AdGuard 3.6.11!
You must have been missing AdGuard for Android updates. Well, you won't be bored now, because we're breaking into 2023 with a new release of the product, and we'll only gain traction from there.
The main changes in AdGuard v3.6.11 for Android were made in our core filtering engine – CoreLibs and DNSLibs. As for the rest, we’ve worked to enhance content filtering and made a bunch of minor changes to improve the application performance.
Updated DnsLibs to v2.0.75 #4324
A significantly updated version of the DNS filtering library consumes less resources and runs faster. The DNS-over-QUIC protocol implementation now supports the
RFC 9250 standard, and the experimental status was removed from the DoQ support.
First step to Encrypted ClientHello support DL#161
First of all, what is Encrypted ClientHello? Nowadays, almost every internet connection is encrypted and no one can see what's inside this encrypted connection. However, there is still one little issue with it: the very first packet of the connection indicates the name of the server you are connecting to. Say you want to open
www.google.com, your ISP cannot see what exactly you send and receive from it, but they know what website you are communicating with. ECH (Encrypted ClientHello) is a new technology that is supposed to solve this issue and encrypt that last bit of unencrypted information.
So what would be the first step to supporting it from AdGuard? Surprisingly, it is to suppress ECH! This can be done by switching on both
pref.dns.block.ech and
pref.https.redirect.doh flags in the
Low-level settings.
But fret not: what we want to achieve is to provide you with ECH support globally so that
all your apps could benefit from ECH, not just your browser. To accomplish this, AdGuard makes your apps establish regular HTTPS connections with it, and then it will establish a ECH-enabled connection on their behalf. This experimental feature is planned for the next update so stay tuned.
Updated CoreLibs to v1.10.186
DNS-over-HTTPS filtering
Added an option to redirect secure DNS requests to the local DNS proxy #1563
Chrome and Firefox DNS queries sometimes could circumvent DNS filtering by using a DNS-over-HTTPS server. Now AdGuard can automatically filter DNS-over-HTTPS as well.
This feature is experimental and can be enabled in
Low-level settings, its name is
pref.https.redirect.doh. In the future versions we're planning to enable it by default.
Improved content filtering
The following new features are important to filter maintainers and provide advanced capabilities for content filtering.
Enhancement
- Added a new $jsonprune basic rule modifier. This modifier allows advanced filtering for JSON responses #1447
- Added a new $hls basic rule modifier. This modifier provides advanced filtering capabilities for modifying HTTP live streaming files which will help with preventing video ads. #1434
- Expanded capabilities of the $stealth modifier. Filters maintainers can now specify which Stealth Mode features should be disabled for a given URL. Before that change the only option was to completely disable Stealth Mode. #1224
- Added support for empty $path modifier for non-basic rules. #1591
- $removeparam can now be applied to POST requests. #1573
Fixed
- Hide your Referrer from third-parties Stealth mode option interferes with the $third-party modifier #1640
- Cosmetic rules with :where() pseudo-class are rejected #1609
- Rules with $third-party modifier block resources from the site's own subdomain #1637
- Rules with the $all modifier do not block explicitly visited sites #1590
Other improvements
- Enabled HTTPS filtering by default for Soul Browser #4202
Other fixes
- When confirming 2FA the code entry page disappears in some cases
- AdGuard does not create a local VPN and protection does not start #4269
- Internet fails to work when a network is changing from Wi-Fi to mobile data #4265
- Compatibility issue with iRobot Home app #4273
This version on GitHub
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