My son has set the house up with a Pi-Hole. It’s a raspberry pi running Ad blocking on the whole house’s network.
We’re a few hours in and we’re seeing effects, as well as some teething problems.
First, we’ve discovered that about a quarter of all the internet connection in or out of the house were ad related. In a few hours, that’s about 10,000 out of 40,000 processed.
We also discovered that every link on Twitter was blocked.
This was solved by whitelisting the t.co domain.
Once out browsing the Web, everything is loading pretty much instantly. It turns out most of that Page Loading malarkey we’ve been accustomed to is related to sites running auctions to sell Ad space to show you before the page loads.
All gone now.
We then found that the Samsung TV (which I really like) is very fond of yapping all about itself to Samsung HQ. All stopped now. No sign of any breakages in its function, so I’m happy enough with that.
The primary source of distress came from the habitual Lemmings player in the house, who found they could no longer watch ads to build up their in-app gold.
A workaround is being considered for this.
The next ambition is to advance the Ad blocking so that it seamlessly removed YouTube Ads.
This is the subject of ongoing research, and tinkering continues.
All in all, a very successful experiment.
Certainly this exceeds my equivalent childhood project of disassembling and assembling our rotary dial telephone.
A project whose only utility was finding out how to make the phone ring when nobody was calling.
Can confirm, after small tests, that RTÉ Player ads are now gone and the player on the phone is now just delivering swift, ad free streams at first click.
Some queries along the lines of “Are you not stealing the internet?”
Firstly, this is my network, so I may set it up as I please (or, you know, my son can do it and I can give him a stupid thumbs up in response).
But there is a wider question, based on the ads=internet model.
I’m afraid I passed the You Wouldn’t Download A Car point back when I first installed ad-blocking plug-ins on a browser.
But consider my chatty TV. Individual consumer choice is not the method of addressing pervasive commercial surveillance.
Should I feel morally obliged not to mute the TV when the ads come on?
No, this is a standing tension- a clash of interests.
But I think my interest in my family not being under intrusive or covert surveillance at home is superior to the ad company’s wish to profile them.
There’s a handy explanatory video from Dr. Johnny Ryan which sets out how we could end up with Just So Much ads.
Each webpage load can potentially run an auction (with you as the prize pig on the block) sending data to loads of different brokers.
Just did Morning Ireland with my new phone mic and headset rigup.
I hope it helped deliver the message that the Gardaí have no legal basis for opening files on people unconnected with any crime, and keeping family photos of their children.
The police themselves couldn’t cite any applicable legal basis.
Having recited a series of legal powers which applied to the investigation of powers, they could only say they had a ‘rationale’ for keeping these permanent files.
The investigation of crime, rather. The anti-superhero Investigation of Powers law has yet to hit the books.
I was reminded by a Google search this evening that in 2006 I put three TV scripts for a kids mixed live action/stop motion series up on the Internet Archive with a Creative Commons licence.
Sinn Féin is blessed with the quality of its enemies.
The party remains the most likely to lead the next government, and yet the questions asked of it are about matters irrelevant to the majority of voters.
It’s all culture war (and sometimes just class war) stuff instead of a focus on people and policy.
I think that this is because SF became the party other large(ish) parties have to define themselves against.
So the vamping isn’t intended to win over SF voters, but to fish in the pond of non-SF voters.
When FG and FF talk about SF, they are talking amongst themselves.