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The Morality of Web Advertisement Blocking

An anonymous reader writes "There has been some recent coverage of the over-hyped boycott of Firefox, in response to the rising popularity of the Adblock Plus Firefox extension. A recent editorial on CNET looks into the issue, and explores the moral and legal issues involved in client-side web advertisement blocking. Whereas TiVo users freeload on the relatively fixed broadcasting costs paid by TV networks, users of web ad-blocking technology are actively denying website owners revenue that would otherwise go to pay for the bandwidth costs of serving up those web pages. If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft? Is this right? "

974 comments

  1. Oh boo hoo by Trigun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

    1. Re:Oh boo hoo by ivanmarsh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Agreed... web advertisers talking about morality and ethics is a joke.

      When you site warns me that it's going to resize my browser, install software and watch everything I do I'll stop blocking it.

    2. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since I browse with javascript disabled, I don't see half the annoying bullshit to begin with. Does this make me a "thief"?

      The only ads I've ever clicked on were google text ads. The only ads I block are obnoxious animated GIFs; which is pretty much all of them (Nope, no flash either - not interested).

      I don't mind advertising but I do mind ads stealing focus, taking up half a page or otherwise straining my eyes.

    3. Re:Oh boo hoo by everphilski · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Then take the 'moral high ground' and don't visit the site ... period.

    4. Re:Oh boo hoo by KU_Fletch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. I don't sift through every page and Adblock everything. One, it would be a waste of my time, and two, I actually do click on a few ads every once and a while. I use Adblock to get rid of "annoying" ads, like the ones screaming into my speakers that I won a free iPod Nano, or the ones who make huge flash overlays over half the page so I can't read the damn article. It's not immoral, it's pushback.

      --
      It's not stupid. It's advanced.
    5. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Working for a company who does exactly this, I have to agree with you. The worst thing is the new-ish wave of "rich media" ads - videos that load and waste your bandwidth (perfect for mobile connections), banners and skyscrapers that pop out to occupy the page when you roll over, horrific flash things that float in the middle of the page and just won't go away. To be honest the tracking aspect doesn't bother me that much, but then maybe that's because I've seen what these companies actually store about you and what they do with that data (not a lot).

      I would, however, have to agree that if I put up a website and I depended on advertising revenue, I'd be a bit pissed off if all of my visitors started using adblock, especially if I chose non-intrusive adverts like google ads. It may not apply to a lot of mainstream sites, at least not at the moment, but it definitely applies to tech sites like vimeo or Slashdot - I'd be interested to hear how much their ad income has dropped as use of adblock has increased.

    6. Re:Oh boo hoo by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK. Then when the site warns me before it loads that it's going to resize my browser, install software and watch everything I do I'll not visit it.

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    7. Re:Oh boo hoo by xENoLocO · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not two wrongs... its one wrong blocking another. :)

      As a site publisher I understand the angle that it "blocks advertising", but as a web surfer I definitely understand. I don't put intrusive ads on my page, but if people want to block them, I understand.

      --
      "The need to build the internet comes from something inside us, something programmed... something we can't resist."
    8. Re:Oh boo hoo by Pojut · · Score: 5, Funny

      Two wrongs don't make a right.
      No, but three lefts do ;-)
    9. Re:Oh boo hoo by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      In addition, where there's no desire to a view a website due to ads, there's no business. If the user doesn't have an enjoyable experience viewing a website they certainly have even less of an incentive to view something that makes it less enjoyable. I for one, applaud anyone who wants to block firefox, or IE, since it just makes their business die off that much faster.

      People should know by now that subscription services (if legitimate), having a shop, things like that provide alternate methods to gain revenue. Just because we don't want to sit through the equivalent of a 5minute TV ad repeated ad nauseum, doesn't mean that we wouldn't perhaps buy something cnet branded.

      Just like the RIAA and MPAA, its time to revisit your business model if you live solely on advertising.

    10. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, but it evens the playing field.

    11. Re:Oh boo hoo by Deagol · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Repeat after me: "It is my computer. It is my browser. If the web site operator doesn't want me to view the content for free, then they should not place it on the web in a public location."

      This is not like TV, where all you get is what the broadcasters send to you. You are the one who requests data from them. If all I want is the text (say, I want to read in a terminal via Lynx), then that's my prerogative and nobody else's. If I don't want Flash or JavaScript on my machine, then who is anyone else to tell me otherwise?

      As the user has total control of the browsing experience, online adverts were an inherently broken revenue model from the beginning. The fact that users are just now being empowered in this respect does not change the inherent flaws of the advertisers' plan.

    12. Re:Oh boo hoo by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Two wrongs don't make a right."

      And blocking ads from your computer is not wrong. Your comment is null and void.

    13. Re:Oh boo hoo by jollyreaper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Two wrongs don't make a right. -1 * -1 = 1, so two negatives do make for a positive. If you want two wrongs to make a right, just use the proper math.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    14. Re:Oh boo hoo by mgblst · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it. Are they of the belief that those of use who go out of the way to avoid these adverts, will somehow fall under their magic when we see their latest animations?

    15. Re:Oh boo hoo by Duhavid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That was stupid.

      If you shine a light in my window, annoying me,
      I cant draw the blinds? Because your commercial
      interests are affected?

      Bugger off, make some ads that are not offensive.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    16. Re:Oh boo hoo by quaketripp · · Score: 1

      Nor does one wrong make a right. But if you take a negative and add it's absolute value it equals zero, which is what we're looking at here.

    17. Re:Oh boo hoo by funaho · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I wouldn't be blocking ads if:

      1. The ad servers didn't overload all the time and slow the page load to a crawl. I can't count the number of times I've had to block an ad server just to get a page to LOAD.

      2. The ads weren't so obnoxious. Sound is an absolute no-no. Animation is almost as bad, but at least doesn't startle you half to death at 3am when you aren't expecting it. It does however tend to slow the page down, especially if there are multiple animated ads all dancing around and asking you to punch the monkey.

