Google’s ultra-long goodbye to third-party cookies — the once unbreakable pillar of web tracking — is inching closer. But their “privacy-friendly” replacement is flawed. Learn how to mitigate the risks and how we are responding in this article.
Adnaseum is better. It actively tries to help websites by “clicking through” all tracking ads without accepting a return payload so it is safe for you. This means the website you are browsing gets the income from the ad clicks and you have an ad free experience. This also obsficates your online presence by clicking everything.
Breaking loose the discussion: Whats the better add-on: adguard or ublock origin?
The general consensus is ublock origin. It’s best on Firefox and I’ve had no issues with it
A lot of the internet is unusable without ublock origin IMO.
Especially on mobile. News sites are legit impossible to use, let alone tolerate.
uBlock. Adguard is probably fine for what it is but uBlock Origins is far and away the gold standard.
Adnaseum is better. It actively tries to help websites by “clicking through” all tracking ads without accepting a return payload so it is safe for you. This means the website you are browsing gets the income from the ad clicks and you have an ad free experience. This also obsficates your online presence by clicking everything.
That’s not going to be very useful for very long. Advertisers will very quickly wise up and find a way to detect this.
The plugin has been active for 4+ years and still works. It will get detected as more people use Firefox.
Adnas, even though it’s based on ublock, I’ve noticed it doesn’t catch an ad occasionally even when set up the same.
adnauseam!
I’ve been using ad-nauseam on Firefox: https://adnauseam.io/