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Glossary

Browser profile

A self-contained browser environment with its own cookies, storage, extensions, fingerprint, and proxy settings, isolated from every other profile.

A browser profile is a complete, separate browsing environment. Mainstream browsers use profiles to separate people sharing a computer: each profile has its own cookies, history, extensions, and saved logins. In an antidetect browser the concept goes further. A profile also defines the identity the browser presents, including its fingerprint, user agent, timezone, language, geolocation, and proxy, so each profile behaves like a distinct machine rather than a different folder on the same one.

Profile isolation is what makes orderly multi-account and multi-environment work possible. An agency operating client accounts keeps each client in its own profile so sessions never mix. A QA team keeps one profile per device and locale configuration under test. A researcher separates data-collection sessions from personal browsing. Without isolation, shared cookies, storage, and a shared fingerprint silently connect contexts that should remain independent, which corrupts tests and creates accidental cross-account contamination.

Oculr profiles are isolated browser environments, each with their own cookies, storage, extensions, and network identity, and each able to present a Windows, macOS, or Linux identity from any machine. The app is built for fleets, with groups, tags, colors, templates, bulk operations, and a trash bin with restore, plus cookie import in JSON or Netscape format and one-click migration from AdsPower.

Real engine
Fingerprinting compiled in
20+ kernels
Chrome 86 to current majors
40+
MCP agent tools

Give your agents a browser that sites trust

Spin up your first two profiles free. Point an agent at them, run a task, and watch Oculr turn it into a workflow you can scale.

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