      If they toned down the ads a couple of notches, and made sure their infrastructure could handle the number of ads they are serving I think a lot of people would be more than happy to put up with the ads in exchange for the free content. But it seems like no matter how much you say this the advertisers don't want to listen. They're stuck in the old TV mentality where they try to push as much dazzling crap at you as they can. The problem is Internet users aren't TV viewers; we don't want things shoved in our faces constantly. If we did, we'd watch TV. Instead of getting "mind share" they're just pissing everyone off.

      (and speaking of TV will someone please bitchslap the people who compress the audio of TV commercials to make it sound obnoxiously loud?)

    18. Re:Oh boo hoo by gfxguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not really the advertisers, it's the website owners who lose the revenue. Even if you don't buy the product, they make money on views. Eliminate the view, eliminate the money.

      On the other hand, I agree with you completely... if they need a click to generate revenue, they aren't going to get it from me anyway.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    19. Re:Oh boo hoo by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I find it tremendously amusing that when big media companies try to defend their right to their business model, and put a stop to all these websites that are subverting it, everyone jumps to stick up for the web, but when users materially express their dissatisfaction with the "publish stuff I want bundled with crap I hate and get paid by the creators of the crap" business model, suddenly the shoe is on the other foot.

      Find another business model.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    20. Re:Oh boo hoo by dashslotter · · Score: 1

      Two wrongs don't make a right? Who the F are you to say I'm wrong for how I surf the web? I don't remember joining any contract with these web-devs, so again, who the F are you to say I'm wrong here? Get over yourself.

      --
      I was flipping bits on an abacus, newb.
    21. Re:Oh boo hoo by badasscat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would, however, have to agree that if I put up a website and I depended on advertising revenue, I'd be a bit pissed off if all of my visitors started using adblock, especially if I chose non-intrusive adverts like google ads.

      Well, that's the real rub. I have adblock, but I've got a bunch of sites actually whitelisted because I don't mind their ads and I don't want to have a bunch of empty space all over the place (which, without the whitelist, I'm never sure would be ads or something else I'm missing). And I wouldn't even have adblock at all if it weren't for a few really bad apples that forced me into it.

      Adblock is not something that everybody just has, and that's as simple to use as flicking a switch. Remember that most people - and I don't mean most people here, I mean most people in the world - have no clue what a "Firefox Extension" even is or how to install one. You need to make an actual effort to find out about this, to download it, to install it, to configure it so that it blocks what you want it to block. Even people who have the technical ability to figure this out are not going to do it unless pushed. It's not like everybody who hits the web for the first time immediately says "ok! I'm ready to start surfing! But first, how do I block the ads?"

      Look at Google's model (at least to this point). They're making plenty of money on ads, and so are all the sites that rely on them. And I guarantee you they're not having any problem with adblock. Their revenue numbers certainly don't seem to show any. Why? Because their ads are not intrusive, in fact they occasionally even border on useful. I have clicked Google ads a few times myself.

      It's both funny and strange to me that people still think the way you make money on ads is to be as annoying as possible, when the biggest company on the net became as successful as they are by doing exactly the opposite. Don't people ever learn anything?

      If you ask me, any site whose model is to present you with the most annoying ads possible deserves to have a user set that relies on adblock. If you've got a problem with adblock, it's because you as a webmaster brought it on yourself.

    22. Re:Oh boo hoo by Paladin128 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Do you even understand the point of HTML and similar markup languages? The user agent which interprets the document has the option of ignoring tags that it doesn't support or doesn't want to. That's why we have non-graphical browsers, mobile browsers, and text-to-speech browsers. Other user agents include spiders (some of which only parse the first 500 bytes of text, removing most tags), validation engines, and mashups.

      The short story is, it's not theft; the user agent is just configured to ignore certain elements that match a pattern. It's the user agent doing it's job of presenting the content in an efficient manner to the user.

      If you want to force people to view the content so rigidly, use a PNG or PDF.

      --
      Lex orandi, lex credendi.
    23. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I personally boycott things that are advertised in an annoying way.

      That means that if a product or service is advertised via an annoying TV or radio campaign, I make a point of remembering, and avoiding that product or service for a good long time.

      That means that if I receive a telemarketing call, I never buy the product on offer or contribute to the charity that's calling.

      That means that I delete spam unread.

      That means that if I come across a web advertisement that resizes my browser or otherwise pisses me off, I make a point of remembering, and avoiding the product or service for a good long time.

      So, given all of the above, what's the point in my even viewing a web ad in the first place? Hell, by blocking web ads I may well be saving the company in question from a year-long boycott!

    24. Re:Oh boo hoo by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Bugger off, make some ads that are not offensive. Sounds about right to me.
      I install adblock as a matter of fact but don't block that many ads. However flashblock is on by default (so flash ads are right out) and the worst offenders that spew content-modifying crud (such as that annoying keyword underlining popup crap) or that host annoying moving ads have their domains blocked. The rest doesn't bother me, I just ignore it without any technological assistance.

      While I'll admit that advertising is a somewhat necessary evil nowadays, there's such a thing as overdoing it.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    25. Re:Oh boo hoo by aldousd666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Essentially though if the advertisers are paying sites to display their content, they are expecting a return. If the site displays ads that are not properly targeted anyway, and/or the required browser capabilities to view the site's ads aren't present (lynx et al) then, these may be features about the audience they're trying to reach, and thus serve as valid market feedback by not being displayed. If they don't belong on page X because the visitors aren't susceptible to web adverts like that for whatever reason (even blocking them) then the companies advertising their products still end up with a truer to life 'effectiveness' rating on who is displaying their ads and following through to purchases. The money grubbing grease-ball in the middle who didn't want to think of a real business model is starting to realize that business is actually an investment after all, not a free ride. Business don't have 'the right to succeed in their chosen business model' the truth is the consumers vote with their dollars/time/energy whether or not a business model succeeds. If they can't make enough money to keep the site alive because people block ads, well then your site has a bad business model. Just like the convenience store, I mean if nobody stops to buy anything, then you have to close up shop. Simple as that.

