1) What would be the quickest way to get a either a Pi-hole device or a router supporting that level of functionality (ad-blocking, and DNSCrypt) into the hands of normal consumers on a mass scale (e.g. completely non-technical users like my parents or grandparents)?
2) I know my next suggestion goes against net neutrality, but what would stop an ISP from doing something similar at the level of their router (or cluster of routers)?
Update: Actually for 2), some places that provide Internet access to their users who aren't ISP customers (e.g. businesses, malls, municipalities, colleges/universities/schools) could roll this out as well citing bandwidth savings (therefore cost savings).
>What would be the quickest way to get a either a Pi-hole device or a router supporting that level of functionality (ad-blocking, and DNSCrypt) into the hands of normal consumers on a mass scale (e.g. completely non-technical users like my parents or grandparents)?
Sell it as a turn-key appliance in a box with three ports: Network in, router in, and power. Operate as a transparent proxy, automatically update, web interface on the inside port only, etc etc.
Biggest issue is ensuring it's got enough performance on both Ethernet ports to not bog down traffic.
2) I know my next suggestion goes against net neutrality, but what would stop an ISP from doing something similar at the level of their router (or cluster of routers)?
Update: Actually for 2), some places that provide Internet access to their users who aren't ISP customers (e.g. businesses, malls, municipalities, colleges/universities/schools) could roll this out as well citing bandwidth savings (therefore cost savings).