How to Use Google as a Proxy (HOW TO View MySpace/FaceBook at School/Company)
Posted on August 5th, 2008 by Web Freak under Tips n TricksNormally when you view a web page, your computer’s browsing software makes a connection to the destination server, downloads the page’s data, and displays it for you.
This would normally be the preferred way of doing things, but occasionally you’ll find yourself on a work or school connection that disallows you from connecting to certain web sites. In these scenarios, what you need is a proxy. A proxy is a server or service that will connect to the blacklisted server on your behalf and send you back the results.
Now, you still need to directly access the proxy server, so it’s important that it’s not on the blacklist itself. It’s very interesting that Google, a host unlikely to end up on most blacklists, has a couple of tools that can essentially act as a web proxy!
Google Proxy Trick #1
The first tool is Google’s translation service. This service will dynamically download and translate any web page you request, and if you specify the “to” launguage as English (or your desired language), Google Translate will just spit out the destination document, acting as a simple proxy. Note that you used to be able to set the “from” and “to” language both as English to ensure no translation, but this feature seems to have been removed. However, I’ve found that if you specify Chinese to English (or anything to english) on an already english document, you usually get the exact text. The bonus of using the Chinese filter is that you can hover over any text and it’ll give you the exact original text.
Just replace www.myspace.com in the URL below with a blocked site to see:
http://www.google.com/translate_c?langpair=zh%7Cen&u=http://www.myspace.com/
The only problem with this is that it doesn’t proxy any of the images for you. Those are still coming directly from the destination server, so they will likely be filtered and all you’ll see is the page text.
Google Proxy Trick #2
The second Google tool that can be used as a proxy service is the Google Wireless Transcoder. This service was designed to make web pages viewable on mobile phone browsers. It will download a destination site’s web page, including images, and rework the entire page, on the fly, to fit into an average cell-phone’s screen space.
To try it out, go to http://www.google.com/gwt/n and enter the url you’d like to view. You’ll quickly see that most of the page formatting has been stripped out, leaving a very simple, single-column page. You’ll also notice that all the images are scaled down to mobile phone optimized size. It’s a bit of a downside, but google is actually downloading and sending the scaled versions from a google server. So, if you’re on a blacklisted site, you’ll still be able to view images – they’ll just be smaller than usual.
On the plus side, I’ve found that 99% of MySpace templates look better using the Google Wireless Transcoder.

Thanks nice tricks
very cool idea
love it
woww!! what a web freak idea, thanks dude.
Nice translation idea ;D thats pretty sweet
The first one is a nice trick….
the second one isn’t such a gr8 one though!!
I prefer to use a proxy thats easy to use. But the translate option is sweet.
First one was cool, I just trid it, thanks
As an aside, due to my location, one annoying thing I encounter sometimes is “this is not available in your area”. Could be youtube videos, streams, even basic sites. Def gets annoying after a while.
Though the same seem to have worked as anonymous proxy, but in reality google is not shadowing your ip address or is doing nothing to hide it (the same may be an intentional attempt from their side to discourage people from using their translation and other services as proxy).
Here’s the proof:
Visit http://www.tracemyip.com
then visit: http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&langpair=zh|en&u=http://www.tracemyip.com in a new tab or new window
and finally visit http://www.google.com/gwt/n?u=http%3A%2F%2Ftracemyip.com in another tab or window.
What you will notice is that ip address returned via these url’s is the same, i.e. when you accessed http://www.tracemyip.com you are actually checking your public ip without any proxy server as this site identifies your public ip and shows the same to you. Now when you access other two url’s you are trying to browse the same website via two of the googles services trying to fool it into acting as anonymous proxy server, the site comes up but displays your actual ip address.
What does it mean?
This means google is not at all hiding your ip address and possibly other vital information that a given anonymous proxy server is supposed to hide.
I also not recommend abusing anyone’s services, translation is meant for website translation thus the same should not be used as proxy.
Most of the good content filters have identified this tactic of using google services as proxy server and have developed solutions to counter the same. You are lucky if your organization is still using the old/out-dated content filters.
There are plenty of decent anonymous proxy servers, with a simple PHP or ASP coding (available for free on the internet) you can host your own proxy server on any of the free hosting providers, being your private proxy server your network administrator or isp will never notice you using that.
Happy surfing
mj