Slashdot Mirror


DoubleClick Warns Against Ad-Blocking Browsers

An anonymous reader writes "The end of free Internet content will come when Web browsers start blocking online advertisements by default, a DoubleClick executive has warned. Bennie Smith, the online advertising network's privacy chief, said the popularity of tools like Adblock -- an extension to the Mozilla Firefox browser -- which makes blocking online ads simple was tied to 'a negative vibe against advertising in general'."

6 of 1,399 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Good call by Le+Marteau · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't care. The ad industry has gotten so obnoxious and full of itself, I want to see it die, and I don't care what it takes with it.

    I know this is probably not in my own best interest, but, like I said, I don't care. When I get this pissed off about a thing, sometimes logic goes out the window, and what will happen to the 'free internet' is secondary to my desire to see slimeballs like that double-click guy flushed down the crapper.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
  2. Re:Indeed, this is the free market at work. by Otter · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This is the free market at work.

    Actually, free-rider situations like this are precisely where market forces don't work efficiently. Everyone reading this site while blocking ads is able to do so only because of people like me who do view them (and subscribers). And I free-ride at the expense of people who are willing to view pop-ups.

    Bennie Smith is entirely correct -- if ad blocking becomes standard in popular browsers, that will be the end of free content on the web.

  3. Re:Indeed, this is the free market at work. by CyricZ · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The freerider problem only applies to public goods that are excludable and rival. The Internet is neither excludable nor rival, and therefore is not a public good. And since it is not a public good, the freerider problem does not apply to it.

    Blocking ads won't end free content on the Web. It will lead to innovation and new opportunities.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
  4. Re:Indeed, this is the free market at work. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If I block ads, it's also true that if I didn't, I still wouldn't buy their lameass products. Me watching their brain-torturous manipulative garbage will never, ever convert to a sale.

    So, let me turn off adblock, so I can watch them still wither into nothingness. I'm no longer a free-rider, they just bought something with their advertising that wasn't ever going to pay off, my eyeballs.

    Some advice, I may one day buy a new car, Ford/Chevy/etc. I may not. Either way, it's totally uninfluenced by your billions of dollars a year in ad money. Keep that money, and buy something with it. More R&D, lower prices, hell, have the biggest hooker and booze party on planet earth, it matters not. This goes for people who sell laundry detergent, fast food, and video games.

  5. Re:Indeed, this is the free market at work. by InvalidError · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Free-riding spares people's bandwidth... I never purchased anything from banner ads before adopting ad-blockers and am extremely unlikely to ever do. By free-riding, I am sparing the advertiser/host's bandwidth along with my own.

    When advertisers started using Flash animations with SOUND, I snapped and decided to go on a quest for absolute free-loading. The only ads I am willing to tolerate are google-style text-only ads and static images.

    Advertisers are going too far and I see freeloading as one way of protesting... and definitely a necessary thing for dial-ups.

  6. Re:a nitpic by flosofl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    really, how does /. know I am blocking the ads? They can't, it's block on my machine.

    It depends.

    I used to think that Abblock worked by just redirecting anything filtered to the bit bucket. Then, I hit a site that gave me a redirect and told me to turn off Adblock. Now, they were actually serving up the ads locally so I don't know if the same detection can work with 3rd party ads. Maybe it has to do with Adblock blocking HTTP GET for filtered content or something... I don't know. But somehow they knew that their ads were not getting rendered (received?) by my browser.

    But the point is that, yes, sometimes they can tell if you are blocking.

    --
    "This calls for a very special blend of psychology and extreme violence" - Vyvyan "The Young Ones"