      --
      Speak for yourself.
    26. Re:Oh boo hoo by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

      What if the site is one I liked but they started using annoying ads? I might try to find a good replacement but what if it does the same thing?

    27. Re:Oh boo hoo by Technician · · Score: 4, Interesting

      When you site warns me that it's going to resize my browser, install software and watch everything I do I'll stop blocking it.

      Actually that is when I block the entire site, not just the advertisements.

      It is when the advertisements covered up the site so you could not access the content (X-10 cams?) is when I got serious about blocking advertisements. Yahoo news was almost unreadable due to all the junk floating over the page. It was as welcome as reading a used newspaper after someone used it to mop up a spilled bottle of catchup. The flash floaties were so bad, I went to the extreme to fully remove flash from my machine so I could read the articles. Later other tools came out to deal with the problem, the best being flashblock. That gave me the best of both worlds. I could view flash content and control the ugly spills on the articles.

      It was obtrusive advertising that started this mess.

      Once flashblock was working it was a small step to find discussions regarding the problem and solutions. The solutions would not have had a market if there were not a serious problem to deal with. The advertising hasn't improved, except Google came along and showed the world that a page full of banner advertisements isn't required to have effective advertising. Search engines have for the most part have cleaned up their act, but most news sites haven't caught on and are playing games with flash advertising for those who haven't blocked it yet, article keyword advertisements, and the old standby banner advertisements.

      A hint for advertisers is to be there in the search results. Provide lots of great sponsored content. When I need soething, I'll come looking for you. That is the best kind of consumer, ones that want your product. As an example I was looking for information on a failing lamp in my laptop. Do I replace the laptop? Can I replace the lamp? Is it expensive? Is it hard to replace?

      A Google search gave me the answers and a vendor with reasonable prices. The vendor didn't need to buy a bunch of banner or flash advertisements to get my business. They just needed to provide the info I needed and a good catalog of the proper parts.

      Here is the tutorial that got me to the vendor's site;
      http://www.ccfldirect.com/lcdtutorial.html

      Here is the table that told me what lamp I needed;
      http://www.ccfldirect.com/lcdrepair.html

      And from the table, here is the lamp I need and the price;
      http://www.ccfldirect.com/2x29fuspccla.html

      I found my bulk inkjet supplier and fuser supplier for my old laserjet the same way. I looked into how to refill cartridges, how to reset the ink level indicator, and such. The supplier with the info got my order. I found them from a Google search. I did not respond to a flash or banner advertisement. Those advertisements simply don't contain the info needed. Most click-through advertisements simply put you into a data mine site. They gather information on the hot new lead instead of providing the information you seek. Bad move. I'm not signing up to everyone's email list just to get questions answered. Visit the above example for the laptop lamps. Notice the total lack of data mining. They don't ask your age, income, e-mail, profession, etc. They simply provide an open door. From there I placed my order and supplied the information needed for the order. Notice who got the sale and who didn't.

      Ad blocking isn't evil. It's just an efficient way to toss the electronic 3rd class mail in bulk that you never open or respond to anyway. The free samples of catchup not spilled on your web page is a bonus. You shouldn't let advertisers spill gooey messy stuff all over your pretty web page.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    28. Re:Oh boo hoo by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

      BINGO.

      If ads had remained a banner at the top or bottom of a page, with no animation, most people likely would not have felt the need to block the crap. Bonus if it's targeted ads.

      I have no sympathy.

    29. Re:Oh boo hoo by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not just about "offensive" ads...It's ads that slow down your goddamn page loads, because the page waits for the massively overloaded ad server to finish loading its ad before the rest of the content pops up. Screw that.

      I block ads from most big banner providers because I hate them. For sites that depend on that revenue I tend to buy their stuff, or subscribe, or donate, or whatever.

      For small providers or people who host their own ads? I don't block 'em. They're usually not as annoying to me as the interminable "Punch the Monkey to Win an XBox/iPod/Whore" ads and I don't mind giving them my business. Hell, to use an over-wrought example, look at Penny Arcade...They put thought into the ads they choose to host, and the ads are relevant and informative to the people who frequent their site.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    30. Re:Oh boo hoo by Buran · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On top of that, my computer is my computer and no one else's. I can do whatever I wish with my own property, and that includes changing how it displays sites I wish to view, or what software I run on it, or whether or not I install optional components to software, whether through bundled optional addons at install or addons added later.

      You may run your Web site however you wish, but you cross a line when you complain about how I use my own property. Who are you, as a webmaster, to dictate what I can and cannot do?

      If you ride in on your high horse and start complaining at me because you don't like the fact that I don't click on all your banner ads, maybe you shouldn't use bouncing, flashing, text-covering, sound-blaring crap. D'ya think that JUST MAYBE ... there MIGHT be a reason why we don't want that shit?

      You had your chance and you blew it.

    31. Re:Oh boo hoo by SeaSolder · · Score: 1

      This is a case of advertisers misinterpreting what is going on...

      Ideally, advertisers should see this as a backlash against their horribly intrusive practices, and they should temper their practices. Instead, they are ramping up the annoyance levels of their ads, just so they out-flash the other ads on a page, and driving MORE people to block their ads. I wonder if one of those ads sent someone into an epileptic seizure, could the advertizing company be held liable for damages?

      If there were nothing but text ads, would anyone block them? I wouldn't bother, that's for sure.

      As it is, if I want to check the weather, and I don't have ad-blocker, or pith helmet running, I am inundated with horrible flashing ads, and javascript overlays.

      Oh, and just for the record,
      I've never clicked on a banner ad in my life, so if I see your ads or not, it won't get you any more money. (I have clicked on text ads, and even bought something through one, because it was RELEVANT to what I was looking for.)

    32. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. If their business model doesn't match reality, that's their problem, not mine.

      I'm not going to RTFA, since C|NET is a horrible, terrible, shitty shitty shitty site with thre paragraphs per page for the sole purpose of shoving ads in your face, so I'll just comment on some egregious bullshit in the blurb itself.

      moral and legal issues involved in client-side web advertisement blocking

      There are none. Period. I am under no legal or moral obligation to load youf fucking ads. And I'm not going to. You don't like my browser? Fuck you, block it; there are billions of web pages, I can sure as hell do without yours. In fact, not just "fuck you" but fuck the pig you rode in on, too.

