This Bug Will Let You Watch YouTube AdFree

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Well, there’s a simple trick that will let you watch YouTube AdFree, which means you can watch anything on YouTube ad-free without using any adblocker or subscribing to Premium membership. Watching or watching ads may be a part of the web, whether you wish it or not because it helps the platform to monetize from these ads. However, you would not always want to ascertain a 15-second ad before that YouTube video.

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You must think you would like an ad-blocker to skip ads on YouTube, right? However, what if we tell you that there’s a particularly simple, and that we aren’t exaggerating, way during which you’ll block ads on YouTube. Yes, a redditor has found the only of the way to dam ads on YouTube where you don’t need to install any adblocker or do anything.

Watch YouTube AdFree Using this Bug

Watch YouTube AdFree

On Reddit, someone has posted an effortless way of watching YouTube videos during a browser with no ads. you’ll view any video on the platform without ads, you only need to put an additional period after the dot com (www.youtube.com./video-link) within the YouTube link.

With this method, you’re definitely getting to have your ads blocked on the platform which is YouTube but we found in our testing that you simply are going to be signed out of the web site. So, let’s get into the tactic which is just placing a dot within the URL. for instance, if you’re visiting YouTube by writing the URL as “www.youtube.com” then to dam ads, you only need to add an additional “.” at the top which suggests your new URL is going to be “www.youtube.com.”

Normal URL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxxx

Modified URL

https://www.youtube.com./watch?v=xxxx

The Redditor who found this trick says that “It’s a commonly forgotten edge case, websites forget to normalize the hostname, the content is still served, but there’s no hostname match on the browser so no cookies and broken CORS – and lots of bigger sites use a different domain to serve ads/media with a whitelist that doesn’t contain the extra dot”.

Also, we’ve tested that the URL will remain because it is for the whole duration meaning that there’s no got to keep changing the URL to feature an additional dot. If you would like to use this trick on mobile, you’ll need to browse YouTube from a browser and “request desktop site” and add the additional dot after “.com” at the top.

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