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Alexander2011-10-26 02:15:05
Domain Name System
Alexander, 2011-10-26 02:15:05

I am looking for a personal DNS-proxy with a special feature

Good afternoon, habr.

Lately, I've been really hovering over the fact that all sorts of social networks and other Internet services monitor my actions around the clock and regardless of my desire.

The simplest example: I spent a couple of hours a week ago on ebay, choosing a watch for myself. I did not use Google, Yandex and any other search engine to find something. I just went to ebay and looked at different watches there. I don't have any toolbars. I always use private-surfing whenever possible. I always press the "logout" button before leaving the site where I logged in. However, now all the ad networks are trying to sell me hours day and night.
Okay, ebay leaked to advertisers the data that I was looking for a watch in it. They are goyim, but this is their goy right. But advertisers also somehow recognize me! How? In addition, everyone probably remembers the analysis of Facebook cookies, which are really a model beetle.
In general, I am sad. At least get out of the virtual machine to the Internet and roll back the snapshot after each site.

On this occasion, the idea was born that I want to provide data to anyone only when I really want it. The easiest way is a local DNS-proxy with a good base of all advertisers, search engines, social networks, etc. in the world. The entire database looks at 127.0.0.1 by default. And only when the demon finds out that I personally, with my own fingers, send the browser to facebook.com, it stops blocking and only for the time that I am on the site.

The prohibition in the browser to load data from other domains is inconvenient, because so many sites collapse from such a ban if the page is composed of several related domains.

Is there already something like this out there?

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7 answer(s)
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@sledopit, 2011-10-26
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Accepting cookies only from allowed sites, forbidden js and adblock will save the world. =)

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Sergey Savostin, 2011-10-26
@savostin

No wonder - ebay contains the doubleclick.net code, and this is Google in all its glory.
For example, Kaspersky cleans all ads in any browser by default (you don’t need to load Firefox memory with all kinds of plug-ins).
You can also disable cookies from third party sites (third party cookies)

J
jursovet, 2011-10-26
@jursovet

For Firefox - all this can be implemented using add-ons.

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@sledopit, 2011-10-26
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I understand that it cannot. Therefore, I write about the prohibition of cookies from all sites except certain ones. Well, of course, you also need to clean them. Some cookie monster thread in ff can help with all these problems.

A
avesus, 2011-10-26
@avesus

Only editing the hosts file helps me - most of the pages containing banners, instead of these banners, display "such a page does not exist." The file already contains about 100 manually identified entries.

V
ValdikSS, 2011-11-25
@ValdikSS

So it just won’t work out to implement this, then you need to write a plug-in for the browser then. Neither for the DNS server nor for the proxy server does it matter whether you typed the address in the address bar or whether it was loaded from the page. So, really, there are two ways out: this is an analogue of adblock in the browser for your case, or some kind of squid and you will manually allow / prohibit sites that you don’t like on it.

C
ced, 2013-07-20
@ced

Or www.ghostery.com

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