

UBO is available on the Google Chrome web store, on Chromium, Microsoft Edge, Opera, and as a Mozilla Firefox add-on (including the Android and iOS versions). Hard mode is like medium mode on steroids and is likely to cause more website breaks for a final small gain in security. This is the recommended mode for privacy-savvy users. One of these APIs is the AbortAPI (aka abortController) and it is now required for that adblock test to work successfully.Medium mode is for advanced users and requires in-depth knowledge of the add-on, enabling users to manually decide what content is filtered and what is allowed. Hi the d3ward test, hosted on GitHub, requires browser APIs that Firefox ESR 52.9.1 simply lacks, because it has been left to rot after its EOL in Sept 2018 (two and a half years already ) I won't even touch the security aspects of still using it, but the web itself has evolved greatly since then, usually for the worse, mostly according to what is being dictated by Google Chrome devs (which has been the topic of another recent post of mine.).Īfter Microsoft acquired GitHub, one of the first things they did was to fire the old GH devs, who were more "willing" to keep GH backwards-compatible with non-Chromium/older browser engines the M$ team that stepped in soon abandoned support for older browsers and quickly introduced "new" web technologies (read Chrome-isms), since their new and shiny toy browser, ChrEdge/Win7+, uses now the Chromium engine. I just get an animation permanently and nothing else happens. įWIW, another tester tool can be tried on:ĭoesn't work at all for me, even with whitelisted. without enabling AdGuard Tracking Protection list, which is quite a big one. However, tracking down which hostnames were allowed in the tool's results, and creating global "block" rules in uBO: In latest Serpent 52, I only use uBlock Origin 1.16.4.28 when I first ran the test, I got a score of 84% Įnabling the built-in AdGuard Tracking Protection filter list, it goes up to 90%
