This extension adds a new option to your browser’s right-click menu:
"Open link anonymously via Webfuse."
It also adds a quick-access button next to links on major search engines
for fast, private browsing. When selected, the link is opened in
a Virtual Web Session — a secure, sandboxed environment hosted on
remote infrastructure.
I like the idea and the following is more feedback than complaint.
With little detail about Webfuse, it comes off as some unknown entity and that seems unfortunate. Beyond that, the overall description raises more questions (for me) than it answers.
This is what I wondered when I read the description:
What even is Webfuse?
Is the extension always inactive unless a user triggers an action?
Does the extension do anything that isn't explicitly detailed
in the description?
Regarding the rest of the description:
Whose infra are the sandboxes sitting on?
What is logged? What is the policy for those logs?
Are new sandboxes created for each opened link?
What happens to a sandbox when a page is exited? Is it reused? Does
any of it persist? For how long?
Are former sandboxes scrubbed or just deleted?
I looked a bit and found the product pages for Webfuse. I get the gist and I think they would bring some legitimacy and cachet to the extension.
That said, I don't know what info Google does/doesn't allow on an extension page. However, if you can better associate Webfuse with the extension and chat-up that this is a free Webfuse service, I believe it'd make the ext feel less unknown.
Regarding my other questions, those are things that security-aware folks would want to know - and they seem to be your audience here. Putting NetSec meat in easy reach might instantly generate good vibes.
With little detail about Webfuse, it comes off as some unknown entity and that seems unfortunate. Beyond that, the overall description raises more questions (for me) than it answers.
This is what I wondered when I read the description:
Regarding the rest of the description: I looked a bit and found the product pages for Webfuse. I get the gist and I think they would bring some legitimacy and cachet to the extension.That said, I don't know what info Google does/doesn't allow on an extension page. However, if you can better associate Webfuse with the extension and chat-up that this is a free Webfuse service, I believe it'd make the ext feel less unknown.
Regarding my other questions, those are things that security-aware folks would want to know - and they seem to be your audience here. Putting NetSec meat in easy reach might instantly generate good vibes.