Monday, January 28, 2008

Myspace proxy sites | proxy myspace | unblock myspace

Myspace is one of the biggest sites in US. Many people are using myspace and because of the use of myspace in schools and colleges by students, it has been blocked by network filters in such places. Therefore, one cannot simply browse myspace from such places. There are only a few only options that can be used to surf myspace from such restricted areas out of which using a "web based proxy" is the easiest. A web based proxy can unblock myspace from such areas and enable you to surf myspace freely. However, not all web based proxies works with myspace and only some proxies works fine with it. So, if you want to surf myspace with a proxy, Do you have to search for myspace proxy sites all the time? The answer is "NO" because we have a list of myspace proxy sites which can be used to unblock mysapce with a few clicks. Just select one of the proxies listed in our proxy list and click "surf now" and you can start surfing myspace from anywhere.

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Myspace proxy sites

In computer networks, a proxy server is a server (a computer system or an application program) which services the requests of its clients by forwarding requests to other servers. A client connects to the proxy server, requesting some service, such as a file, connection, web page, or other resource, available from a different server. The proxy server provides the resource by connecting to the specified server and requesting the service on behalf of the client. A proxy server may optionally alter the client's request or the server's response, and sometimes it may serve the request without contacting the specified server. In this case, it would 'cache' the first request to the remote server, so it could save the information for later, and make everything as fast as possible.

A proxy server that passes all requests and replies unmodified is usually called a gateway or sometimes tunneling proxy.

A proxy server can be placed in the user's local computer or at specific key points between the user and the destination servers or the Internet.
Types and functions
1.1 Caching proxy server
1.2 Web proxy
1.3 Anonymizing proxy server
1.4 Hostile proxy
1.5 Intercepting proxy server
1.6 Transparent and non-transparent proxy server
1.7 Forced proxy
1.8 Open proxy server
1.9 Split proxy server
1.10 Reverse proxy server
1.11 Circumventor
1.12 At schools and offices
1.13 Managed 'clean-pipe' proxy servers


A proxy server can service requests without contacting the specified server, by retrieving content saved from a previous request, made by the same client or even other clients. This is called caching. Caching proxies keep local copies of frequently requested resources, allowing large organizations and Internet Service Providers to significantly reduce their upstream bandwidth usage and cost, while significantly increasing performance. There are well-defined rules for caching. Some poorly-implemented caching proxies have had downsides (e.g., an inability to use user authentication). Some problems are described in RFC 3143 (Known HTTP Proxy/Caching Problems).