Setting up a pi-hole is as easy as some kind of baked desert. Flash your OS to the SD card, boot, install. Follow the prompts and you’ll be golden. The hardest part, depending on your router, may potentially be giving it a static IP and setting it as your DNS server, but those steps are also usually pretty easy.
It’s pretty much just does it.
Default settings are good.
I think you can dial in stricter block lists, but might have issues with some websites.
But you can pause PiHole for 5 minutes, allowing you to do what you need to. I think there is even browser plugins to give you an easy toggle button
I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re also using something like Google Analytics to track users.
I assume any corporate owned website uses Google. analytics. I fortunately have their domain blocked at the DNS level
Got any link or some info on how I could block them too? Just ordered a raspberry pie for my own piehole and got a lot to figure out.
Setting up a pi-hole is as easy as some kind of baked desert. Flash your OS to the SD card, boot, install. Follow the prompts and you’ll be golden. The hardest part, depending on your router, may potentially be giving it a static IP and setting it as your DNS server, but those steps are also usually pretty easy.
Thank you! I’m going through the install instructions from the website. Anything particular needed to block all Google Analytics and trackers?
It’s pretty much just does it.
Default settings are good.
I think you can dial in stricter block lists, but might have issues with some websites.
But you can pause PiHole for 5 minutes, allowing you to do what you need to. I think there is even browser plugins to give you an easy toggle button
Just follow the steps on the GitHub, iirc it’s in the default block list.
go test with a burner device on a different network