P
podkaracz
Guest
Ive seen here and there people posting about new feature beeing added that could be called adblock. Are there any plans for Asus to add such feature to official release?
You do know Asus doesn't monitor these forums, correct?
I would post this question directly to Asus instead.
If you didn't find it already there's a big 370 post thread right here on the forum
Diversion - Diversion - the Router Ad-Blocker
Welcome This is Diversion - the Router Ad-Blocker for Asuswrt-Merlin All install and update infos are on the Diversion website. May 04 2020 Diversion 4.1.12 is now available See the Diversion website or this post for the change log. Diversion is free to use under the GNU General Public...www.snbforums.com
In the past, this feature was available in AsusWRT software, but has been removed for unknown reasons.Ive seen here and there people posting about new feature beeing added that could be called adblock. Are there any plans for Asus to add such feature to official release?
In the past, this feature was available in AsusWRT software, but has been removed for unknown reasons.
it was in branch 378 or earlier if I remember correctly.
The feature was never officially enabled by Asus. It was something they worked on for a while, and eventually dropped. It was only available on my firmware where I enabled that particular feature.
I shouldn’t have to download 3ed party firmware to get something as basic as a Adblock “content filter“
Name me one other commercial router that ships with built-in ad blocking capabilities.
Ad blocking is highly touchy on a legal point of view, with laws varying between countries. Highly unlikely any of the big router manufacturers would add that as a built in feature for a product that sells worldwide. This was most likely the reason why Asus reversed course mid-development. I doubt they would change their mind a second time on this.
Just use an ad blocking DNS as was suggested, it will have the exact same effect. Ultimately that's the only ad blocking technology that can be implemented at a routing level: a blocking list of specific ad domains. Any URL filtering implementation has to be done at the client level, due to TLS.
You do have the control. RMerlin gave you the options already.
As for the 'more ads than content', that is why subscription services are flourishing.
I put up with neither. Life is too short to be paying (more, or less; same thing) to be consensually brainwashed.
And for the reading I do online, that is why Diversion is indispensable for me (and an OpenVPN server connection back to it when I'm not home).
dns blocking adds latency im a gamer
Name me one other commercial router that ships with built-in ad blocking capabilities.
Ad blocking is highly touchy on a legal point of view, with laws varying between countries. Highly unlikely any of the big router manufacturers would add that as a built in feature for a product that sells worldwide. This was most likely the reason why Asus reversed course mid-development. I doubt they would change their mind a second time on this.
Just use an ad blocking DNS as was suggested, it will have the exact same effect. Ultimately that's the only ad blocking technology that can be implemented at a routing level: a blocking list of specific ad domains. Any URL filtering implementation has to be done at the client level, due to TLS.
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