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looking for advice

Hello all, i am looking to see if there is any software that will block ads in apps ONLY.
Not an ad blocking browser.

I have an app I basically cannot live without and it never had ad's till today, which render it unusable. I tried to see about a paid version but none exsists.

Phone in NOT rooted
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
Welcome to Android Forums, metalman228! :)
looking to see if there is any software that will block ads in apps ONLY.
Not an ad blocking browser.
I am purely guessing here, but I believe that would violate Google's rules. Apps that contain ads are monetized via those ads; blocking the ads would negatively impact their revenue.
I have an app I basically cannot live without and it never had ad's till today, which render it unusable. I tried to see about a paid version but none exsists.
It's unfortunate that there's no ad-free, paid version. Have you thought about contacting the app's developer? Let them know you're unhappy that its latest update added ads, and that you'd gladly pay for an ad-free version. That's what I'd do. (I don't do ads!)

Also, if you tell us its name or, preferably, give us the link to its Play Store page, someone might be able to recommend a good replacement.
 
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This is what I use to block ads in apps. Download, install, let it create a VPN and your good to go....
https://adguard.com/en/adguard-android/overview.html
What do I do about the browser it wants to install? I want to use my Firefox, none of the others. Using their browser but not FF is another problem and i dont want to trade one problem for another, and it would be worse than an ad on the app.
 
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There are plenty of other VPN-based ad-blockers out there (DNS66, Block This, etc). You won't find them in the Play Store because Google are an ad company, but it's easy to find legitimate download sites for them. Neither of those has a browser involved. And probably a better solution than insulating tape unless that particular app is the only thing you use the phone for.
 
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Is it imperitive that this app of yours have internet access?

There are two excellent firewalls that will easily stop ads by blocking internet access.

After you set up the firewall, go to the Settings and the app info page for the ad riddled app.

Clear the cache.

No more ads.

https://noroot-firewall.en.uptodown.com/android

NetGuard (A simple way to block access to the internet per application) - https://f-droid.org/app/eu.faircode.netguard

If for sone reason you can't use the app without internet access, you can try Blokada.

It will block ads on your device while still allowing internet access.

Blokada v4 (ad blocker) (The ad blocker - battery efficient, fast, powerful and simple to use) - https://f-droid.org/app/org.blokada.alarm

But the easiest and possibly my favorite way of achieving a no ad situation in a case like yours is to find the older version of the app that had no ads to begin with.

This can be accomplished by looking up your app on an alternative appstore that allows the downloading of previous versions of apps.

I use ApkPure and UpToDown.

https://m.apkpure.com/

https://en.uptodown.com/
 
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Then try some of the others and see whether you have better luck. Although they all work on the same principle (without root it's basically all you can do) they do vary in effect. I tried a few of them a couple of years back and found they were broadly similar in overall effectiveness, but there were always cases where one worked for some things and another did not. It does depend on exactly what ad delivery system the particular app is using.

The iptables-based ad blockers are better, but you need root for those.

(BTW I'm not currently using any of these things because sometimes there were conflicts between the VPNs these things used and the security settings on some networks I was visiting, resulting in my silently having no network connection. I could have got into the habit of turning them off when visiting certain labs and on again afterwards, but as very few of my apps serve ads in the first place I learned to live with the few that do - I use paid versions where available, otherwise an app that serves enough ads to annoy me doesn't last long regardles of what it does).
 
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Then try some of the others and see whether you have better luck. Although they all work on the same principle (without root it's basically all you can do) they do vary in effect. I tried a few of them a couple of years back and found they were broadly similar in overall effectiveness, but there were always cases where one worked for some things and another did not. It does depend on exactly what ad delivery system the particular app is using.

The iptables-based ad blockers are better, but you need root for those.

(BTW I'm not currently using any of these things because sometimes there were conflicts between the VPNs these things used and the security settings on some networks I was visiting, resulting in my silently having no network connection. I could have got into the habit of turning them off when visiting certain labs and on again afterwards, but as very few of my apps serve ads in the first place I learned to live with the few that do - I use paid versions where available, otherwise an app that serves enough ads to annoy me doesn't last long regardles of what it does).

This was exactly my problem with Blokada.
That is why I use NoRoot Firewall, and just allow access for the apps that actually need it.

Blokada is great when it works.
But it only takes an update of whatever host files you are using to break your connection to something.

I grew tired of the web or some sites working one day and not the next.

So the firewall became my simple solution.

NetGuard also has host file ad-blocking, with the same issue I had with Blokada (for the same reason).

NoRoot just blocks access.
But thete is the option to ad the IP of a site and to block it either on a per app basis or globally (all apps).

This I have used to great effect.

The only drawback so far is that Android only allows one VPN service to run at a time, and any non root type firewall or host file ad-blocker is going to use that method.
So you cannot use a real VPN at the same time.
 
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