@bobjonkman 2) goOgle's threats of legal action are much less intimidating if you're hosted outside the reach of US law. 3) I'm told that invidio.us does what HookTube used to do. It works for me with all JS from goOgle and YT blocked by #NoScript.
Meine Güte, aber Hauptsache man hat Inhalte überall verteilt. Das moderne Netz / Internet, am Besten gleich alles breit gefächert in der "Cloud" und CDN-Anbieter. #Stop-Playing-Bullshit
@Ninjatrappeur@david_ross hmm. Is it possible that the same thing that allows #uBlockOrigin to stop #WebRTC leaking private data could also stop sevice based on it from working properly? Especially in combination with #NoScript?
@mcscx Still easy to disable the blocklist. If companies want to pay for getting on the whitelist, fine by me. They're still not getting through to me or anyone I configure #adblockplus for .]
The main reason I don't use µBlock Origin is because it bugs out with #NoScript because of some weird font crap.
@kzimmermann For one thing, with the new #NoScript, it isn't clear to me how to _temporarily_ accept #JavaScript from a site, nor how to revoke those temporary permissions. I haven't used #uMatrix yet, but I'll be willing to take a look.
@tregeagle What I enjoy is websites where the [nag|registration|pay]wall depends on #JavaScript. For a few months, before somebody noticed, you could read as much of the New York Times as you wanted. Which generally isn't much, but it's the principle that counts. #NoScript
This is what happens when I land in a website for the first time. 1. Stare at why it isn't loading or partially loaded 2. Ask noscript to enable the scripts from the main site 3. Stare at why it is still not loading 4. Ask noscript to load script from CDNs 5. If comments section (news websites) does not load, ask noscript to enable the appropriate third party site that serves them. 6. If everything fine, read the article. Else, goto step 3.