      Whereas TiVo users freeload

      No, it's not freeloading. YOU are freeloading on my time by serving up that crap. I am under no obligation whatever to watch it. And it's worse with TIVO, as if you're on cable you're PAYING to watch. Come to think of it, I'm PAYING to get on the internet.

      When I first got on the net back in '98, there were very few sites that even had ads. A few had a single banner at the top, that was it. Only when the unwashed masses started swarming to the internet did these disgusting moneygrabbing assholes start shoving intrusive ads in my face.

      users of web ad-blocking technology are actively denying website owners revenue that would otherwise go to pay for the bandwidth costs of serving up those web pages

      Tough shit. In fact, I'd like to see every single site that is full of ad-laden, three para per page screens off the internet for good. That's YOU, C|NET.

      are you engaged in theft?

      Hell no.

      Is this right?

      What's not right is that you shove that shit in my face. Blocking ads IS my right.

      The only ads on my site are google text ads at the very bottom of articles. There are none whatever on index pages. But that site's been live since 1998 under various URLs; the main index has changed little, and still uses the same logos. So maybe I'm a little old fashioned? C|NET can get the hell out of my yard and no, the young whippersnappers can't get their balls back!

      -mcgrew

    33. Re:Oh boo hoo by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If the ads had never been intrusive to begin with, then people would not have used things to block them. That your 'nice' ads are collateral damage is not our problem. Advertisers shouldn't have been such morons about their business method, and maybe then they wouldn't be having problems now.

    34. Re:Oh boo hoo by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1
      Well, maybe, but I view it like this: bandwidth doesn't just cost the site operators money. I should be able to view a website on a 9.6K connection without waiting half an hour for each page load. Why should I pay for a broadband connection, which is significantly more expensive than dialup, just because a website operator decided to contract with Flash, Java applet, or XYZJax advertisers?

      Why should I foot a higher electricity bill? These ads are now so CPU intensive that my power consumption nearly doubles. I shouldn't have to upgrade my processor to read an article just so that I can render the ads without crawling along. Advertising is fine, but I shouldn't have to pay just to view it.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    35. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you think you have this a little backwards? You are requesting data, and they are gracious enough to allow you to have it. You should view it the way they are intending you to, assuming they didn't trick you in to viewing the pages or surprised you with something harmful. If you don't like it, then stop asking them for their data. Television is just blasted out to everybody and is there whether you want it to be or not. You should be able to view that in any manner you choose.

    36. Re:Oh boo hoo by merreborn · · Score: 1

      Repeat after me: "It is my computer. It is my browser. If the web site operator doesn't want me to view the content for free, then they should not place it on the web in a public location."


      Ironic that you'd post this using a free account on a site that's made all its revenue via advertisements for years. Oh, and you have a free gmail account. Whaddya know.

      Guess how your slashdot account and gmail account are funded? Advertising. If a majority of users on both sites follow your example and start blocking ads, these sites are going to have to find alternate revenue streams. That probably means either marrying advertising even closer to content -- e.g., more "slashvertisements" then you can shake a stick at, or more intrusive measures such as forcing you to view an ad and then answer a question about its content before you're granted access to content ("Before you read this next email, watch this ad and tell us: What color were the Adidas Ape(TM)'s shoes?") -- or switching to a subscription model.

      In fact, those flash/DHTML pop-overs we all hate so much? They probably wouldn't have been invented if pop-up blockers hadn't become so prevalent. The more ads blocked, the more intrusive advertising becomes.

      This "everything on the web is free" thing *only* works because of advertising, and adblocking only works because it's only done by a minority of users. If that minority ever becomes a majority, "everything on the web is free" fails. I don't think anyone *really* wants that.
    37. Re:Oh boo hoo by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      I thnik we can handle this with a simple look at the advertising contract: I'm sure almost every one states something exact like or very similar to "there is no guarantee that your ad, placed in our site, will be presented on the users screen due to any number of reasons including, but not limited to, being blocked by client side software, failure of an internet connection, hardware or software failure in the site server systems, line transiossion failures, packet loss, corrupt data, slow load times, or browsing away from a page before the ad is displayed." and further "It is the sole responsibility of the purchaser of ad space to periodically review the web site and ensure their ad is being proerly displayed."

      If you post a bilboard by a freeway, and it tears in a storm, you still pay for it unless you contact the sign maker and tell him it's damaged. There's also no guarantee anyone will actually look at the bilboard even if it's in prestine condition. Advertisers are simply paying for the likelyhood that people will have the oportunity, should they wish it, to view the ad. By blocking the advertising, the user is basically "opting out."

      Same goes for junkmail... There's no guarantee, even if delivered successfully, that a person will actually read the junkmail in their real mailbox. I go to the box at the street, collect my mail, walk to my outdoor trashcan, and throw out anything not immediately recognized as valid mail (anything from any company I don't have an open account with, any form of coupon sheet, flyer, or any other form of advertising). My e-mail system does the same thing for me. Why should my web browser be subject to any different financial advertising system. The advertiser simply can't guarantee I recieve it or not.

      Even if this campaign actually was successful, all we need is 2 little changes to adblocker: 1) allow a user configurable spoofing tool to be integrated making certain the web host is unaware of the existance of the plugin or unaware that I'm using Firefox and 2) download the ads anyway, even if blocked from being presented to the screen so that the advertiser still pays a fee and it still costs the host bandwidth.

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
    38. Re:Oh boo hoo by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2

      I block all pop-ups. There is never any excuse for those, so bye-bye. I block all annoying flash ads, and any ads that force me to wait while they load, and not only do I block that ad, but I block the entire domain that they come from.

      Like all matters of ethics, there is a certain amount of trust between the two parties. On one side, there are the people who block ads, and on the other side there are the people who produce ads.

      Most people don't block informative and tasteful ads that don't hamper their browsing experience, so the ad companies (very few) that produce tasteful and informative ads tend to do better...I'll cite Google as an example for this, in that they do contextually relevant ads that tend not to get in the way, or slow down load times.

