This appears to be a link to , a web proxy service often used for browsing the internet with a degree of anonymity or bypassing restrictions.
Fog Network , a developer group explicitly dedicated to ending internet censorship and bypassing content filters, created Ingot as a countermeasure. Built with an interface modeled directly after Chrome's internal extension management page ( chrome://extensions ), Ingot gave users a simple "On/Off" toggle for every single extension running in their browser—even those marked as un-removable by administrators. ⚙️ How Ingot Operated: The LTBEEF Exploit
The patching of Ingot highlights the cat-and-mouse game between censorship circumvention tools and the platforms they target. While the original exploit no longer works, its legacy and the underlying principles continue to inspire new projects and forks that attempt to find new vulnerabilities or workarounds.
on how to set up the project on your machine. h t t p s f o g n e t w o r k g i t h u b i o i n g o t top
Critical for IoT, autonomous vehicles, and industrial automation.
The user's experience is centered on the web interface provided by fognetwork.github.io/Ingot . The GitHub page for the project provides clear installation instructions:
This diverse set of tools establishes FogNetwork as a versatile provider of digital freedom solutions, catering to both end-users seeking to bypass restrictions and developers looking to integrate anti-censorship features into their own projects. This appears to be a link to ,
But Ingot was not just any bookmarklet. It was built on a previous exploit known as (and named after the exploit's author, "Bypassi," and the 3kh0 project). Ingot took the core functionality of LTBEEF — the ability to force-disable any extension installed on Google Chrome — and wrapped it in a polished, user-friendly graphical interface modeled after Chrome's own extension management page.
In the landscape of web security and browser management, particularly within educational or restrictive environments, tools often emerge to manage, bypass, or test browser extensions. One such tool that gained attention is , developed by the Fog Network .
Option A — systemd service (running binary directly) ⚙️ How Ingot Operated: The LTBEEF Exploit The
Tightening policies in the Google Admin console to prevent users from interacting with the extension management page.
However, "top" also appears as part of a project name or username in the broader ecosystem. There's a reference to a GitHub user "" in the documentation for ext-remover , which is a related tool that forked Ingot's code. Could "top" be a pointer to this or a similar online persona? It's possible but less likely.