The voyager client has filters you could use to try and filter things out.
Probably around 370 in total, but at any given moment, 3.
You should be able to do that with a ublock origin filter.
Maybe ask on the community: !ublockorigin@lemmy.ml
I have already answered you, but I just noticed that my Android client has that feature already. My client is Voyager
Where do you live? If you live in Northern America, or Europe, you most probably are not in the 1% that have the lowest carbon footprint in the world.
I don't want to remove any credibility or minimize any of your effort! I wish people would take it as seriously as you are, but just existing in a modern society is horrible for the environment.
I think maybe whatever client you use could build this functionality.
Is the database of websites installed locally in the extension or is it calling home for every website I visit?
Let's not build anything because there are no users. There are no users if we don't build anything.
It works on Android, but I don't believe it works on iOS.
I understand we have all the proof now, but back then, how can someone get intimidated by a call that could easily be fake.
Fair enough, but a decent actor could probably work as well.
How did he prove he was actually himself? Seems like anyone could have done it with a bit of AI.
Duckduckgo's version is so much better. Unlimited aliases for free.
It's a trade-off, because they often also want their entire article to be crawled by Google.
🧩 Puzzle #437 🤔 18 guesses ⏱️ 6m 20s
For that they use iframes, which have a different security system.
Because of the CORS settings on Google's servers would tell your browser to not go forward with the request. There are two ways it could eventually be possible:
- By opening the video in a new page/tab that only contains the video, with the YouTube player, which defeats the purpose a bit.
- By installing an addon or an app on your device.
Fair enough, that's interesting. I assume this only applies to the non-web clients. On the web, it would not be possible. You can verify by looking at the outgoing network requests on this random video for example: https://invidious.privacyredirect.com/watch?v=qKMcKQCQxxI
I'm pretty confident that you are wrong.
Hello,
I would like to self host either on my machine, or on a raspberry pi. I don't absolutely need to access it from outside my network, but it would be a plus. I have read this page: https://docs.piped.video/docs/self-hosting/ , but I'm a bit lost on how to set up hostnames. Maybe I can use something like DuckDNS: https://www.duckdns.org/