Comodo positions itself as a cybersecurity-centric publisher whose portfolio historically spanned enterprise-grade firewalls, antivirus engines, SSL certificates, and secure DNS services for Windows workstations, mail servers, and e-commerce gateways. The company’s consumer line has concentrated on Chromium-based browsing, with Comodo Dragon offering a hardened fork of Google Chrome that adds on-by-default website filtering, certificate pinning, and selective extension sandboxing aimed at privacy-minded users who still want seamless compatibility with Chrome Web Store add-ons. IT administrators often deploy the browser alongside Comodo’s legacy endpoint agents to create a layered defense on corporate laptops, while home users appreciate the built-in media downloader and social sharing buttons that simplify grabbing video or pushing links to Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn without extra plug-ins. Because the executable is compiled from the same open-source base, existing bookmarks, settings, and cloud sync carry over with minimal migration effort, making it a low-friction replacement during mass rollouts. Comodo Dragon is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the newest release and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
Faster, better than Chrome.
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