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Blocking mode: hard mode
Roughly similar to using Adblock Plus with many filter lists + NoScript with 1st-party scripts/frames automatically trusted + RequestPolicy with 1st-party resources automatically whitelisted.
Blocking-wise, this is a small leap from medium mode. This mode will however lead to a higher likelihood of broken websites, and thus will likely require intervention the first time you visit a site, since even passive 3rd-party resources (i.e. images, css) are blocked with this mode.
This mode will block all 3rd parties by default, so it keeps privacy exposure to 3rd parties to a minimum.
3rd-party network requests are blocked by default.
Starting with v1.21.7b5, a red badge on uBlock Origin (uBO) toolbar button indicates activation of the hard mode.
With a single click, it is possible to toggle the hard mode into the medium mode: it's just a matter of assigning a local noop rule to the 3rd-party cell. You can accomplish the same with a keyboard shortcut through the command "Relax blocking mode".
- Web pages will load fast.
- Your privacy exposure to 3rd parties is reduced to a minimum.
- You no longer depend mostly on 3rd-party filter lists to dictate what is blocked or not.
- The static filter lists are still used to mop up whatever network requests is not blocked in this mode -- so double protection.
- Very high likelihood of web pages being broken: you have to be ready and willing to fix them when this happen.
- Keep in mind though that as you build your ruleset for the sites you usually visit, you will spend less and less time fixing web pages.
Settings pane:
- I am an advanced user: checked.
3rd-party filters pane:
- All of uBO's custom filter lists: checked
- EasyList: checked
- Peter Lowe’s Ad server list: checked
- EasyPrivacy: checked
- Online Malicious URL Blocklist: checked
My rules pane:
- Add
* * 3p block
- Add
* * 3p-script block
- Add
* * 3p-frame block
With few clicks, you can easily fall back into lesser blocking modes, if ever you do not have the willingness to figure the necessary rules for a given site.
Fall back into medium mode for the current site:
- set a local noop rule for the 3rd-party cell.
Fall back into easy mode for the current site:
- set a local noop rule for the 3rd-party cell.
- set a local noop rule for the 3rd-party script cell.
- Optionally, set a local noop rule for the 3rd-party frames cell.
uBlock Origin - An efficient blocker for Chromium and Firefox. Fast and lean.
- Wiki home
- About the Wiki documentation
- Permissions
- Privacy policy
- Info:
- The toolbar icon
- The popup user interface
- The context menu
-
Dashboard
- Settings pane
- Filter lists pane
- My filters pane
- My rules pane
- Trusted sites pane
- Keyboard shortcuts
- The logger
- Element picker
- Element zapper
-
Blocking mode
- Very easy mode
- Easy mode (default)
- Medium mode (optimal for advanced users)
- Hard mode
- Nightmare mode
- Strict blocking
- Few words about re-design of uBO's user interface
- Reference answers to various topics seen in the wild
- Overview of uBlock's network filtering engine
- uBlock's blocking and protection effectiveness:
- uBlock's resource usage and efficiency:
- Memory footprint: what happens inside uBlock after installation
- uBlock vs. ABP: efficiency compared
- Counterpoint: Who cares about efficiency, I have 8 GB RAM and|or a quad core CPU
- Debunking "uBlock Origin is less efficient than Adguard" claims
- Myth: uBlock consumes over 80MB
- Myth: uBlock is just slightly less resource intensive than Adblock Plus
- Myth: uBlock consumes several or several dozen GB of RAM
- Various videos showing side by side comparison of the load speed of complex sites
- Own memory usage: benchmarks over time
- Contributed memory usage: benchmarks over time
- Can uBO crash a browser?
- Tools, tests
- Deploying uBlock Origin
- Proposal for integration/unit testing
- uBlock Origin Core (Node.js):
- Troubleshooting:
- Good external guides:
- Scientific papers