Fixing the exceptions list when it blocks content you actually want.
I suppose more recent versions are better at not fucking up your browsing... but honestly, I just don't care. Most of the sites I frequent, I don't mind letting them get their 0.1c per pagehit.
mnem
I don't even mind the little Jack Russel terrier. ruff!
I'm running µMatrix in my browsers, and while it is annoying to fix sites (by selectively allowing shit js code dragged in by people who "build" web sites by using runnable code downloaded from
${DEITY}-knows-where, runtime) and some don't even work even with everything allowed, I' more angry with the slop and leakage of my information to Google and Facebook and others.
It is a matter of observed fact that many sites, including EEVBlog, have a small Facebook tracking device. El Zuck has no business in gathering data on me, who has decided against participation in that cesspool.
Likewise, it's been found in court, that Google Analytics on a public web site in the EU is a breach of the rules regarding export of personal information outside the union.
Freedom is a complicated concept. In the electronic world, to keep this at least a little on-topic, the first line of defence is that my data is mine, and my computers run the code I am expecting them to, and very little else. Just as I expect my TE to perform as expected, report results to me, and so on.
This is why I refuse subscription software like F360 and the entire evilness that is Adobe Creative Shite, and will do my utmost to stay outside "cloud" services unless I've done a thorough analysis of what will be lost. I'm OK with my grocery shopping list leaking, not much more.
The convenience gained is not worth the freedom lost.