Blocking Ads in 2023

You can install a network wide adblock using a Pi or/and a DNS that can filter ads. I hate Firefox and the faggots over at Mozilla. Hope that the Brave devs at least allow legacy support for addons that refuse to move to Jewgle's Manifest v3. Otherwise I may consider Librefox if I can't filter network wide somehow.
 
Doesn't affect me in any way shape or form. Brave is still going to support Manifest V2, so old adons are going to work on it. Even if Google prevents Brave in some way from using Mainfest V2 there's still lesser evil browser such as Firefox, which I'm also using. Personally I think this is really good thing, because it has potential to turn away many regular users from using basic Chrome, which is fucking trash anyway. For Android you also have choice. Either Brave or Bromite, both have built in ad blocking so you don't even need any adons.
 
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You can still get Firefox 68.11.0 to sideload as an APK. You can install uBlock Origin.

Brave and Firefox, both with uBlock Origin on desktop. Brave on its own doesn't block as much as uBlock Origin.

Praise be to Raymond Hill, fuck pretty much anything else
 
Imagine still using chrome. Also Brave is available for android you dingus.
Brave is based on Chrome. AFAIK the ability to load the scrips adblock uses to be effective will eventually be disabled directly in the Chromium source code. Unless Brave completely forks for good this restriction will hit them and their ability to effectively block ads as well.
Especially since it's not just hitting adblock. Other Extensions like Tampermonkey are fucked on Chrome too.

The only thing you can do at this point is to switch to a non-Chromium-based browser or getting a Pi Hole and routing even your mobile traffic through it.
 
Brave is based on Chrome. AFAIK the ability to load the scrips adblock uses to be effective will be disabled directly in the Chromium source code. Unless Brave completely forks for good this restriction will hit them and their ability to effectively block ads as well.
Especially since it's not just hitting adblock. Other Extensions like Tampermonkey are fucked on Chrome too.

The only thing you can do at this point is to switch to a non-Chromium-based browser or getting a Pi Hole and routing even your mobile traffic through it.
Yeah I thought about that, which is a bit concerning since Brave is the only browser really able to block ads completely on mobile. Other browsers like the DuckDuckGo one are only able to partially block ads.
 
I use Brave and FireFox instead of Chrome, so hopefully Brave won't follow the path Chrome seems to be going. If it does, then back to FireFox full time because I refuse to use the modern day internet without some decent form of ad-blocking. If all of the major browsers bend the knee and I can't be bothered to search for a workaround, I'll probably just go nuclear and make a script to mass edit the hosts file and update it with new domains as needed.
 
For desktop, Firefox with ublock origin. Extra addons: Decentraleyes, Privacy Badger, HTTPS everywhere, and Sponsorblock.

Firefox Nightly on mobile can use desktop addons.

This free and open source Android app gives you the ability to download privacy-oriented browsers of your choosing without using Google Play Store. It will also update them if you want.

Not A Bug page:

F-Droid page:
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/de.marmaro.krt.ffupdater/

Screenshot_20221116-025026_Firefox Nightly.jpg

Screenshot_20221116-025032_Firefox Nightly.jpg

Screenshot_20221116-025044_Firefox Nightly.jpg
 
There are tons of excellent suggestions in this thread, though I'll have to vehemently disagree with Pappy Nool over using Brave (Ad Nauseam even more so). Brave is more than adequate if you're looking for a drop-in Chrome replacement, but it's still a Chromium fork at the end of the day. Yes, it's been extensively de-Googled and these patches are 100% verifiable on whatever git repository that the Brave Foundation has set up. However, the ultimate direction of Brave will forever be influenced by its dependence on the Chromium project which Google itself stewards. This is a critical flaw that I, as an autistic retard on the internet, cannot abide.

More to the point: ads don't just end at your desktop browser; they exist on any internet connected device like smart TVs, cell phones, or anything else you have on your network. Brave on mobile is actually quite lovely insofar as browsers are concerned. However, ads still exist on other apps that Brave itself cannot handle. You need a multi-pronged solution to well and truly "rid" yourself of advertising. Here are my relevant suggestions:

Browsers of choice

"Hardened" Firefox ESR for 90% of web browsing needs > Brave for everything Firefox breaks that I can't easily fix
  • FFProfile allows you to create a Firefox profile where you're able to create a "prefs.js" file entirely to your own specification. I'm not gonna go into the complexities of how it goes, but I'd recommend leaving it 90% untouched. Just remember to keep things like WebGL, Widevine/DRM modules, and Audiocontext enabled if you like playing games, streaming things via subscription service, or using Discord in your web browser. Most recommended extensions I'd go for are uBlock Origin, Canvas Blocker, and Cookie AutoDelete. Everything else is at your discretion. Brave (or any other Chromium variant) exists solely for websites that are incontrovertibly incompatible with Firefox.
Network-wide ad blocker

Pi-Hole (preferably on an actual RPi (of any kind) that's always connected to both power and ethernet) > AdGuard Pro (though you'll have to pay like a filthy cuckold).
  • Pi-Hole is an extremely robust DNS sinkhole that not only blocks ads, but you're also capable of running your own recursive DNS resolver to spare yourself the hassle of using a third party like Cloudflare, OpenDNS, or even Quad9 (if you don't trust their filtered lists) to resolve your own DNS over HTTPS requests. If you're a lazy nigger and you don't wanna deal with all of that, AdGuard Pro is a viable option if it's much more cost-effective for you to pay for a proprietary service than it would be to handle up-front hardware costs and setup configuration. If you have children, AdGuard Pro may be a more compelling option for you but I'd still try Pi-Hole first.
 
NoScript and Privacy Badger work for me to almost obliterate ads without invoking anti-adblock measures.

NoScript has been effectively rendered obsolete because of uBlock Origin Medium Mode accomplishing the same effect (global blocking of third party scripts and frames) while still allowing you easy access to toggles for dynamic filtering.

Privacy Badger’s also effectively moot if you’re running uBlock Origin Medium Mode.
 
If Google force Brave to comply, is there an alternative to Firefox? I don't want to support Mozilla troons.
 
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If Google force Brave to comply, is there an alternative to Firefox? I don't want to support Mozilla troons.

1) Brave’s internal adblocker (Shields) are entirely independent of ManifestV3. It’s a fork-specific modification that Google has no jurisdiction over.

2) Though if Brave’s crypto shilling becomes intolerable for you like it did for me, and you insist on staying away from Mozilla branding, LibreWolf is the best you’ll have access to.

Though with that said, FFProfile more or less accomplishes what LibreWolf does. Also, LibreWolf does not have automatic updates on Windows. You need to rely on an unofficial extension to achieve basic functionality that Mozilla already has.
 
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