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uBlock, I exfiltrate: exploiting ad blockers with CSS
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<blockquote data-quote="Jan Willy" data-source="post: 967647" data-attributes="member: 80838"><p>For the record: in daily life I use on my laptop only Adguard for Windows. For experimenting I use now and then uBlock Origin. On the occasion of your question, I have (also as experiment) added the next whitelist-rule to Adguard: @@||*^$stylesheet.</p><p>The advantage is that other kinds of cosmetic filtering remain intact. An example from Adguard-log:</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]262707[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Edit: In the past I've used the extension Policy Control. For CSS was the default setting Allow all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jan Willy, post: 967647, member: 80838"] For the record: in daily life I use on my laptop only Adguard for Windows. For experimenting I use now and then uBlock Origin. On the occasion of your question, I have (also as experiment) added the next whitelist-rule to Adguard: @@||*^$stylesheet. The advantage is that other kinds of cosmetic filtering remain intact. An example from Adguard-log: [ATTACH alt="css whitelist example.jpg"]262707[/ATTACH] Edit: In the past I've used the extension Policy Control. For CSS was the default setting Allow all. [/QUOTE]
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