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ADGrimes
Making moves
Status: Trending idea

Ublock Origin is one of the most popular add ons, and I think it would be great to integrate it directly into Firefox and Firefox Mobile as a setting. Perhaps it could be part of the 'strict' setting of the tracking protection, or it could be a separate setting for blocking ads.

Microsoft Edge has a built in optional ad blocker on mobile, and I think having this in Firefox on desktop and mobile would be a great benefit, rather than relying on users knowing about it and having them download it from the add on store.

52 Comments
Tbtoft
Strollin' around

I think some here misunderstand what it would mean to integrate something like this directly into Firefox. Sure you might believe blocking ads is "being a freerider" but having it as a part of Firefox doesn't decide what to block or not to block - that is up to the user by picking a set of block lists. That is a whole other discussion which basically have already taken place. After all Firefox has already taken a stance and made options to block things so this is more a matter of giving the user more options by default, not deciding how they use it. The browser isn't a place to force moral decisions, that is up to the user. Taking away choice is taking sides. Creating integrated tools that give more choices without using extra extensions is not in my opinion picking a side. No-one forces a user to block ads and only wanting to block more tracking is just as good a reason to have something like uBlock Origin integrated in Firefox as it is a lot more powerful for this too than the currently available options.

tlzyiqleu
Making moves

When Google and Mozilla try to enable Doh default :

https://www.zdnet.com/article/dns-over-https-causes-more-problems-than-it-solves-experts-say/

https://www.zdnet.com/article/uk-isp-group-names-mozilla-internet-villain-for-supporting-dns-over-ht...

 

The websites need ads to survive.

This is also why only blocking tracker and intrusive ads will be a better idea.

rv
Making moves

Just my two (really) cents:

1. Right now, if I'm recalling correctly, Firefox has no relevant segment of the browsers users-base market, so, whatever Firefox does will not impact notoriously on the Internet metabolism soon (maybe the risk is a move that could backfire against Firefox from certain websites?). Increasing users-base could modify this, but only afterwards.

2. Everybody hate ads. They're a plague. An abomination of a commercialized (or marketized?) society. We shouldn't care about markets. We must care about humans. Let markets adapt to human well-being, not the other way around. The idea of gratuity is a misleading business scheme. Products and services have a production cost, and we should try to reduce it through automation (liberating human life). Technology makes business obsolete all the time. Maybe we shouldn't be thinking in the health of marketing enterprises but in society's health.

Sorry if the tone sounds harsh or if the comment is out of place, English ain't my first language and I'm just trying to be concise (and in a hurry, actually).

Kind regards, everybody!

wuyanzheshui
Making moves

uBO is NOT an "ad blocker"; it is a wide-spectrum content blocker for Chromium and Firefox with CPU and memory efficiency as primary features. After a new installation, the default behavior of uBO is to block ads, trackers, and malware sites through EasyList, EasyPrivacy, Peter Lowe's Blocklist, Online Malicious URL Blocklist, and uBO's filter lists.

I think it's the user's choice what content to block, and not just ads that need to be blocked. I can't agree with objections on the grounds that it hurts advertisers' interests.
Firefox doesn't need to block all ads or other content, but it needs to have the ability to do so.

picknassaro
Strollin' around

Seriously, there's no justification for not having an integrated ad blocker in vanilla Firefox for iOS (meaning NOT Firefox Focus). Integrate uBlock Origin and Twitch Adblock into regular iOS Firefox!

1simpleAtom
Strollin' around

This would be an especially welcome feature for iOS. Currently, the iOS app does not allow any extension integration. This really hurts Firefox as a browser alternative on iOS when the likes of Safari, Edge and Brave offer proper ad-blocking protection.

