9/1/2023 0 Comments Mozilla adguard![]() I only really use it to apply visibility: hidden to any element with an attribute matching one big regex that's basically just a bunch of domains regex |'d together. So you specify a regex what to search, attributes and/or text (text can cause a lot of undesired results so I don't use it much) and css styles to add to the elements containing matches. The actual idea of the extension is "Style stuff using regular expressions". I'll be glad to guide you if the tiny amount of help I've included isn't enough. But it's definitely not designed for general use. I had to put it there because of how difficult/impossible it is to run a local extensions. It is in the official extension repository. They delegate the task to third parties, "blocklist" maintainers. IME over nearly 20 years of controlling own DNS, restricting that ability makes the web instantly readable, even so-called "dumpster fire" webpages.ġ. One of the requirements for the web to suck the way it does, and for so-called "tech" companies to proliferate by collecting data and selling ad services, is that the web browser and webpages must be give free reign to resolve any domain name. I do not even make remote DNS lookups because generally I already have the DNS data stored (gathered in bulk beforehand), so the web becomes faster, not slower. ![]() I do not need to maintain a list of domains to block,^1 I only need to maintain a list of domains for hosts that I actually want to access. "Instead you need a gigantic list of filter rules, one for each domain, making loading web pages slower."īy not using recursive DNS, including open resolvers or other third party DNS providers, I avoid this problem.
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