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    <title>
      Bloqr AI — Blog
    </title>
    <description>
      AI-powered adblock list management and real-time threat intelligence. Block ads, trackers, and malware at the network level — without routing your traffic anywhere.
    </description>
    <link>
      https://bloqr.dev/
    </link>
    <language>
      en-us
    </language>
    <item>
      <title>
        Bloqr Mesh: A Private Network for Every Device You Own
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/bloqr-mesh-coming-soon/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/bloqr-mesh-coming-soon/
      </guid>
      <description>
        We&apos;re building Bloqr Mesh — a device-native private network powered by Cloudflare Mesh that brings your adblocking, filter policies, and privacy rules with you everywhere. Here&apos;s what it is, how it compares to NordVPN Meshnet, and where we are today.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Fri, 29 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        mesh
      </category>
      <category>
        privacy
      </category>
      <category>
        cloudflare
      </category>
      <category>
        roadmap
      </category>
      <category>
        networking
      </category>
      <category>
        coming-soon
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        Bloqr 0.82: Clerk is out, AI threat list is GA, and a natural language rule builder
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-82-release/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-82-release/
      </guid>
      <description>
        The auth migration completes. AI threat intelligence moves from beta to generally available. And you can now describe what you want to block in plain English — no syntax required.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Wed, 20 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        auth
      </category>
      <category>
        ai
      </category>
      <category>
        better-auth
      </category>
      <category>
        natural-language
      </category>
      <category>
        rule-builder
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        AI is generating phishing domains faster than filter lists can track them
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/ai-phishing-domain-generation/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/ai-phishing-domain-generation/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Threat actors are using LLMs to spin up thousands of convincing lookalike domains per day. Static filter lists can&apos;t keep up. Here&apos;s what&apos;s changing — and why real-time threat intelligence matters now more than ever.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Fri, 08 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        industry
      </category>
      <category>
        ai
      </category>
      <category>
        phishing
      </category>
      <category>
        threat-intelligence
      </category>
      <category>
        security
      </category>
      <category>
        malware
      </category>
      <category>
        dns
      </category>
      <category>
        industry-news
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        Bloqr 0.81: pricing tiers, account dashboard, and early-access discounts
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-81-release/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-81-release/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Account tiers are live. Here&apos;s what each tier includes, how Cloudflare billing is wired up, and what early-access subscribers get that everyone else won&apos;t.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Tue, 28 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        pricing
      </category>
      <category>
        billing
      </category>
      <category>
        cloudflare
      </category>
      <category>
        accounts
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        Bloqr 0.80: tRPC, Better Auth, and the road to general availability
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-80-release/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/v0-80-release/
      </guid>
      <description>
        API versioning, a new auth stack, Neon PostgreSQL via Hyperdrive, and what&apos;s coming next. The release notes for engineers who actually read release notes.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Mon, 06 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        release
      </category>
      <category>
        trpc
      </category>
      <category>
        auth
      </category>
      <category>
        cloudflare
      </category>
      <category>
        neon
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        DNS-over-HTTPS explained: why the last plaintext protocol matters
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-dns-over-https/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-dns-over-https/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Your browser encrypts the page. Your email encrypts the message. DNS — the system that looks up every website you visit — still travels in plain text. Here&apos;s why that gap matters, and what seals it.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Thu, 02 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        education
      </category>
      <category>
        dns
      </category>
      <category>
        doh
      </category>
      <category>
        dot
      </category>
      <category>
        encryption
      </category>
      <category>
        explainer
      </category>
      <category>
        privacy
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        What is DNS blocking — and why should you care?
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-dns-blocking/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-dns-blocking/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Your browser asks for directions to every website you visit. DNS blocking means some of those directions never arrive. Here&apos;s why that&apos;s a very good thing.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Wed, 01 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        education
      </category>
      <category>
        dns
      </category>
      <category>
        explainer
      </category>
      <category>
        privacy
      </category>
      <category>
        beginner
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        Pi-hole vs. NextDNS vs. Bloqr: which DNS blocker is right for you?
