Joined December 2012
428 Photos and videos
A silly overreaction. Granted, it doesn't help that the browser does not report which exact permission(s) was added. There is no evidence the extension was sold. The project is developed in the public eye and there are no such announcement: github.com/tabwrangler/tabwr…
Another Chrome extension allegedly sold to mine your personal information This is an entire black market you'd have no idea existed but it does! Your best bet is to use no Chrome extensions at all, except uBlock Origin for ad block Or better: just vibe code your own so you know what is running in your browser
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"Read your browsing history on all your signed-in devices" is not new, and a result of requiring the "tabs" permission. You were already warned about it when you installed the extension. It was always there: 17 years ago in the first commit of the project github.com/tabwrangler/tabwr…
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Minor correction: "Read your browsing history *on all your signed-in devices*" is the result of the asking permission for both the "tabs" and "sessions" APIs together. Usage of "sessions" API was added more than 8 years ago (so still not new): github.com/tabwrangler/tabwr…
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R. Hill retweeted
In 2026, the financial siege that strangled Cuba for more than six decades became a military one. Five oil tankers seized in a single month. 7.3 million barrels confiscated. One of the tankers was not even under sanctions. The largest naval deployment in the Caribbean since 1962. US drones surveilling Mexican tanker routes. An executive order threatening tariffs on any country on earth that sells Cuba a single barrel of oil. Mexico, facing $400 billion in trade exposure to the US, stopped shipments. Venezuela's supply was destroyed by force. No alternative supplier was willing to risk retaliation or seizures. 20-hour daily blackouts. Hospitals on generators running out of diesel. Families cooking with wood. The Secretary of State testified to Congress that regime change is the objective. The President said: "I think it's just going to fall." But the siege did not begin in 2026. It began decades ago, and it was never unilateral. 187 nations vote to condemn the US embargo on Cuba every year. 33 consecutive years. The most lopsided vote in UN history. And every year, every country that votes against it lets its banks enforce it anyway. The reason is structural. 88% of all global foreign exchange transactions touch the US dollar. 95% of cross-border dollar payments clear through 42 American banks. One country controls the pipes through which the world's money moves. That is all it takes. Any foreign bank that processes a Cuba-related payment faces ruin. BNP Paribas was fined $8.9 billion. Société Générale, $1.34 billion. HSBC, $1.9 billion. Standard Chartered, $1.1 billion. ING, $619 million. $13.5 billion in penalties against foreign banks from countries that formally oppose the embargo. The lesson was received. Most foreign banks now refuse all Cuba operations. Several countries passed laws making it illegal for their own companies to comply with the US embargo. Total enforcement of those laws over 30 years: one fine. $15,000. Against a hotel in Mexico City. The votes against the blockade are symbolic. The fines are real. And the machinery does not stop at banking. A US private equity firm buys a Dutch software company. 23 years of Cuban contracts, severed in a week. A US corporation acquires two Swiss ventilator manufacturers. Deliveries to Cuba stop overnight. An American cargo company refuses to deliver Jack Ma's donated medical supplies to Cuba. It was the only country in Latin America that did not receive them. PayPal blocks any transaction containing the word "Cuba." Including orders for a cocktail recipe book. Cuba does not lose these suppliers to politics. It loses them to mergers, algorithms, and compliance departments that would rather cut off an entire country than risk a phone call from OFAC. The result: 35 children on a pediatric ward vomiting 28 to 30 times a day because the anti-nausea drug essential for chemotherapy cannot be sourced from anywhere on earth. An 89-year-old woman implanted with a pacemaker recycled from a dead patient, two years of battery life, because no manufacturer will sell to Cuba. 69% of necessary medicines unavailable. Infant mortality rising for the first time in decades. When one nation controls the infrastructure through which the world trades, and weaponizes that control to deny an island of 11 million people fuel, medicine, food, pacemakers, ventilators, software, insurance, shipping, and banking for more than six decades, while every other nation on earth formally objects and none enforces its objection, the word for that is SIEGE. The longest siege in modern history. Condemned annually. Enforced permanently.
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"malicious browser extension called NexShield that impersonates the legitimate uBlock Origin Lite ad blocker [...] Ironically, the victim was searching for an ad blocker when they encountered a malicious advertisement" huntress.com/blog/malicious-…
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21 Dec 2025
To be clear, "Read and change all your data on all websites" also exists with MV3. Installing one of top MV3-compliant content blockers currently in the Chrome Web Store still warn about this, as seen in pictures below.
20 Dec 2025
Everyone keeps saying uBlock Origin ‘saved the internet’ but we casually gave it permission to read and change everything we do in the browser, logins, cookies, banking, crypto, all of it. If that code ever gets sold, hacked or pushed a bad update, your ‘ad blocker’ instantly becomes a perfect spyware plug‑in sitting on every site you open. Chrome removing it isn’t just about ads, it’s also because these old‑style extensions had too much power under the old Manifest V2 system, so they’re being disabled as “not following best practices” on Chrome as well. Use browsers with built‑in blockers like Brave/Vivaldi, or go one level up with Pi‑hole, AdGuard Home, or NextDNS so ads get blocked before they even reach your browser.
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22 Dec 2025
All browsers can limit on which sites an extension can read/change data, they all offer "deny by default/allow on specific sites". r/n Safari does it best as it also offers "allow by default/deny on specific sites", a better approach for a content blocker. x.com/anasTheCatwanji/status…

