Business YouTube is cracking down on adblock users: pay or disable - this is reminder to install brave

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YouTube has introduced an anti-adblock feature, which alerts users with pop-ups and interrupts the viewing experience. The adblocking community is already working on ways to defeat the feature, but YouTube seems to be changing its detection scripts constantly.

Users trying to view a YouTube video with an adblocker enabled are now greeted with a pop-up warning.

“Adblockers are not allowed on YouTube,” the warning reads. “You can go ad-free with YouTube Premium, and creators can still get paid from your subscription.”

The buttons below give users two options: either allow ads or choose a paid subscription. However, for now, closing the alert allows viewing the video.

Complaints about YouTube’s actions have started appearing on social media, as many people use adblockers for limiting trackers and other privacy-intruding scripts. Security researchers have been urging users to restrict exposure to ad networks for a while now because they’re often used to deliver spyware such as Pegasus.

“Awfully brave of YouTube to think I'm gonna stop using AdBlock before I stop using YouTube,” one X user shared.


Others encouraged resistance against YouTube’s new measure by leaving adblocking solutions enabled: “If you show Google that you are willing to forgo your adblocker for YouTube, they will make this new adblock ban a permanent change.”

An ad-free YouTube Premium subscription costs users $13.99 per month.

Adblocking community working on a workaround​

The adblocker provider AdBlock Plus says that YouTube’s wall is “particularly distressing to many of our users.” Some of them are unhappy that many ads on YouTube include “obvious scams” that stay afloat even after reporting them to Google.

For now, AdBlock Plus recommends that users keep their filter lists up to date so that any changes made by the filter list authors are applied to their extensions. They can also add YouTube to their allowlists, which will continue blocking ads elsewhere but allow them when watching the popular website.

The uBlockOrigin adblocker already has a workaround offered on its subreddit page. For that, users have to update the extension and its filter with quick fixes to the latest version.

The post also warns that stacking multiple adblockers or using old block lists won’t help.

“Disclaimer: YouTube changes their detection scripts twice a day, which means that even if you got a filter update earlier today, another one might be required soon. There's no way around this if you want to remain logged in,” the post reads.

Some X users also shared filters for the adblocker to turn off the new YouTube feature.

Ads are a significant attack vector​

Blocking malicious ads with adblocking software is an essential component of good cybersecurity hygiene and is recommended by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).

Malvertising is a significant vector for exploiting networks as it bypasses built-in browser settings to protect against pop-ups and website redirects. Malicious ads can generate a forced redirect or deliver a malicious payload.

“Adblocking software prevents different types of ads from displaying or removes them altogether, reducing the risk of receiving malicious advertisements or being redirected to malicious websites. A common adblocking technique uses web browser extensions that allow organizations to customize and control how online advertisements appear. CISA encourages organizations to evaluate solutions that would allow the ability to block a malicious advertisement,” the organization writes in its recommendations.

However, YouTube is not stepping back and insists that users will receive multiple notifications urging them to cease using the tools – or subscribe to YouTube Premium – before their viewing is disrupted, The Verge reported.

“We take disabling playback very seriously and will only disable playback if viewers ignore repeated requests to allow ads on YouTube,” Google spokesperson Oluwa Falodune’s mail to The Verge reads. “In cases when viewers feel they have been falsely flagged as using an adblocker, they can share this feedback by clicking on the link in the prompt.”

To find out more about DNS filtering solutions, you can check out this CyberNews experiment.



Over my dead body. Install brave or mozila i tested them both working , mozila had few days before they patched up and brave never had a bleep. Their blocking the adblock solution is now only workable on chrome . Also brave on mobile can play music in backround from youtube without paying shekels for premium. If youtube wants my money better let me view my downloaded videos without internet connection or demonitase and ban my favorite creators every time, or i dont know give me what i search for . Reminder to replace google with brave search engine or any non google based engine
 
Wait, so all this warning screen BS only happens when you're logged in? Because I never watch videos like that and kept wondering why it's never happened to me yet.
Not only is it linked to your account, they're doing it in a staggered rollout, so for example, they might have all youtube accounts separated in 20 groups, and every monday another group has it deployed to them, which is why some people that are logged in get it and others don't. It's a way of doing risk mitigation and to get feedback. I used to work change management.
 
Not only is it linked to your account, they're doing it in a staggered rollout, so for example, they might have all youtube accounts separated in 20 groups, and every monday another group has it deployed to them, which is why some people that are logged in get it and others don't. It's a way of doing risk mitigation and to get feedback. I used to work change management.
So I guess it's just a matter of time before they start doing this to non-logged users as well?
 
I dread the day they go full Twitch and start injecting ads into video itself. It'll be truly over at that point and the only answer is to simply stop using YouTube.
Well, they sort of do. Sometimes, they directly pay the content creator to actually do the ad. I actually don't have much of a problem with this since all the money goes to the person who is worth the money, not to Jewgle.

Also lmao "adblockers are not ALLOWED" on YouTube. Bitch did you hear me asking?
 
Weird, I did not even consider turning off uBlock and I guess youtube gave up? I don't even get the pop-up anymore, video is a good little bitch and plays with no ads no problems
 
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Weird, I did not even consider turning off uBlock and I guess youtube gave up? I don't even get the pop-up anymore, video is a good little bitch and plays with no ads no problems
Nah, still triggers on other adblockers. Enough that uBlock tells you it's best to either get rid of them or disable them on Youtube. uBlock just updates more frequently to circumvent Youtube's shenanigans.
 
When I was traveling, sometimes I used to just download my videos and listen to or watch them offline.
Haven't done it in a while, though now's probably a good time to ask for any reliable video downloader recommendations people have (that, and it also would help me with archiving and posting media to threads).
 
I had to disable malwarebyte's adware blocker to finally get rid of "buy our premium" page. I guess the poos at google wants you to be vulnerable to their javascript hijackers.
 
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--all


--Android

*You should have no problems with the Brave Browser on Android

--What should always work on Windows:

Download sandboxie-plus
Install> right click on your Brave or Firefox with ublock >start in sandboxie >when ads show up, left click on the sandboxie icon >delete content, repeat. (all your shit in sandboxie gets nuked so dont safe vids or pics .etc while in sandboxie)

*All my ad blockers work on Windows: Brave Schild and UBlock without sandboxie

* People say Adnauseam works too, I have not tried it.
 
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So far I hadn't experienced FreeTube maybe-partially breaking from any of these changes (by mere consequence), but I wonder how long it can hold on? It is the one desktop youtube software that I truly love and worry about all the same.
 
I'm using firefox with adblock and I can say the videos are still working as normal. However, there are now sponsored ads. For example if you search games you get ads now. Knowing YouTube they'll make their whole website into one giant ad.
 
So far I hadn't experienced FreeTube maybe-partially breaking from any of these changes (by mere consequence), but I wonder how long it can hold on? It is the one desktop youtube software that I truly love and worry about all the same.
I stopped using Freetube about 1.5 years ago because it stopped showing age-restricted content, which is strange because it uses invidious, which should ignore age restrictions.

no idea how its now
 
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