      On the other hand, people who produce loud, intrusive ads should expect their ads to be ignored or blocked. When I'm watching TV and some ad comes on, recorded at a volume well higher than the show I was watching, with some dumbass yelling about his cars or sofas, I change the channel instantly. Period.

      As far as I'm concerned, when the advertiser or content provider stops holding up their end of the deal, the deals off. I'm not going to be forced to watch an annoying flash ad, wade through a mass of popups, or listen to a commercial.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    39. Re:Oh boo hoo by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      It's interesting how they twist the argument; users stealing bandwidth, etc. How about: advertisers stealing your attention, and you're just stopping that theft?

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    40. Re:Oh boo hoo by Area51_jk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Small Correction: Repeat after me: "IT IS MY NETWORK. It is my computer. It is my browser. If the web site operator doesn't want me to view the content for free, then they should not place it on the web in a public location."


      What do they propose to do about ad blocking on a network level? I have several thousand users, and like it or not, they are all filtered. There is so much junk out there, I cannot afford to not filter this kind of crap.


      Go ahead and block my FF , I'll use IE and still not see your flash/js ads.
      j

    41. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, you make a decision as to if the ads are worth viewing to get to the content. If they aren't, don't go there. Fucking idiot.

    42. Re:Oh boo hoo by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 1

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it.
      Chalk it up to perverse incentives. A certain number of users click on those ads erroneously and the site gets paid for those errors. Some slimeballs even lay out their pages with poor usability just to encourage those errors.

      If you try to control the way I look at your content, you will fail. Whatever your business model, you have no assurance that I'll comply with it unless I explicitly agree. And agreement does not entail your having some weasely TOS hidden somewhere on your shitty site. If you can't stay in business when your users are empowered, you should change careers. For your moral improvement, I recommend a new revenue model involving you operating the receiving end of a gloryhole in an inner-city bus station for spare change.

      PS. I'd really like to find a way to reliably block those goddamned "Skip this Ad" ads. For now I abandon any site that displays one of those.

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
    43. Re:Oh boo hoo by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      For the same reason email spammers operate: the cost of their advertising is quite low, and the rewards are enough to make them think it's worth continuing to advertise.

      This is why so many spammers and so many exciting web pop-up ads are fraudulent or at least wildly misleading. Such investments in advertising cost less if you don't have a legitimate product and don't have to do anything about customer complaints.

    44. Re:Oh boo hoo by karmatic · · Score: 1

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it.

      Because it works. Remember, there are 2 types of ads on the web - ads that want an immediate action (click here to buy X), and ads for branding purposes.

      Branding ads are designed to "get in your head", and leave you with an impression (or even simple familiarity) with a product. It can be worthwhile to look at _why_ you think certain ways about products - you might be surprised.

      As an example, I was thinking of getting a Vacuum. I immediately thought about brand X (no, I'm not going to to them a favor and Astroturf for them). Upon reflection, I realized that I didn't own, had never owned, nor did I know anyone who owned one of their vacuums, yet their brand was the one I though of first. I realized that I had heard about it only through ads, and I had heard them since I was quite young.

      Or, to put it another way, you click on 0% of the ads you block, and perhaps 0.5% of the ads you do. That's still more than 0.

    45. Re:Oh boo hoo by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      >Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it.

      Because virtually *nobody* is interested in advertising. Salesmanship is precisely selling people things they don't need. If they needed it, they'd go buy it without advertising.

      Advertising must, by its nature, be intrusive.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    46. Re:Oh boo hoo by fishdan · · Score: 1

      There are not two wrongs here -- there are two rights -- as in the right of the people to do whatever the hell they want. If these we site owners wanted to make a pages that have ads on them, that's totally their right. If they wanted to make pages that required advertising viewing, they could do that easily -- it would be child's play to do that in flash, or some other intrusive technology.

      On the other hand, if I want to view a site in lynx -- then guess what -- I can. If they let me block ads, then I will look at each ad once, and if teh ad is not over the top, I'll probably leave it. Asking me to not block ads when they could force me to view ads is like asking me to drive 55 on the highway. Google is not making all this money on ads because their ads don't work...

      Publishers want it both ways. They want their content to be easily accessible, but not TOO easily accessible. Guess what publishers -- if you make it difficult, we won't come. So the onus is on you to earn our eyeballs.

      --
      Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
    47. Re:Oh boo hoo by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would, however, have to agree that if I put up a website and I depended on advertising revenue, I'd be a bit pissed off if all of my visitors started using adblock, especially if I chose non-intrusive adverts like google ads.

      So charge for access to the site and find how much your content is *really* worth. The best content sites are the ones that have quality original content and can charge for subscriptions (Wall Street Journal comes to mind). Failing that you might try to convince your readers that you will not barrage them with flashing banners, dancing always on top flash, or video ads and maybe, just maybe, they will be nice and unblock your banners (I use both the AdBlock and ScriptBlocker and Slashdot is one of my few trusted sites). If you want ad revenue then earn the trust of users with good quality content. They may block you initially, but if the content is good and the presentation (no 1 page article divided into 10 narrow short column pages to squeeze in more ads) is fair then people will be fair in return.

    48. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capitalism is an economic system, not a moral one. Furthermore, if you are consuming the product, you should pay the price of letting the ads display on your browser. You should act in good faith, even though you are not forced to behave that way. If the price is too much for the product, don't buy it. Just because I _can_ walk in to a store and take something without paying for it doesn't make it moral.

    49. Re:Oh boo hoo by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      I agree. I wish that Slashdot wouldn't allow animated banner ads. I have tried unblocking the ads on slashdot because I do want them to make money. I can take it for about 20 minutes and then back on goes the blocker.
      It is hard to read text when there is an animation on the same page.
      The same is the ads on slashdot are probably for stuff I am interested in. They just present it in a way that is too annoying for me to tolerate.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    50. Re:Oh boo hoo by Trigun · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing about the advertising gig is that you're not the consumer, you're not producer, you're the product. Advertisers are selling your attention to companies. You are more correct than you realize about advertisers stealing from you. They are selling you to companies. They have no contract with you, yet they are trying to legally make a binding, non-opt-out contract where you are essentially rented out to the highest bidder.

