifically, the VPN network helps to ensure privacy, as it hides your online habits. Here's the main reason to start using VPN with Setapp only for $9.99 per month. These might also interest you:.

There are two kinds of Mac users: those who use Spotlight constantly, and those who ignore it. If you’re in the second category, that’s too bad: everything about using a Mac gets faster with Spotlight. This search tool doubles as a text-based Siri alternative, and with just a few keystrokes, you can launch or look up anything. Getting started couldn’t be easier: just click the little magnifying glass. But if you really want to be quick, don’t click: press Command+Space on your keyboard to launch Spotlight. If you only learn one, make it this one. You’ll instantly see a blank search window.

What can this search box do? A lot: just start typing. Let’s dive in, starting with the basics and working our way toward lesser known features. Getting Started: Looking for Files The basic functionality of Spotlight is instant search of every file on your computer. A very simple use for this is to launch software: just type the name of the program.

Results will pop up instantly as you type, and you can hit “Enter” right away to launch an app or game. It feels silly at first, but it’s actually faster than clicking an icon somewhere—you never even have to take your hands off the keyboard. Once you get used to it, you will seriously wonder why you ever opened software any other way. You can also use this to launch individual panels in the System Preferences, again just by typing the name. This becomes really useful when you need to quickly find a file. If you want to quickly find a photo you took in Paris, just hit Command+Space and search for the word “Paris.” In the above example, you’ll notice that music came up before photos.

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No matter: you can use the up and down arrow keys to quickly jump from item to item. As you scroll through the photos, you’ll see thumbnails in the right panel. Searches look at filenames, but in the case of documents, Spotlight also looks inside the file. For example: way back in college, I helped publish a parody publication that was “written” by a cat named Muffles. All these years later, searching Spotlight for “Muffles” brings up the document, even though “muffles” is nowhere in the filename. – If you’re like me, sometimes you can’t remember where you put a document, or what its filename was.

In those cases, typing a phrase you know is in the document can help. You can open the document by hitting Enter, or see where it is in the Finder by hitting Command+Enter.

If you want to get fancy, you can also use basic boolean queries, including OR, AND, and NOT. It’s usually not necessary, but good to have sometimes.

Searching for Files With Natural Language RELATED: Spotlight is useful enough for simple searches alone, but you can go deeper. What does this mean? That you can type surprisingly specific queries and get the results you’d expect. For example: type “pictures from december 2015” and you will see only photos from that specific month. You can use similar language to find documents from last week, videos from last Tuesday, or applications installed in March. RELATED: We’ve talked a lot more about, so check that article out for more depth: there’s a lot to figure out here.

Take It to the Finder As we said before: you can see any search result in the Finder by pressing Command+Enter while it’s highlighted. But it’s also possible to bring your searches to the Finder, where there’s a much more nuanced set of controls. To do this, scroll down to the bottom of your results, then click “Show all in Finder.” If you’d rather not scroll down to the bottom of the list, you can use the keyboard shortcut Option+Command+Space instead—this will launch the Finder instantly. From here you can browse through all of the results, or you can further refine things by clicking the “+” button at top-right. This will allow you to add additional queries. If you use a search like this often, you can even hit the “Save” button at top-right to add it to your Finder sidebar.

That way you can see the results anytime. Spotlight Internet Tricks So far we’ve focused on Spotlight’s local capabilities, but it also offers a lot of Internet content. For example, if you want the weather, just type “Weather.” Or, if you prefer, you can also request the weather in a particular place by typing, for example, “weather in buffalo NY.” The trick also works for sports scores. Type “NHL scores” and you’ll see a schedule for today and a few recent scores. There are a few more tricks like this.

For example, type “define” followed by any word to see a quick definition from the web. You can also use Spotlight as a quick calculator. There are a few more features hidden here: stock prices, currency conversion, online videos, even results from Maps if you’re looking for the location of a nearby business. It’s not quite as feature complete as, but it’s got a lot of the same features, so give it a shot. Apple seems to add new features with every release. Customize Spotlight Content and Order Maybe you’re not a huge fan of these Internet results, or any particular category of results. No problem: just open up the System Preferences, then head to the Spotlight section.

From here you can disable any category of results RELATED: If you installed Xcode at some point, your results might have all kinds of system files that aren’t really useful to you. We’ve explained how to, and it might be a touch more complicated than you’d like if you deleted XCode. You can also disable specific folders from coming up in search queries, by heading to the “Privacy” tab. This can be a good way to keep any collections you might have private from other users of your computer, or to keep things like ebooks from cluttering up results.

I find that long books tend to dominate results, because they contain just about every common word. A Complete List of Spotlight Keyboard Shortcuts To really get the most out of Spotlight, you should really learn all of its keyboard shortcuts. It makes browsing search results a lot easier. Happily, there’s an on the Apple website; here’s a quick summary.

Command+Space will launch Spotlight. The Right Arrow will complete the search using the currently selected result, turning your query into the full name of that item. The Up and Down Arrows let you browse through the list.

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Command Up and Command Down let you jump between categories of results. Enter allows you to open the currently selected result. Command+R or Command+Enter will show you the current result in the Finder.

Option+Command+Space will open the current search in the Finder, so you can drill down with more tools. Command+L will jump to the definition for any search term. Command+B will look up your search term using the default search engine in your default browser. Command+I will open the “Get Info” window for the result. Command+C will copy the result, just like it would in the Finder. That’s most of what we could find.

We hope some of this makes Spotlight more useful for you, and that you won’t hesitate to get in touch with any other tips.