Versions:

  • 5.72.3
  • 5.72.2
  • 5.72.1
  • 5.72.0
  • 5.71.9
  • 5.71.8
  • 5.71.7
  • 5.71.6
  • 5.71.5
  • 5.71.4
  • 5.71.3
  • 5.71.2
  • 5.70.12
  • 5.70.11
  • 5.70.10
  • 5.70.9
  • 5.70.8
  • 5.70.7
  • 5.70.6
  • 5.70.5
  • 5.70.4
  • 5.70.3
  • 5.69.10
  • 5.69.9
  • 5.69.8
  • 5.69.7
  • 5.69.6
  • 5.69.5
  • 5.69.4
  • 5.69.3
  • 5.68.7
  • 5.68.4
  • 5.68.3
  • 5.67.9
  • 5.67.8
  • 5.67.7
  • 5.67.6
  • 5.67.5
  • 5.67.4
  • 5.67.3
  • 5.66.4
  • 5.66.3
  • 5.66.2
  • 5.65.5
  • 5.65.4
  • 5.64.8
  • 5.64.7
  • 5.64.6
  • 5.64.5
  • 5.64.4
  • 5.64.3
  • 5.64.2
  • 5.64.1
  • 5.63.4
  • 5.63.3
  • 5.62.2
  • 5.61.7
  • 5.61.6
  • 5.61.5
  • 5.61.4
  • 5.61.3
  • 5.61.2
  • 5.60.3
  • 5.60.2
  • 5.60.1
  • 5.60.0
  • 5.59.2
  • 5.59.1
  • 5.58.5
  • 5.58.4
  • 5.58.2
  • 5.58.1
  • 5.57.7
  • 5.57.6
  • 5.57.3
  • 5.56.3
  • 5.55.22
  • 5.55.21
  • 5.55.20
  • 5.55.19
  • 5.55.18
  • 5.55.15
  • 5.55.13
  • 5.53.3
  • 5.51.6

Sandboxie 5.72.3 is a sandbox-based isolation utility designed for 32- and 64-bit Windows NT platforms, giving users a controlled, virtualized layer in which any application—be it a browser, installer, or unknown executable—operates without writing permanently to the real file system or registry. Originally created by Ronen Tzur, the project passed through Invincea and Sophos before transitioning to open-source stewardship by David Xanatos; under his direction the program has reached its 85th public build, refining compatibility with modern Windows revisions and adding policy-based restrictions that keep emerging threats contained. Typical deployments include safe browsing sessions where downloaded malware is discarded on closure, trial installations of beta or untrusted software that might otherwise pollute the host, and forensic analysis of suspicious documents that can be opened in sandboxed Office or PDF viewers without risking lateral infection. Because every spawned process inherits the same transparent redirection rules, IT staff can also preload multiple programs into a single box for automated, side-by-side testing. The tool therefore sits in the Security category, specifically among virtualization/isolation solutions, yet remains lightweight enough for consumer laptops. Sandboxie is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads supplied through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always serving the latest version and enabling batch installation alongside other applications.

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