Subvertise is an open-source response to the recent bill repealing FCC privacy controls for the internet.
If ISPs can sell your browsing data to advertisers, what value will that data have if it's full of false-visits?
Subvertise just runs in the background, randomly visiting a list of random (but safe) websites for random amounts of time.
You can modify the list of websites to add some spice to it.
When ISPs sell your browsing history, they'll be selling a large list of random websites, with your actual visits mixed in. Advertisers won't know what you're really visiting, foiling their sinister plans.
If you'd like to run Subvertise manually, then you'll need to clone the repository,
run npm install
and npm start
.
There's now a Windows installer for release v1.1.2.
Just download the setup file and run it. You may need to run it as "Administrator" on Windows 7.
A portable AppImage for 64 bit Linux exists here v1.1.2.
If Subvertise just hit facebook.com instead of loading the page, then all the other domains (cdns, ads, etc) would not be loaded, and ISPs would know this wasn't a legitimate visit.
So, it loads the whole page to fool em good.
You betcha! What's your privacy worth to you? Unless you pay per MB (and very few people do), this shouldn't be much of a concern. It's not streaming video or downloading huge files.