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/pi-hole-vs-nextdns-vs-bloqr/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/pi-hole-vs-nextdns-vs-bloqr/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Three tools, three different philosophies. Pi-hole requires a home server. NextDNS works everywhere but hands your DNS to a third party. Bloqr brings your own DNS provider. Here&apos;s how to choose.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Wed, 25 Mar 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        industry
      </category>
      <category>
        pi-hole
      </category>
      <category>
        nextdns
      </category>
      <category>
        comparison
      </category>
      <category>
        dns-blocking
      </category>
      <category>
        adguard
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        The VPN breach playbook: same story, different logo
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/nordvpn-incident-pattern/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/nordvpn-incident-pattern/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Another quarter, another VPN provider in the news for the wrong reasons. Here&apos;s the pattern that keeps repeating — and what it means for your privacy strategy.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Wed, 18 Mar 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        industry
      </category>
      <category>
        vpn
      </category>
      <category>
        security
      </category>
      <category>
        industry-news
      </category>
      <category>
        breach
      </category>
      <author>
        Bloqr Team
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        Browser fingerprinting: the tracking method that ignores your cookie settings
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/browser-fingerprinting-explained/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/browser-fingerprinting-explained/
      </guid>
      <description>
        You rejected all cookies. You cleared your history. You&apos;re still being tracked — with a method that&apos;s more accurate, more durable, and invisible to most people. Here&apos;s how it works.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Tue, 10 Mar 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        education
      </category>
      <category>
        fingerprinting
      </category>
      <category>
        tracking
      </category>
      <category>
        privacy
      </category>
      <category>
        cookies
      </category>
      <category>
        browser-security
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        What your ISP knows about you — and who they sell it to
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/isp-data-selling-what-your-provider-knows/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/isp-data-selling-what-your-provider-knows/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Every website you visit starts with a DNS lookup that travels in plain text to your internet provider. In the US, they can legally sell that data. Here&apos;s what they know, what they do with it, and what you can do about it.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Sat, 28 Feb 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        education
      </category>
      <category>
        isp
      </category>
      <category>
        dns
      </category>
      <category>
        privacy
      </category>
      <category>
        data-broker
      </category>
      <category>
        surveillance
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        AdGuard vs. uBlock Origin vs. Bloqr: browser blocking vs. network blocking
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/adguard-vs-ublock-origin-vs-bloqr/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/adguard-vs-ublock-origin-vs-bloqr/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Browser extensions block ads on the page. DNS blocking stops the request before it ever leaves your device. Here&apos;s the actual difference — and why they&apos;re not competing for the same job.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Sat, 14 Feb 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        industry
      </category>
      <category>
        adguard
      </category>
      <category>
        ublock-origin
      </category>
      <category>
        ad-blocker
      </category>
      <category>
        dns-blocking
      </category>
      <category>
        comparison
      </category>
      <category>
        browser-extension
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>
        What is a filter list — and why yours is probably outdated
      </title>
      <link>
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-a-filter-list/
      </link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">
        https://bloqr.dev/blog/what-is-a-filter-list/
      </guid>
      <description>
        Filter lists are the brain behind DNS blocking. They&apos;re plain text files listing domains to block — but they&apos;re only as good as their last update. Here&apos;s how they work, who makes them, and why automation changes everything.
      </description>
      <pubDate>
        Tue, 20 Jan 2026 00:00:00 GMT
      </pubDate>
      <category>
        education
      </category>
      <category>
        filter-list
      </category>
      <category>
        dns-blocking
      </category>
      <category>
        adblock
      </category>
      <category>
        hagezi
      </category>
      <category>
        oisd
      </category>
      <category>
        adguard-home
      </category>
      <category>
        explainer
      </category>
      <author>
        Jayson Knight
      </author>
    </item>
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