3/10/2024 0 Comments Ublock origin disabled in chrome![]() “Wow, you are still continuing to spread your FUD? Here we go again, time to debunk it once more: Some Chromium-based browsers, notably Brave and Opera, have built-in adblockers now. ![]() I just copy and paste my previous reply because writing the same text again is not warranted here: 3 enforcement drops, gorhill will stop development of uBlock Origin, & the existing version of uBlock Origin will stop working in Chromium based browsers ).Īh, your usual propaganda. 3 is enforced by Google, so all the Chromium tards can watch all the ads that uBlock Origin will block for me in Firefox (spoiler, when Manifest v. Firefox is spyware just as much as Chrome is. I guess I’ll find out in about 12 hours (the “delay” between when I post my comment to when it “sometimes” is published in the comments Firefox is based. Then Reddit will continue to mock the comment section on ghacks. I wonder if this entire comment will be deleted. 3 enforcement drops, gorhill will stop development of uBlock Origin, & the existing version of uBlock Origin will stop working in Chromium based browsers ).īTW, using DNS to block ads (Pi-hole) is vastly inferior to uBlock Origin & should be relegated to devices to ban ad blocking, because it sucks. I hope this post is NOT discarded by the censor & never allowed to post in the comment section. Gecko is just an antique that can’t die out any I was already censored once today, 1 post I made today disappeared thanks to the site censor. And sadly, but truly, the future of the browsing is the Blink rendering engine. Sure Google are trying to govern what happens with their Chromium browser, but all the Chromium forks can fight back if they wanted to. It’s only a matter of time when it falls below 0.5% percent and everyone stops caring about it. Not to mention how more and more web developers refuse to make their websites compatible with Firefox and for good reason – it’s market share is down to 4% worldwide. They have been spending more time updating the browser’s appearance to coincide with their ideals than making it work better. Just look at their browser logo, it’s like the colors of the LGBQTSLSJSxD flag. Not to mention their publicity stunts backfiring on them, like firing Brendan Eich, because he isn’t an SJW feminist, which is exactly the sorry crowd that’s at the helm of Mozilla and Firefox. Whether that is enough for users to switch to Firefox remains to be seen.Įxcept that Firefox has been running itself into the ground since around 2010-2011 when they released version 4.0. For now, the Firefox version of uBlock Origin is superior to all other versions of the extension. The Firefox version of uBlock Origin is the only version that supports CNAME-uncloaking and thus an effective option to block first-party tracking attempts automatically and not based on manual lists. The extension may display a prompt to accept a new permission - Access IP address and hostname information - during the update process as it is required for the new functionality.Īdditional information about the new feature is available on the project's official GitHub page. Google Chrome and other Chromium-based browsers don't support this and uBlock Origin cannot look up the requests therefore in those browsers.įirefox users who have uBlock Origin installed should receive the new version of the extension automatically if automatic extension updates is enabled in the browser. Mozilla's Firefox web browser is the only browser with the required DNS API functionality to make these look-ups. The resources may be handled just like any other connection using the extension you may allow some in case they are needed or keep blocking them. Sites may use CNAME redirects for content delivery purposes. The uncloaked sites are displayed in a smaller font size underneath the canonical names these may be used to determine whether a resource should be blocked or allowed. The resources are highlighted in blue in the uBlock Origin interface when all connections of the active site are displayed. ![]() The latest uBlock Origin version for Firefox looks up non-blocked resources to uncover first-party tracking and block these attempts. The problem with the manual approach is that it is very easy for sites to change the redirects or even use automated means to switch subdomains. Content blockers have a hard time identifying these redirects, and most use a manual list of known domains. Some sites may use a relatively new tracking technique that uses canonical names (CNAMEs) to bypass content filters and ad-blockers.īasically, what the sites do is disguise an ad-tracking or serving domain by using a first-party domain, e.g. The latest version of uBlock Origin for Firefox, version 1.25 or higher, will "CNAME-unlock network requests".
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