The internet has a hygiene problem.
Bloqr is the fix.
Not a manifesto. Not a pitch deck. Just a honest account of what broke, who noticed, and what they decided to do about it.
A two-minute task that took twenty years.
The founder of Bloqr — a solutions architect with over two decades in enterprise IT — had already solved the internet privacy problem for himself. Custom filter lists hosted on GitHub. A cluster of self-hosted DNS filtering servers running on Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Device-level clients across a dozen machines. Custom encrypted DNS resolvers handling resolution over DoH and DoT. His own private certificate authority so that he, and only he, held the keys proving who was reading his traffic.
It worked beautifully. It also required expert-level knowledge of DNS architecture, public key infrastructure, enterprise networking, and a fair amount of stubbornness to build and maintain.
One afternoon, he found himself copy-pasting an updated filter list into four different admin consoles. Tedious. Obviously automatable. He wrote a script to sync his GitHub list to all four DNS filtering instances via API. Done in two minutes.
And then the question: if this is useful for me, why doesn't it exist for everyone?
That question turned into Bloqr.
DNS was designed in 1987. Privacy wasn't on the spec.
DNS — the system that translates every web address you type into an actual server — was standardized in a world where the internet was a handful of universities and government labs. It was never encrypted. It still isn't, by default. Every domain name you visit travels in plain text to your ISP before it reaches the destination, a daily gift of behavioral data to anyone with access to that pipe.
Most people don't know this. Most VPNs don't fix it — they just move the trust problem from your ISP to a VPN company in a jurisdiction chosen specifically for its weak accountability laws. "Reject all cookies" doesn't fix it either. Trackers that lose their cookies just switch to fingerprinting, which is more accurate, more durable, and completely invisible to the user.
The tools to fix this exist. DNS-over-HTTPS, DNS-over-TLS, network-level ad blocking, encrypted resolvers, custom filter lists — they're all there, proven, open, and maintained by communities of engineers and privacy advocates who've been fighting this battle for years. They're just not assembled for anyone outside that community.
Bloqr is the assembly.
Make the internet hygiene that protects experts automatically work for everyone.
Not another VPN. Not another proxy. Not another black box with a slick app and a cancellation dark pattern buried in the settings. A transparent, vendor-agnostic layer that sits between your internet traffic and the parts of the internet that are trying to exploit you — and gets completely out of the way for everything else.
If you already have AdGuard, NextDNS, Pi-hole, or any other DNS filtering setup, Bloqr works with it. Bring your vendor. Bring your lists. Bloqr gives them intelligence, consistency, and automation. If you don't have anything — if you just want the internet to stop feeling hostile — Bloqr handles every part of the setup for you.
Bring your own. Or use ours. Either way, you're not locked in.
A few things we won't budge on.
Privacy is not a product feature.
It's a basic expectation. You shouldn't have to pay extra, read the fine print, or hand your traffic to a stranger in a jurisdiction chosen specifically to avoid accountability in order to control what your internet activity looks like to people watching it.
Transparency is non-negotiable.
Every rule Bloqr applies to traffic is visible. Every list is documented. If something changes that affects your experience, you'll know. No black boxes. No opacity-as-a-business-model.
What's never logged can't be produced.
Bloqr doesn't log DNS queries or browsing patterns — not as a marketing claim, but as a technical architecture decision. The data that doesn't exist can't be subpoenaed, sold, breached, or handed to anyone. This is a statement our legal counsel reviews for accuracy, not a line from the marketing department.
Simple enough for your grandmother. Honest enough for your attorney.
Bloqr will never obscure what it does with jargon. It will never make a claim it can't defend. It will never use "no-log" as a phrase without the technical architecture to back it up. Every claim on this website links to a primary source. Read the fine print. That's the point.
Things Bloqr will never do.
- Log your DNS queries or browsing patterns
- Sell, share, or license your data to third parties — under any circumstances
- Lock you into a contract you didn't consciously choose
- Use "no-log" as marketing language without full technical documentation
- Pretend to be something it isn't (not a VPN, not an anonymity tool, not Tor)
- Hide the rules applied to your traffic
- Route your traffic through infrastructure you can't audit
- Make it hard to leave
The gap is closed. Come through.
Internet hygiene that used to require a home server lab now requires exactly nothing. Bloqr sets itself up, stays up to date, and follows you everywhere.