Introduction

 

Welcome to GPass, your key to anonymous, secure, and unrestricted Internet surfing.

 

GPass wraps the network traffic of your Internet applications in various formats and tunnels the wrapped packets through various dynamic channels to its servers. The GPass servers unwrap the packets and forward them to their destination on your behalf, yet they hide your identity (i.e., IP address).  

 

GPass adds security to your online activities because the content you transfer on the Internet is encrypted and disguised to avoid sniffing by your friends (well, you know, your boss, your DSL company, or even the national gateway of your country). GPass hides your identity as well as the websites you are visiting (but sorry, porn sites are blocked in GPass) because the worldwide distributed GPass servers act as your middle agents. In addition, while some websites may be blocked by the firewalls of your company, ISP, or country, GPass brings them back to you.

 

GPass supports several types of dynamic channels, which greatly enhance its ability to defeat Internet jamming (i.e., blocking by censorship agencies). If one type of channel is blocked, you can try another. The native GPass channels are the safest and fastest. If you have Skype or Tor installed, or if you know unblocked Socks servers, GPass can use them as dynamic channels as well. Except for the Socks Direct channel, GPass adds encryption and compression to the network traffic to protect your privacy and speed up your online transactions. These are represented by the green curves in the illustration below.  

 

You can use GPass to enhance your online security with most of your favorite Internet applications. Supported applications include web browsers (such as Internet Explorer or Firefox), multimedia players (such as Windows Media Player or Real Player), email clients (such as Outlook or Thunderbird), Instant messengers (such as MSN, Skype, and Yahoo messenger), and download managers (such as wget and FlashGet), etc.

 

The creator of the software and network believe in benefiting humanity, free information exchange on the Internet, and harmony in the global Internet community. GPass absolutely does not have malicious ad-ware or backdoors, and it absolutely does not intend to harm you or your computer. GPass is green software: it runs from a single EXE file and does not need installation. 

  

GPass is free for personal use within selected countries where unjust Internet jamming is prevalent. To download, please visit our website www.gpass1.com.