I don't need to use a specific service that utilizes SSL and non-logging
proxies to understand communications remain encrypted and unusable
elsewhere along the path between source and destination hosts. Since
Anonymizer uses SSL, you don't have to worry about your ISP seeing the
*content* of communications. But SSL alone does not prevent your ISP
from seeing *where* you connected. That's why you use Anonymizer's
proxy. Your ISP only sees you connecting to Anonymizer, but not to
where you have that proxy connect. Are you saying Anonymizer does not
provide an SSL-secured proxy? Do you know? If you don't know then
obviously YOU are the one bashing a service for which you have no
experience. If they do not provide an SSL-secured proxy then, yes, your
ISP can see *where* you connect but not *what* gets transferred. This
isn't rocket science. I don't have to use a particular service to know
how it works since lots of other services and even companies themselves
use the same techniques. It ain't nothing new.

Unless you can provide some actual PROOF that Anonymizer is not
anonymous rather than just some vague claims, stop wasting time bashing
a product that apparently doesn't suit your specific super secret needs
(which also makes suspect why you need security on *where* you have
browsed rather than being concerned about securing *what* is contained
in your communications). I'm sure pedophiles, scammers, thieves, and
other slime are truly afraid of the gov't, their parents, or their
employer in finding out who they are or their browsing habits.

Unless you provide some specifics as to exactly why Anonymizer is not
anonymous, your comments are seen as merely rants to bash a service.
Just how is Anonymizer not anonymous (for YOU)? So what is YOUR
solution? What other anonymous service provider is *more* anonymous
than Anonymizer? And why are you so desparate to hide?