Control D has filters for every category you mentioned except "Parked domains", we may add this in the near future. As of this week, given all the recent updates, Control D has virtually every feature of NextDNS, with all the unique stuff on top (like traffic redirection). The only real "downside" is higher average latency vs NextDNS, which we're working on.dns0 blocks
- Newly registered domains
- New active domains
- Domain generation algothrithms
- IDN homographs
- phishing sites
- DNS rebinding
- Dynamic DNSES
- Cryptojacking
- Parked domains
- High risk top level domains
so does NextDNS aswell
ControlD blocks
- new domains
- phishing
- malware
DNS wide, dns0 & NextDNS blocks much more categories than ControlD does. Also nextdns has more companies as friend and thats why nextdns & dns0 gets ai & better malware filtering
View attachment 273711
View attachment 273712
I still recommend you to trial both DNS resolvers and find the one that fits for you best
I’d switch to Control D just for your honestyThe only real "downside" is higher average latency vs NextDNS, which we're working on.
Mobile apps for iOS and Android are available, as of yesterday (follow the new tutorials or see general docs: GUI Setup Utility). It's a much better idea to use DNS profile on iOS and native DOT on Android, but there are apps that offer 1 step up for those who don't want to install natively.I’d switch to Control D just for your honesty
NextDNS has mobile apps as well though. It is a very basic app but it makes turning on and off the secure DNS easy. That + the block page is something to think about. In terms of user experience, you already beat NextDNS. I believe you had the option (if I remember correctly) to quickly whitelist a blocked domain. NextDNS, despite having it requested times and times again, never implemented that.
Your latency improved enough (since a year ago) that I subscribed for a year, mostly for mobile ad blocking. So even though it is a weakness, the improvements being made are noticeable. Also, your straightforward explanations and honesty on a podcast I heard recently really gave me some confidence in your product.Mobile apps for iOS and Android are available, as of yesterday (follow the new tutorials or see general docs: GUI Setup Utility). It's a much better idea to use DNS profile on iOS and native DOT on Android, but there are apps that offer 1 step up for those who don't want to install natively.
There is also a pretty sweet CLI available, also as of yesterday. Runs on all operating systems via a 1 liner install command. Works best on routers and has some pretty unique features: Command Line Daemon
Wait till you see what else we got in the release pipeline (except for latency improvements)![]()
I think ads blocker in relaxed mode should do the trick...What is the least ad blocking/least powerful third party filter in ControlD? I have found the ControlD's own Ads & Tracker block list to be too powerful.
I want to configure my router to have the least possible filtering.
It occasionally will block email links for a bit, but they clear false positives pretty quickly. The only other option is OISD.I think ads blocker in relaxed mode should do the trick...
I think ads blocker in relaxed mode should do the trick...
It occasionally will block email links for a bit, but they clear false positives pretty quickly. The only other option is OISD.
OISD is actually a great option if you want few false positives: oisd | domain blocklistEven in relaxed mode it's too powerful in my experience. Trying Adguard atm. Not sure it's less powerful than OISD.
AdGuard one is the smallest blocklist, by far. It may not be 100% effective (well, nothing is), but it should be pretty "false positive" proof based on user feedback.What is the least ad blocking/least powerful third party filter in ControlD? I have found the ControlD's own Ads & Tracker block list to be too powerful.
I want to configure my router to have the least possible filtering.
DNS ad blocking doesn’t work for blocking in stream ads.I have added NextDNS to my Chromecast in the network settings. Why doesn't it block ads in the Twitch app? Under Blocklists I have added AdGuard DNS filter and Peter Lowe.
If I use AdGuard's public DNS server, it does block the ads. I guess NextDNS should do the same.
I have a dynamic IP address, so I'm using a DDNS hostname for my NextDNS - not sure if it is a issue.
A nice feature indeed. But what do you do about the most common TLDs? ( .com .net .org ) I can't add youtube.com to the allowlist for example because it will bypass the tracking blocklists altogether and let the ads right through. Any good wildcards we can add to the denylist that catch what the blocklists occasionally miss? Nothing is 100% but TLD blocking seems like the closest thing we have atm.Only have experience with NextDns. I like the features and tracking blocklists. The TLD blocking is nice, just add a bad TLD and you're done. The only problem is on mobile for e-commerce sites in that it can block access to the apps and stop them from working properly.