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              | Date: 2001-12-10 
 
 SafeWeb will noch einmal starten-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Wie Wired berichtet, möchte der Web-Anonymisier/dienst SafeWeb
 wieder in Betrieb gehen. Er stellte kürzlich aus wirtschaftlichen
 Gründen sein Gratis-Service ein. Nach heftigen User-Interventionen
 will SafeWeb noch einen Versuch starten. Dazu ist u.a. der Launch des
 Produktes "Secure Extranet Appliance" (SEA) mit 01/2002 geplant.
 
 Fix ist aber nix:
 "We will evaluate the prospects on an ongoing basis," says Chun.
 "The company's final decision will depend on whether there is a
 viable business model to ensure the privacy service is both sustainable
 and profitable. We care a great deal about privacy, but as a company,
 we also need to be profit-minded."
 
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 SafeWeb Considers Online Comeback
 (By Michael Singer, December 10, 2001)
 
 SafeWeb, whose Web site let users anonymously surf the Internet, is
 considering reopening its public site for business again.
 
 The Emeryville, Calif.-based company had shuttered its service last
 month after it failed to gain some additional funding, but a campaign
 from fans of the site and service impressed company executives
 enough to reconsider.
 
 "We have been overwhelmed by the response to the shutdown of our consumer
 privacy service," says SafeWeb president and co-founder Jon Chun.
 "We knew we had broad reach, but weren't expecting to receive this
 level of outside interest."
 
 The consumer privacy service, which launched in October 2000, used
 virtual private networking technology to let Internet users bypass
 firewalls of governments, corporations, and others who attempted to
 censor the Web. At one time, SafeWeb was processing more than
 4 million encrypted page views per day.
 
 The company's online privacy service is still being used in conjunction
 with its project with Internet Broadcasting Bureau, and its subsidiary
 the Voice of America, to help Chinese Web surfers access sites banned
 by their government. SafeWeb also licenses its technology to others,
 including In-Q-Tel - the venture capital arm of the Central
 Intelligence Agency and PrivaSec LLC, which offers a version of
 SafeWeb's anonymous surfing service, called SurfSecure, for a fee.
 
 But, since it turned off the service four weeks ago, SafeWeb says it
 has received thousands of phone calls and e-mails from users and has
 even been approached by several potential business partners that have
 persuaded the company to consider reviving the online privacy service.
 
 "We will evaluate the prospects on an ongoing basis," says Chun. "The
 company's final decision will depend on whether there is a viable
 business model to ensure the privacy service is both sustainable and
 profitable. We care a great deal about privacy, but as a company, we
 also need to be profit-minded."
 
 Chun says the company is now focused on launching its new product, the
 Secure Extranet Appliance (SEA), which is scheduled for launch in
 January 2002. The SEA, which is based on its core technology, lets
 companies build secure extranets so that remote employees, clients and
 partners can access internal applications and data securely using
 any Web browser.
 
 
 Volltext unter:
 http://siliconvalley.internet.com/news/article/0,2198,3531_936451,00.html
 
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 published on: 2001-12-10
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