Jump to content

Ad block: Difference between revisions

From Consumer Rights Wiki
Consumer impact summary: fixed cite error
m Update grammar in opening paragraph
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Wikipedia:ad blocking|'''Ad blocking''']] Is a form of user customization of information presentation.  For instance, to selectively not display information of little interest to the user, or content the user deems harmful or offensive, or to conserve resources by not processing some information.  Blocking ads can increase security, can improve accessibility, It can also speed up devices and make them more reliable (decrease network traffic, decrease processor/memory usage).
[[Wikipedia:ad blocking|'''Ad blocking''']] Is a form of user customization of information presentation.  For instance, to selectively not display information of little interest to the user, or content the user deems harmful or offensive, or to conserve resources by not processing some information.  Blocking ads can increase security, improve accessibility, speed up devices, and make devices more reliable (decrease network traffic, decrease processor/memory usage).


==Consumer impact summary==
==Consumer impact summary==

Revision as of 15:08, 28 November 2025

Ad blocking Is a form of user customization of information presentation. For instance, to selectively not display information of little interest to the user, or content the user deems harmful or offensive, or to conserve resources by not processing some information. Blocking ads can increase security, improve accessibility, speed up devices, and make devices more reliable (decrease network traffic, decrease processor/memory usage).

Consumer impact summary

Advertising is pervasive online, and increasingly showing up in devices (e.g., refrigerators, cars, operating systems, televisions). Ad block can help consumers own their own devices by controlling what the devices do. Advertisements can be dangerous, by misleading or distracting the user, and by tracking or damaging the device. Many sources, including US government agencies, suggest ad block as a way of enhancing security. There are efforts to use copyright law (e.g., DMCA/spotify/revanced, and German court case) to force consumers to play ads or run other programs on devices.[1]

Ad Blocker Examples

Some of the add-ons / extensions / plug-ins below are not necessarily ad-blocking software but do contribute to blocking advertisements or reduce or eliminate the amount of data you share online.

Internet Browsers

A for Android, i for iOS, L for Linux, W for Windows

Browser base: C for Chromium, F for Firefox

If a browser is not listed "officially" for an add-on in the table below but shares the "Based on" attribute with a browser that is, it may (but is not guaranteed to) work with that browser.

Based on "Do Not Track" feature DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials NoScript Privacy Badger uBlock Origin
Brave C
Chrome C L, W
DuckDuckGo C A
Edge C L, W
Firefox F A, L, W A, L, W A, L, W A, L, W A, L, W
Firefox Developer Edition F L, W L, W L, W L, W L, W
Opera C
Safari -
Vivaldi C
Waterfox F L, W L, W L, W L, W L, W

Further Reading

References

  1. Claburn, Thomas (2025-08-15). "No more Blocktoberfest? German court throws book at ad blockers". The Register.


Category:Common terms