    51. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a colossal fucking idiot.

      Seriously. Colossal. Fucking. Idiot.

    52. Re:Oh boo hoo by DrXym · · Score: 1
      If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

      It's worse than that. The likes of Google, Yahoo and no doubt others tie your browsing habits to cookies you CAN'T delete because they control access to personalized services on their site. I wish it was possible to say to ad blockers to not pass any Google cookies EXCEPT for top-level sites of my choosing. That way GMail doesn't break but I can stop Google snooping on sites I happen to be visiting.

    53. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, some of us use MythTV and record the TV that we *pay* a cable provider to send us and then watch it without the commercials. Ads are so over the top and obnoxious -- in general -- these days that I have no compunction about removing them from my viewing. There are some sights that I frequent where I exclude at least some of the blocking. But many animated GIF or flash ads (and even more commercials) are exceptionally annoying and I refuse to watch them.

    54. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe I block ads because I feel guilty about not looking at or clicking on them, screwing the guy who paid for the ad to be shown.

    55. Re:Oh boo hoo by ivanmarsh · · Score: 1

      So it's wrong to stop someone from screwing you over?

      I block spyware... if you don't you have no business being on the internet.

    56. Re:Oh boo hoo by MrAtoz · · Score: 1

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it.

      A very good point. You could make the case that the person blocking the ad is actually saving the web site bandwidth costs by saving them the trouble of sending over all that Flash/graphic/audio datajunk. The person who views the content and fails to click through the ad (or even worse, is like me and just doesn't even glance at the ads) is the one who's really stealing bandwidth here.

    57. Re:Oh boo hoo by ZWithaPGGB · · Score: 1

      It's pretty simple cost containment/business sense. Not serving up a page to someone who isn't going to click through saves you costs that won't produce revenue.

      This is analogous to a coffee shop that asks people who sit in their chairs and read the leftover newspapers but never buy coffee to go use the public library instead.

      Businesses exist to make money. One of the ways a web-based, advertising supported, business can contain costs is by not serving up pages to people who aren't going to generate ad revenue. Whether blocking Firefox users actually increases your click through rate or other revenue or not is up to debate, but if it does, then doing so makes sense from a business standpoint.

      If you don't want the ads, don't visit sites that serve them up.

    58. Re:Oh boo hoo by jessecurry · · Score: 2, Informative

      If the web site operator doesn't want me to view the content for free, then they should not place it on the web in a public location.

      By limiting which browsers are able to connect to their site and retrieve data they are(more or less) doing what you recommend. I take from your post that you support a website's right to limit your access?

      --
      Those who know, do not speak. Those who speak, do not know. ~Lao Tzu
    59. Re:Oh boo hoo by houstonbofh · · Score: 3, Informative

      Considering that Yahoo served up a few million Trojans in poorly vetted ads, it is a damn sight more than an inconvenience! http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/11/yahoo_serves_12million_malware_ads/

    60. Re:Oh boo hoo by lordmetroid · · Score: 1

      I don't agree... People don't go out an buy things they don't know exists. Advertisement primary objective for new products with no past exposure is to inform people that the product is available for purchase.

    61. Re:Oh boo hoo by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      If you ever want to check the weather, you should try the source

      There are no ads. You already paid for this with your tax dollars, so nobody else needs to make a quick dirty buck off it. As a nice bonus, you can piss off people like Rick Santorum, who attempted to pass legislation banning the National Weather Service from providing weather information in order to benefit the crapware flash-ad bastards who ran a fraudulent weather website in his senate district.

      Why does everything on the web have to be a money-geyser commercial nightmare? Why can't people leave the excellent, functional, downright usable sites alone? I like NOAAs site. I like craigslist. I'm tired of people trying to crap it up and make it worse to make a buck.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    62. Re:Oh boo hoo by unfunk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Repeat after me: "It is my browser." Not according to Microsoft (and many other companies') EULAs, it's not...
    63. Re:Oh boo hoo by zymurgyboy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So...

      Some guy has nothing better to do at his public llama petting zoo one day, so he decides to sit out in a lawn chair with a bunch of printed advertisements for some store. They said they'd give him a dollar for every sale they made when their customer mentioned the llama zoo. I head into the zoo and he hands me a copy of it. I drop it as soon as I get by him, or refuse to take it at all, or take it and rip it in half right in front of him, or feed it to one of the llamas. Or perhaps he's holding a live monkey and asks me to take a shot at it before I go into the zoo. If my response is that I'd rather not take a swing at his monkey or that I trash/ignore/deface the piece of paper handed to me, a reasonable response would be for the llama herder to hop out of his lawn chair shouting, "thief. THEIF!"

      Perhaps he'd be better off putting a small rack next to the entrance that says "Support Our Favorite Merchants" or somesuch and drop his ads there?

      He'd certainly blend in better with sane folks, I'd think.

      Once the ad is in my possesion, do I not have the right to destroy or ignore it, or write important phone numbers on the back of it?

      --
      If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
    64. Re:Oh boo hoo by samkass · · Score: 0

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it. Are they of the belief that those of use who go out of the way to avoid these adverts, will somehow fall under their magic when we see their latest animations?

      1. Brand recognition. Study after study has shown that people prefer the familiar, rate the familiar higher quality, and will tend to choose the familiar when making choices. Anything any advertiser can do to make their product seem more familiar to you is a win. You don't have to click on a thing for the advertiser to gain.
      2. Nothing is "clear" about who's interested... it's possible the right ad will come up just when you're looking for something, and you'll click it. With a hundred million surfers out there and relatively low advertising costs, you only have to catch a tiny amount to profit.
      3. Even if you're not going to buy something, if a brand gets tied to a purpose in your head, you may tell someone else about it if they ask on that topic. "I haven't used anything like that myself, but I seem to recall there's a product named Fruity Oatey Bars" that might do the trick for you." That sort of thing.
      4. The whole reason they NEED the animations is because people are not interested in it. If the product was inherently interesting, animation wouldn't really be necessary (how many animated iPhone ads do you see online?) In order to accomplish #1, #2, and #3 above, it needs to draw your eye, and if the product itself is uninteresting the ad needs to compensate for that somehow.

