She clicked a cached link — an old CNET review from 2014. The download button was a skeleton. Then, on page three of the search results: a tiny, unassuming FTP directory at download.comodo.com . Her heart thumped.
I understand you’re looking for a story involving a search for — a once-popular, privacy-focused web browser based on Firefox, developed by Comodo. comodo icedragon download
Mara stared at the blinking cursor on her old laptop. Her research — sensitive interviews with whistleblowers — required a browser that left no crumbs. No telemetry. No prying eyes. She clicked a cached link — an old CNET review from 2014
She remembered the name from a decade ago: . Fast, Chromium-based now (later versions), wrapped in Comodo’s security tools. It wasn’t mainstream, but that was the point. Her heart thumped
Because in a world of spying browsers, the dragon wasn’t dead. It was just hiding. Moral of the story (lightly told): Sometimes, the best download isn’t the newest — it’s the one that never phones home.
“icedragon_installer.exe” — 47 MB.
When the dark blue IceDragon window opened — no ads, no suggestions, just a blank start page — Mara smiled. It was like starting a vintage car. Clunky. Unsafe, some would say. But hers.