I’m talking full phone and blocking. Not just browser.

Edit: So many options! Thanks guys I’ll go through them all and see what one I think will work best for me. I appreciate it.

  • @extrahazmat@lemm.ee
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    348 months ago

    Pihole on the home network and my phone has constant VPN connection to the home network via Wireguard.

    • @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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      48 months ago

      Out of curiosity, you have to open a port in the router for that to work, right? How does that work in the security aspect? Do you need to do some constant maintenance in your setup or something in order not to be vulnerable?

      • @rambos@lemm.ee
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        58 months ago

        While you have to open a port for wireguard, it doesnt respond to anything other than your clients with a key. It should be safe enough without any maintenance, but security updates are always a good idea. If you don’t want to open port there are alternatives like tailscale or zerotier, but I have never tried them

        • @barbara@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          Meshvpns like you described work good but having a real WAN connection works best in my experience.

      • @extrahazmat@lemm.ee
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        38 months ago

        Yes, wireguard requires an open port. No security issues in the years I’ve had this setup.

    • @lemmyingly@lemm.ee
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      28 months ago

      How much battery do you think this consumes? I’ve always thought an always on VPN set up but never tried it as I assumed it would drain the battery too quickly.

      • youmaynotknow
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        28 months ago

        The battery consumption is negligible. I use Invisible Pro with so many different types of blocks and circumventions that it’s almost ridiculous, and it runs at about a 3% in 24 hours. Invisible Pro has to be way up on the battery sucking scale for similar products.

      • @CyberDine@lemmy.world
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        18 months ago

        Did you use a guide to configure it all? I’d love to get started but networking has always been a weak spot for me

  • @LWD@lemm.ee
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    238 months ago

    My personal favorite is RethinkDNS, which is technically capable of running your favorite VPN provider alongside blocking ads and blocking/logging domains on a per-app basis.

    It’s a bit frustrating to set up for my taste, but it definitely works. (Kudos to Mozilla for sponsoring their project, BTW.)

        • @lemmyingly@lemm.ee
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          18 months ago

          Nice. I use Mullvad DNS for the same purpose.

          They seem to have many different endpoints depending on what you want to block, which is customizable only down to the type of content. Ads, trackers, malware, adult content, gambling, social media.

          If I understand it properly, they have 64 different endpoints for their DNS. But I’m not sure if all of these are publicly facing or if you have to be connected via their VPN service for all of them to be accessible.

      • @Blizzard@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        That is true but then it applies to everything and you can’t pick and choose which app to filter and which not (I exclude banking app for example), what level of filtering you want for each app (my phone is not rooted so there are some apps which will reject https filtering), and additionally I can quickly turn off and on filtering in the app for example when there’s a need for troubleshooting why something is not loading etc. In short, with an app you have more control and access to stats:

      • NightoftheLemmy
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        68 months ago

        The one you are thinking is Adaway which makes changes to the system host file.

        AdGuard creates a local VPN connection and lets all traffic run through that blocking based on filters. Your VPN slot is taken up here.

        NextDNS just changes your phone DNS to its servers and blocks based on filters. Here, your VPN slot is essentially free for use with actual VPN apps.

        • @EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          8 months ago

          Your VPN slot is taken up here.

          Oof, yeah, that wouldn’t work for me anyway since I currently use a VPN. Lol.

          Thanks for clearing it up though! :)

          NextDNS just changes your phone DNS to its servers and blocks based on filters. Here, your VPN slot is essentially free for use with actual VPN apps.

          That sounds promising! :D

    • Tiger Jerusalem
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      38 months ago

      +1 for nextdns, it allows me to track all the connection requests and it saves the logs on Swiss.

  • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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    108 months ago

    I use Blokada - but not the latest version since the company switched from the free open-source standalone app paradigm to a cloud-based continual paid subscription model. It seems like Blokada version 4 (obtained either from the company’s webpage or F-droid I forget which) blocks a heck of a lot more stuff than version 5 for some reason.

    On the other hand, it also noticeably heats up my phone if a not-well-behaved app (examples include Freemium games) continually resubmits queries over & over again every (or even multiple times a) second. You can block every request that it makes… but it can also keep making them so… at some point you may question whether the cost is worth it.

    This arguably relates more to “tracking” than actual advertisements, since there can only be a finite number of the latter but the former can happen all day every day even when the app is not running, if it decides to be aggressive about checking in with its home base. These days, even if you do pay for something, your data is STILL the actual “product” that is the reason the company is in business at all to obtain.:-(

    • RBG
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      88 months ago

      If you still want to use a VPN style adblocker, I moved from Blokada some time ago to Adaway. Works the same.

    • growsomethinggood ()
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      48 months ago

      I use Blockada 5 and haven’t noticed any heating issues, it might be worth a go! I did have to enable most of the lists to get good coverage (and then a couple custom selected on/off over time) but I mostly don’t think about it after a little setup. The only thing I do have to worry about is swapping which VPN is on when I want a real VPN- but fortunately the VPN I like (Mullvad) has adblock built in too.

      • @OpenStars@startrek.website
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        38 months ago

        Yeah I still use Blokada 5 on my daily driver - it generally works “well enough” for most things, so I never bothered to switch to 4 on it. But I did notice that if you try to play a game on it, it’s like the ad blocker isn’t even there, whereas version 4 worked a lot better straight away. I may just not have played around enough with the settings of 5 though:-).

        • @B1naryB0t@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          38 months ago

          I use 5 and I noticed it was hit or miss so I just said fuck it and enabled all of the available lists lol haven’t seen an ad since

  • BoisZoi
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    98 months ago

    AdGuard. You can get a lifetime license through stack social for anywhere between $16-$30. It also does HTTPS filtering.

    • @DuckBilledMongoose
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      38 months ago

      Same I love adguard. I only wish there was a way to use it with a third party VPN (without root)

  • RethinkDNS is a great option unless you already have something in place that you want to use as well.

    For example, I have a pi-hole and a server that I’d like to use 24/7. There’s a few ways to do it, but I’m an idiot and need a simple, hard-to-ruin method. So I use the pi-hole as an exit node with TailScale

  • @jinwk00@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    uBlock Origin on Mull browser (if not Firefox), Mullvad DNS or NextDNS for “Private DNS” (its DNS-over-HTTPS iirc) if you are not rooted

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    8 months ago

    Probably a good VPN with adblocking features. Iirc, protonvpn and mullvad do this pretty well. I’ve tried the dns methods like other people mention and on some public networks, it won’t work because they force a specific dns so you need to vpn for it to work.