MrCreaper
Strollin' around

I am a bit concerned on how would both teams work together with having access to firefoxs source and in general team chemistry is important. I wont hold my breath but I cant help but be excited for the idea. Worst case; have ublock as a default/pre installed addon

Pois0nous
Strollin' around

It would be great to have adblocker natively, especially sth as great as uBlock Origin

Milldogtjm1990
Strollin' around

I think having this would be nice but for me one huge issue still happens and that is huge amounts of ram usage. Please take a look at this article for more info to this problem.

https://lifehacker.com/adblock-plus-once-again-found-to-dramatically-increase-1576341872

One Mozilla developer took a look at AdBlock Plus' effect on Firefox' RAM usage and found that for every ad the extension blocks, it uses up a little bit more memory. That accumulates for every ad on every site until the amount of space occupied by ads may be much higher than it is without the ad blocker (alot of adblockers do this too):

Second, there's an overhead of about 4 MiB per iframe, which is mostly due to ABP injecting a giant stylesheet into every iframe. Many pages have multiple iframes, so this can add up quickly. For example, if I load TechCrunch and roll over the social buttons on every story (thus triggering the loading of lots of extra JS code), without ABP, Firefox uses about 194 MiB of physical memory. With ABP, that number more than doubles, to 417 MiB. This is despite the fact that ABP prevents some page elements (ads!) from being loaded. That's a lot of RAM usage. It's also not exactly a huge surprise. Not only have we known for years that extensions can use up a ton of RAM, we've even found extensions that suspend extensions you haven't used recently to reduce RAM usage. You can make your own joke about that irony as comments below. Of course, it should also be noted that Firefox (and Chrome, Edge, let's not leave anyone out) can also be a pretty big memory hog on their own without any extensions.

My opinion is probably the same as theirs, which is to keep the memory intensive operations, out of the main thread of the browser app to keep it responsive to the user even if your system is getting bogged down by other apps running on your system. If your system can handle more ram then i suggest upgrading to a higher amount and to get an ad-blocking program downloaded that you like and can handle what you need done.

Jeppie
Making moves

         It's a great idea but at the same time not because mozilla is the only company that respect ad blockers add ons. With the new manifest 3 ad blockers add ons are mostly worthless but mozilla keeps manifest 2 for ad blockers add ons because they care about those add ons. But if mozilla is making their built in ad blocker then they betrayed the people behind those add ons. And it will be worthless to keep manifest 2 in firefox and that is a win for google. Again it's a great idea but don't let the ad blocker add ons lose because that means google wins and we don't want that.           

quantenzitrone
Strollin' around

I think you guys might be interested in Librewolf...

gltch
Making moves

i think this should def be a core add-on of FF but a little more user friendly implemented? (when the add-on is downloaded, make use out of it and replace the shield in the url input with it or enhance the features in it, so you save some px, if not, fallback to their own safety measurements), but it also should be removeable/uninstallable.

i would say everyone should use uBlock Origin only since it's the non plus ultra.

i would also like to force everyone to use it.. jk

also a lot of ppl hear 'bout the name uBlock Origin and might not know it or do avoid it since it is to "complex" for 'em.. also.. some just ignorin the "Origin" at the end and thinking uBlock and uBlock Origin are the exactly same i told 'em about.

have some friends who use Opera's AdBlock and some random terrible optimized adblocker..

i do my best to explain ppl who don't know about uBO what it is and how it works.. it's extremely hard to sell it to them that uBO is superior to the one they downloaded.. (sadly it doesn't always work, a lot of ppl just don't want to switch because why should they? they don't care about privacy neither perfomance or the few thousand different enhancements they get with a different adblocker/all-porpuse-blocker.. also, they don't want to learn new stuff)

EDIT: one of the usecases could be an enhancement feature to a new "js blocking permission", way better than on chromium based browsers. Disable JavaScript and other things for specific websites in the list 

Ford_Prefect
Making moves

Totally disagree 👎 with this suggestion. Firefox should be kept modular.

BTW: There shoud be a disagree button for suggestions.

wutongtaiwan
Familiar face

I think Adguard would be better, better than ublock, which is also open source and trustworthy

wutongtaiwan
Familiar face

use Adguard will be better