Decentraleyes

4.8

215 Ratings
100.0K
Installs
Aug 25, 2023
Updated
Download

#Content #Privacy #Security #Management

What is Decentraleyes

Protects you against tracking through "free", centralized, content delivery

It prevents a lot of requests from reaching networks like Google Hosted Libraries, and serves local files to keep sites from breaking

Complements regular content blockers

Websites have increasingly begun to rely much more on large third-parties for content delivery

Canceling requests for ads or trackers is usually without issue, however blocking actual content, not unexpectedly, breaks pages

See more

Similar Web Traffic For https://decentraleyes.org/

13.8K
Last Month's Visits
53.7K
Last 3 Month's Visits
--
Last 6 Month's Visits

Total Visitors

Visits Over Time

13.8K

Top Countries

Top 5 Countries

Traffic Sources

Marketing Mix

100%


4.8

215 Ratings

William Lawrence (damianvincent)William Lawrence (damianvincent)

If you are even slightly privacy or security conscious, you want this app. It prevents many calls to third party services, which send trackers and other spyware along with the base service being called, turning you unwittingly or knowing into the product being surveilled and spied upon 24/7. It's an integral part of any basic security suite along with a good ad blocker, VPN, and tracking blocker. I also recommend moving over to search engines like startpage.com which offer great search result... Show more

Austin GatlinAustin Gatlin

The Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) are there to deliver the newest content. If it does not need to do deliver anything new, then why make the request, I only wish I knew if it had its own caching system, local or on the, Time 'Till Live (TTL [when to update the website with newest content]), caching system of CDNs. I erase all cached items every time I close the browser because I do not want old, outdated content that has not reached its TTL; even though it is new, And I do not want this ex... Show more

T MacT Mac

I do like DecentralEyes, for both privacy and speed, but... some websites break with it on. For example, the events page at PNWR.org does not expand the quick-view of an event with the extension on. You can add it to the exclude-list, but here's the thing... you have to figure out that (1) some functionality isn't working, (2) it's on your side (e.g. run in incognito mode or in another browser) and then (3) WHICH extension is causing it. It's definitely worth it, but the random breakages a... Show more