Replying to @gorhill
Can't the user disable the full access by using the basic option?
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29 May 2019
29 May 2019
WikiLeaks has grave concerns about the state of health of our publisher, Julian Assange, who has been moved to the health ward of Belmarsh prison. - See full statement:
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25 Jun 2025

24 Jun 2025
One year ago today, Julian Assange began his 48-hour journey to freedom, leaving Belmarsh prison in the United Kingdom and boarding a jet bound for Australia via the remote U.S. island of Saipan. “365 days have passed, but we are light years away from Belmarsh prison. To all the supporters who helped make this possible — there are no words to express how grateful we are to have Julian free.” - Stella Assange
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18 Dec 2025

17 Dec 2025
'The Swedish government violated its own laws by awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to Venezuelan opposition figure Maria Corina Machado, according to an explosive legal brief filed by Julian Assange, the Wikileaks co-founder and former political prisoner who was hounded across the globe, confined in harsh conditions, and subjected to physical and psychological torment over the course of a decade by the US and its allies. 'The Nobel committee’s decision to award Machado the Peace Prize — and the 11 million Swedish Kroner ($1.18 million USD) reward which accompanies it — means that “there is a real risk that funds derived from Nobel’s endowment have been or will be… diverted from their charitable purpose to facilitate aggression, crimes against humanity, and war crimes,” Assange stated. 'The Wikileaks founder pointed to the “ample public statements… showing that the U.S. government and María Corina Machado have exploited the authority of the prize to provide them with a casus moralis for war,” adding that the explicitly stated purpose of the war sought by Machado and her wealthy Latin American backers would be “installing her by force in order to plunder $1.7 trillion in Venezuelan oil and other resources.”' thegrayzone.com/2025/12/17/j…
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18 Dec 2025
There is a regression in uBO Lite 2025.1215.1455, potentially causing issues on YT. A fix in version 2025.1217.1755 has been published -- currently available in Edge and Safari store, but not yet available in Chrome store (review delay is unpredictable in CWS). Sorry about this.
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R. Hill retweeted
New blog post! 🚀⚡ Using an ad blocker isn’t just about convenience - it’s a security measure every organization should consider. I’ve written a guide on deploying and configuring uBlock Origin Lite at scale using Microsoft Intune and PowerShell. imab.dk/enterprise-ad-blocki… #msintune #powershell #ublock #security
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29 Nov 2025
A post on Reddit was brought to my attention: "Why no love for uBlock on Safari?" reddit.com/r/Safari/comments… I was not aware of "no love". Anyway, I want to argue various points made in one of the replies.
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29 Nov 2025
Though uBO Lite did somehow end up being measured in a 2024 benchmark from @DebugBear: x.com/gorhill/status/1792648… "ad blocker adblox" was just a rip off of uBO Lite.

20 May 2024
Replying to @gorhill
Note that "ad blocker adblox" is a re-skinned version of uBO Lite, which is MV3. "Adblock all advertisement", "Stopza Adblocker", "DDG Privacy Essentials", "Adkrig", "uBlock", "Adblock Unlimited", "Adblock Plus", and "AdBlock" are also MV3. The rest are MV2.
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29 Nov 2025
Another aspect is content blocking effectiveness. For this, I have been working on an extension which sole purpose is to count what is *not* blocked, which tells more than counting what is blocked. See github.com/gorhill/uBO-Scope
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