      So yes, visiting a site with an ad blocker is stealing. It's more "stealing" than copying MP3s, more "stealing" than violating EULAs, and more "stealing" than unlocking capabilities in a locked device. Why? Because while the costs for the producers don't change much with the other activities, with browsing you're incurring direct costs for the host each time you visit and not fulfilling your half of the bargain in letting them deliver the ads to you.

      If you don't like the ads, don't visit the site.

      --
      E pluribus unum
    65. Re:Oh boo hoo by compro01 · · Score: 1

      It's ads that slow down your goddamn page loads, because the page waits for the massively overloaded ad server to finish loading its ad before the rest of the content pops up. Screw that. those qualify as "offensive" on my list, along with:

      1. pop-up/pop-under

      2. distracting/seizure inducing

      3. excessively large (either file size or physical size)

      4. ones get in the way of what I'm doing (e.g. those stupid sliding ads that cover part of the screen that I'm trying to read and follow you down the page.)

      5. obvious bullshit (YOU WON A FREE *SOMETHING*!)

      if you want me to see your ads, nice simple text ads (ala adsense) are nice. i keep those whitelisted. a small, simple jpeg is fine too. a small animated gif might be pushing it. and don't even think about using flash.
      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    66. Re:Oh boo hoo by onepoint · · Score: 1

      Some slime-balls even lay out their pages with poor usability just to encourage those errors.

      yep it's called ugly site design:
      it's where you use incorrectly matching color harmonies and make some truly awful sites.

      now the more refined have very wonder site designs except they are awful to look at and after a few minute, you click way from the site due to pain from viewing.

      onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    67. Re:Oh boo hoo by icebrain · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points... "When I need something, I'll come looking for you" sums it up perfectly. I'm more than willing to click on the "sponsored links" section in a Google search and see if they have what I'm looking for, but I never, repeat NEVER, click on banner ads or anything like that.

      --
      The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
    68. Re:Oh boo hoo by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Capitalism is an economic system, not a moral one.

      Not everyone agrees with you.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    69. Re:Oh boo hoo by prockcore · · Score: 1

      If you've got a problem with adblock, it's because you as a webmaster brought it on yourself.


      Except that ABP and Filterset.G block non-intrusive ads by default! Adwords are blocked by default. So you're screwing over people who do non-intrusive ads.. people who have never done intrusive ads.

      I don't have a problem with blocking ads.. I have a problem with Adblock.
    70. Re:Oh boo hoo by WNight · · Score: 1

      Slashdot and Google, both ad funded, allow total blocking of their ads. Go figure.

      They recognize that having more members/users benefits the other users, and so on. If they blocked anyone for not viewing ads their "paying" users would have less people to talk to.

      Also, they might have a false-positive and block the wrong user. And the pros could avoid the blocking anyways. You'd have to be an idiot to play the copy-protection/DRM game.

      If we insist on rules forcing people to view ads to view content we hurt Google, by making giving their competitors a huge step up. No corporate welfare!

    71. Re:Oh boo hoo by PalmerEldritch42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      and not fulfilling your half of the bargain in letting them deliver the ads to you.

      You had me up until this bit. When I go to a website, I am not engaging in any sort of bargain with the webmaster. I never negotiate what I will do or demand what I will get from them. There is no agreement that I explicitly agree to saying I will look at their ads. If there was such a EULA on a website, I would quickly opt out and not go to their site.

      Some of the youngsters on /. may not remember this, but there was a time when there were no advertisements on the web. Somehow, people still found a way to afford to publish their sites. In the unlikely case that all advertisements on the web were to suddenly stop paying off, the web would still exist. The advertisers, and even the publishers of web content do not have some sort or god-given right to make a profit. And we, the web users, do not have any requirement to provide these people with profits.

      As to your stealing soliloquy, come on. What has been stolen? Did I break into someone's house and remove the ad profit from them? No. There is no physical thing that they have lost. They lost a potential profit. A profit that they are not entitled to. They can not demand that that I look at an ad, or download one. If they want to force people to pay for their web page, then they need to ask them for money. The subscription model has worked for a long time.

      It's like saying that you are stealing from Walmart if you walk into their store and you don't buy anything. In this scenario, they may want you to buy their crap. Their whole business model is predicated upon people buying their crap. And you are using their employees' time, taking up valuable parking real estate, and a whole host of other expenses. Their costs are the same regardless of how many people come into the store. But since you did not buy anything, you have stolen from them more egregiously than any mp3 copying, EULA violating, device unlocking pirates. Right?
      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig.

      :wq!

    72. Re:Oh boo hoo by tempestdata · · Score: 1

      Agreed... Microsoft talking about morality and ethics is a joke.

      When they lower their price on windows to $10 or less, and make it bug free, I'll stop stealing it.


      That is really no excuse, if you dont like the advertizing on a website, dont go to the website. If you dont know if the website is free of obnoxious ads... DONT GO TO IT! Just like you wouldn't download and install any random application on the internet.

      --
      - Tempestdata
    73. Re:Oh boo hoo by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      I'd argue that's marketing, but I agree a case could be made for that. However, even then: if you don't know it exists, you probably don't need it. It's still a process of convincing people to buy something that they wouldn't otherwise.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    74. Re:Oh boo hoo by Seumas · · Score: 1

      They would still bitch. I would still bitch. Aside from intrusiveness, I simply don't want 90% of my screen real-estate to be taken by annoying, flashy, blinking, animated, noisey, idiotic advertisements. I don't need every second of my life to be consumed with advertising.

