Epic browser - The News of India

 India now day by day launch own apps and build own economic development. China-india fight to create own a brand and rank in world.


Epic is a privacy-centric web browser. It was developed by Hidden Reflex using Chromium source code. The Epic Web site says that it is always in "private browsing mode", and exiting the browser deletes all browser data. During browsing as little as possible is stored.


The browser has been created by a team of Indian engineers on the opensource Mozilla platform, it said in a statement. . The browser has been created by a team of Indian engineers on the opensource Mozilla platform, it said in a statement. “Epic provides a uniquely Indian browsing experience.

Epic runs all search requests through a baked-in proxy service — actually an integrated VPN (virtual private network) — that Hidden Reflex itself operates. That means search engines can't sniff out the user's real IP address, and so can't track the user by that address.



Epic is a private, secure web browser that blocks ads, trackers, fingerprinting, cryptomining, ultrasound signaling and more. Stop 600+ tracking attempts in an average browsing session. Turn on network privacy with our free VPN (servers in 8 countries). We believe what you browse online should always be private.


The Epic Privacy Browser is a product from Hidden Reflex, a software product company founded by Alok Bhardwaj and based in Washington DC and Bangalore, India. All development is done in India. Rob Malda, the founder of Slashdot is on our Board of Directors, and technology writer and privacy advocate Douglas Rushkoff is an advisor.



Our investors include the Washington Post Company.


Alok Bhardwaj, Founder [alok AT hiddenreflex.com] was born in Texas and grew up in Virginia and Kansas. After earning a degree in philosophy from Princeton University, he worked in finance in equity research and as a mergers & acquisitions investment banker for technology and other companies. He has also been a teacher, a researcher and writer at the Columbia Business School, and co-founded a small advertising and educational services firm. Outside of technology his interests are cinema, art, poetry, and science




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