You can use FoxyProxy (also exists for Chrome) and do a SSH port forwarding to your machine at home ;) To create the tunnel: ssh -D 8080 [email protected] Then you use FoxyProxy to connect FireFox/Chrome to your local port 8080 (if you have no admin rights, use a Port > 10'000). <br /> If port 22 (SSH) is blocked, you can set the SSH daemon at home to listen at the SSL port, that almost always works, at least for me ;) You can also tell Firefox to use the proxy for DNS-resolution already ;) For Windows, you need PUTTY for the SSH tunnel:<br /> http://www.hostdime.com/resources/browsing-internet-ssh-tunnel-windows/ or you can use the ssh in git-bash in [git-scm][1]. Works fantastic. With SSL-Port: `ssh -D 10001 [email protected] -p 443`<br /> With git-scm, you can even use RSA private-public keys, especially when you don't have admin rights, and going through putty-gui is just too slow. ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub >> authorized_keys That's much safer than using a PUBLIC proxy that can't be trusted (those cursed moments when you forget to switch the proxy off), and you can switch it on/off in an instant. Also, if you connect to the SSH server, use the IP instead of the servername, that way DNS-blocking will not be able to stop you. <br /> If you have no admin rights, use PortableApps (for both Firefox and PuTTY, Chrome doesn't need admin rights for installation). All the network admin will see is a SSL connection to your home server IP.<br /> That's much safer anyway. <br /> No more monitoring of your browsing activity, no more blocked sites, no more traces.<br /> Everything is encrypted.<br /> [1]: https://git-scm.com/