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Which block lists do you use with UBO, AG and ABP ?
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<blockquote data-quote="forgottenuser79643" data-source="post: 937329" data-attributes="member: 88069"><p>If you are talking about the new consent.youtube/google.com page. You can't bypass that with filters. No one has succeeded in successfully bypassing it <strong>without </strong>some complications. You need to manually block the cookie for the specific URL being:</p><p>For YT: <a href="https://consent.youtube.com" target="_blank">https://consent.youtube.com</a></p><p>For Google: <a href="https://consent.google.com" target="_blank">https://consent.google.com</a></p><p></p><p>This will skip the consent page, but will break some other things on YouTube. It's Google's next experiment to bypass content blockers. And they have somewhat succeeded with this one. There are a few extensions on Firefox that were created during the past few days, that have somewhat successfully countered it to an extent, but it's still not a proper alternative.</p><p></p><p>Since uBlock can't delete nor block cookies, you have to do that in the cookiemanger of the browser itself, or through the 'info page' (ctrl+i on Firefox). AdGuard however is able to handle cookies, for AG users.</p><p></p><p>I, for one, use the Multi-Account Containers Addon on Firefox and blocking the cookie URL, seems to bypass the consent page by forcing the redirecting to not happen. But it deletes the tab including its history... If you searched Food on Google, then it would go 'Google.com > Food > delete tab > consent page > new tab' reclaiming the tab won’t return the tab history either.</p><p></p><p>Disclaimer: I refer to the site(s) itself, and not as a third-party widget/connection or third-party link.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="forgottenuser79643, post: 937329, member: 88069"] If you are talking about the new consent.youtube/google.com page. You can't bypass that with filters. No one has succeeded in successfully bypassing it [B]without [/B]some complications. You need to manually block the cookie for the specific URL being: For YT: [URL]https://consent.youtube.com[/URL] For Google: [URL]https://consent.google.com[/URL] This will skip the consent page, but will break some other things on YouTube. It's Google's next experiment to bypass content blockers. And they have somewhat succeeded with this one. There are a few extensions on Firefox that were created during the past few days, that have somewhat successfully countered it to an extent, but it's still not a proper alternative. Since uBlock can't delete nor block cookies, you have to do that in the cookiemanger of the browser itself, or through the 'info page' (ctrl+i on Firefox). AdGuard however is able to handle cookies, for AG users. I, for one, use the Multi-Account Containers Addon on Firefox and blocking the cookie URL, seems to bypass the consent page by forcing the redirecting to not happen. But it deletes the tab including its history... If you searched Food on Google, then it would go 'Google.com > Food > delete tab > consent page > new tab' reclaiming the tab won’t return the tab history either. Disclaimer: I refer to the site(s) itself, and not as a third-party widget/connection or third-party link. [/QUOTE]
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