FilterLists | Subscriptions for uBlock Origin, Adblock Plus, AdGuard, ...
FilterLists is the independent, comprehensive directory of filter and host lists for advertisements, trackers, malware, and annoyances. By Collin M. Barrett.
I would rather use a (free) DNS with malware and phishing blocking than using these filters in my adblocker. Reason it is more efficient to do this on the servers of the DNS and the DNS has a lot more feeds with much larger blacklists. So I would drop the malware blocklist in uBOHi friends,
This is an update to a previous thread here about Ubo filters lists.
These are my UBO filter lists.
Any comments or recommendations are welcome.
Thanks you for your contribution.![]()
Quad9.@oldschool
That is a heavily tailored personalized list.
What DNS are you using (asking because I see you have included cname blocklists)?
Why so many filter lists? Definitely overkill!
Why so many filter lists? Definitely overkill!![]()
See GitHub - yokoffing/filterlists: Collection of filters to fill in the gaps for more info and sensible advice.Guidelines
- Prevent overblocking by applying the law of diminishing returns (always blocking more ≠ better blocking experience).
- Aim for efficiency without sacrificing quality (use sane, quality resources).
- Implement the minimum number of useful lists (avoid redundancy and bloat when possible).
@SumTingWong Something to consider:
See GitHub - yokoffing/filterlists: Collection of filters to fill in the gaps for more info and sensible advice.
Read the source I linked and decide for yourself based on your browsing habits.Which filters do you recommend enable and disable in my filters list?
"selectedFilterLists": [
"user-filters",
"ublock-filters",
"ublock-badware",
"ublock-privacy",
"ublock-quick-fixes",
"ublock-unbreak",
"easylist",
"easyprivacy",
"adguard-cookies",
"ublock-cookies-adguard",
"ublock-annoyances",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hagezi/dns-blocklists/main/adblock/spam-tlds-ublock.txt",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Kees1958/W3C_annual_most_used_survey_blocklist/master/EU_US_MV2_most_common_ad%2Btracking_networks.txt"
]
Which filters do you recommend enable and disable in my filters list?
@plat re Browser Speedometer, Edge ran 480 "tests" (10 iterations) and score with ubo running (& privacy badger + netcraft + mbam ext) thru vpn running in vm = 61.2 runs per minute. so far haven't seen a reference to what's good, bad & ugly.do something like Browser Speedometer with uBO on vs. off. Maybe it's a little "clunky" of a suggestion, I dunno.
I don't consider your filter lists excessive by any means.So I am using these as of now:
Code:"selectedFilterLists": [ "user-filters", "ublock-filters", "ublock-badware", "ublock-privacy", "ublock-quick-fixes", "ublock-unbreak", "easylist", "easyprivacy", "adguard-cookies", "ublock-cookies-adguard", "ublock-annoyances", "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hagezi/dns-blocklists/main/adblock/spam-tlds-ublock.txt", "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Kees1958/W3C_annual_most_used_survey_blocklist/master/EU_US_MV2_most_common_ad%2Btracking_networks.txt" ]
I just added the hagezi list.
I honestly don't know what is considered a reasonable number of filters lists, and what's considered overkillWhen I add a list and I get subsequent numerous site breakages, then I reel in the one(s) most recently added. Of course I also note how many filters are used out of the total in a list.
Which in no way implies users should just load up on filters willy-nilly.gorhill did say one time that you can have upwards of half a million list entries and your browsing speed won't be affected by uBO, though.
I'm not sure what the good, bad, or ugly is either, but with Brave, no VPN, and straight from my laptop.@plat re Browser Speedometer, Edge ran 480 "tests" (10 iterations) and score with ubo running (& privacy badger + netcraft + mbam ext) thru vpn running in vm = 61.2 runs per minute. so far haven't seen a reference to what's good, bad & ugly.

Is 205 score bad?There is no general reference in this context--mainly because there are too many software and hardware variables. You compare your own browser's performance with itself--with some parameter on or off. For example: here are my results. Honestly, I expected a more even performance with uBO on vs. off but it is what it is. Windows 10 | Firefox v. 120.0 | Sandboxie | 98,514 network filters | 128,499 cosmetic filters. The images are uBO OFF and ON respectively. I retested several times and the results were the same.
Again, this was just an errant idea to compare the possible effects of an extension. Subjectively, I don't notice anything different with uBO on or off. So take this with a heaping spoonful of your fave seasoning.

I got 205. Is this bad?Maybe you can start by getting rid of the "phishing army" list in your imports. That one has 0/xxxx entries in use. Maybe it's not maintained any more, it's worth maybe checking up on it. The majority of your lists are showing the majority of entries are in use. You can check if your browsing is affected by temporarily shutting off uBO in the dashboard, or if you don't want to go to any web-pages without it, maybe do something like Browser Speedometer with uBO on vs. off. Maybe it's a little "clunky" of a suggestion, I dunno.
gorhill did say one time that you can have upwards of half a million list entries and your browsing speed won't be affected by uBO, though.

Is this a chromium browser? If so, I guess it's good--I mean, I've seen similar scores with chromium ones in Windows. In this context, it's comparing apples and oranges if you're comparing your single score to someone else's. The idea was to compare your own browser's performance with uBlock Origin ON versus OFF. I can see that maybe this wasn't the best idea and I don't want to get too much off-topic when this is supposed to be about filter lists.
Firefox with ubo on.Is this a chromium browser? If so, I guess it's good--I mean, I've seen similar scores with chromium ones in Windows. In this context, it's comparing apples and oranges if you're comparing your single score to someone else's. The idea was to compare your own browser's performance with uBlock Origin ON versus OFF. I can see that maybe this wasn't the best idea and I don't want to get too much off-topic when this is supposed to be about filter lists.![]()