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Secure Browser Cleaning: Privacy Tricks for Chrome and Edge

·5 min read

"Ctrl+H" Is Just the Surface

Many users believe that pressing Ctrl+H and hitting "Clear History" guarantees their privacy. In reality, modern browsers like Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and Brave store data across a vast array of interconnected SQLite databases hidden deep inside your AppData directories.

The Pillars of Browser Tracking

Tracking Cookies & Sessions

Cookies aren't inherently bad; they keep you logged into Reddit or YouTube. However, "third-party tracking cookies" are embedded by advertising pixels to follow your clicks from website A to website B.

Local Storage & IndexedDB

HTML5 introduced powerful APIs allowing websites to store megabytes of data directly on your hard drive. If a website wants to cache an offline web app component, it dumps it into IndexedDB. The problem? Scrapers and trackers also use this space to build resilient "supercookies" that survive standard cookie wipes.

Icon & Thumbnail Caches

Every time you open an incognito tab and type a URL, the "Favicon" database on your computer registers the logo of the site. Anyone analyzing the physical hard drive could deduce your browsing behavior merely by looking at the cached network icons.

Unifying Privacy Control

Hopping into Chrome Settings, then Edge Settings, then Firefox Privacy panes is tedious.

The Web Privacy module within mcCleaner maps the exact localized paths of every major database for modern browsers.

With a single interface, you can wipe out tracking Supercookies, Local DOM storage, and Favicon leaks without deleting your saved passwords. Combining this weekly sweep with a reputable VPN ensures that neither local snoops nor your Internet Service Provider can piece together your digital thumbprint.

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