      Further, I believe that a service is either worth PAYING for (by the visitor) or it is worth GIVING THE SERVICE FOR FREE (by the provider). For instance, I don't want my users to be annoyed by pages full of disruptive advertising, so the 60,000 members to my website do not have to deal with advertising, period. I have kept up with that for more than eight years and I'm willing to do away with the few bucks from advertising and pay for all expenses out of my pocket in return for not being another annoying sell-out.

    75. Re:Oh boo hoo by Big+Boss · · Score: 1

      One more thing to add, they slow the site down significantly. If I get stalled loading a page and Firefox says "Waiting for adserver.com" guess what's getting added to my adblock filter? :) And when I do, that site starts going really fast. Interesting, isn't it?

      Note to advertisers: I don't block google ads, think about that. They are fast, unobtrusive, and often relevant. I even click on them and sometimes buy stuff. The irritating full page flash stuff gets blocked, AND I make a mental note to NEVER buy anything from them. Same thing with pop-up and pop-under ads. If you want my money, don't piss me off. Simple.

    76. Re:Oh boo hoo by blhack · · Score: 1

      Why don't the adblock people change the code a little bit so that the ads are still downloaded, they just aren't displayed?

      Then they could rule the world.

      --
      NewslilySocial News. No lolcats allowed.
    77. Re:Oh boo hoo by zgregoryg · · Score: 0

      Where do these people find the audacity to discuss the morality of blocking web advertising? A better discussion would be the morality of taking something provided for free, the Internet (anyone remember the early 1990s?), and not only trying to make money off of it, but trying to force the issue and do away with the original intention of the platform! The FREE exchange of information and ideas. My $0.10

    78. Re:Oh boo hoo by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      Not serving up a page to someone who isn't going to click through saves you costs that won't produce revenue. Go ahead, alienate your potential customers, lets see what kind of user base you end up with. I would consider the less profitable users to be a simple cost of doing business.

      Oh, and I would think that someone viewing your site without clicking adds is several levels of magnitude less a bottom line impact compared to someone sitting in a starbucks without paying and depriving a paying customer a place.
    79. Re:Oh boo hoo by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 1

      What we need is not an ad blocker but an ad load faker. We need a plugin that will load the ad into a hidden web page with no sound or motion. Once the ad is loaded then the plugin dumps the ad to free up memory. Or something like that. That way the web site gets their traffic and we get to browse what we want instead of what someone else wants.

      --
      The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
    80. Re:Oh boo hoo by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      There are two myths in TFA which I wish to debunk.

      1) Tivo users are less guilty of stealing content because the cost of broadcasting is relatively fixed.
      False - Advertisers pay based on expected viewers of a TV show. As the number of people skipping commercials increases, advertisers will pay less and less for those commercials. Already you can see that the big money in advertising is shifting to product placement in shows. Some shows it is just too prominent in and I have already cut back or stopped watching them all together.

      2) Failing to accept advertisements on a web page is theft since it costs some tiny amount of money to serve you the page
      False - What if I view the page and fail to click on the advertisement? Is that also theft? Very few advertisers pay millage any more, they're almost all pay per click, so whether I view the page with or without advertising, if I don't click on the link, the cost to serve me the page is the same (actually slightly less for not having to pay for bandwidth of the advertisement), and the income is exactly the same - $0. So if skipping ads on a page is stealing, then so is failing to click on ads on a page.

    81. Re:Oh boo hoo by tpet · · Score: 1

      So if it's based on views, and adblock stops us from viewing the ads, what if it also told the site it had loaded the ad so the bandwidth still gets paid for without even using as much of it? If there is some way to tell a site you viewed an ad without wasting the bandwidth to actually download it, then you can avoid viewing ads you'll never click on, and you still support the site whose content you are viewing and whose bandwidth you are using. Everyone wins! (well, everyone I care about, anyways...)

    82. Re:Oh boo hoo by DirkBalognapantz · · Score: 1

      Thank you for replying more eloquently than I would. I was just going to ask if he had gotten out on the crazy side of the bed this morning. I am sick of people implying some type of agreement or contract is in effect every time you visit a site. I like the Walmart example. This is at most an inconvenience for those people who choose to make revenue this way, not theft or an immoral activity. Killing thousands of innocent civilians in an unprovoked war is what I call immoral.

    83. Re:Oh boo hoo by samkass · · Score: 1

      It's like saying that you are stealing from Walmart if you walk into their store and you don't buy anything.

      And I could see your argument up until this point. A better analogy would be if Walmart were charged rent based on how many people came into their store, and they made money simply by you looking at their displays. If tons of people then decided to go walk into Walmart with their eyes closed, that would be a silly but much more accurate analogy.

      I remember when the www didn't exist, and Gopher was trying to put libraries online, so I'm not some precocious kid and your characterization of anyone who disagrees with you being so is insulting. The web has had banner ads very soon after Mosaic allowed images to be embedded into web pages, so the world you're imagining barely existed for a few months and was untrue during most of the web's explosive growth.

      I hoenstly believe that if web ads diappeared today, most of the web would collapse. You'd still have online stores and support sites, but you wouldn't be getting your news, comics, communities, etc. on the web.

      --
      E pluribus unum
    84. Re:Oh boo hoo by RicoX9 · · Score: 1

      It's not just about "offensive" ads...It's ads that slow down your goddamn page loads, because the page waits for the massively overloaded ad server to finish loading its ad before the rest of the content pops up. Screw that.

      Hear, hear!

      That was my motivation - the ad servers/networks are too damn overloaded. Cutting page load times by as much as 90% says a lot about how crappy they are.

      It isn't theft if I NEVER click an ad. I don't use them. No guilt about the site losing revenue they'd never get in the first place, so I streamline the process.

    85. Re:Oh boo hoo by cstdenis · · Score: 0

      Site with ads usually aren't selling anything -- the ads are the money. So the "customer" is the one who clicks/views the ads. Loss of a user base that uses resources without generating revenue isn't much of a loss. And web servers can serve a limited number of clients. It's not as direct as taking a chair in starbucks, but it certainly does affect things like page load times on a busy server.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    86. Re:Oh boo hoo by idiocracy · · Score: 1

      For me I think there needs to be a middle ground.

      For the user:
      1) I do not want to be tracked across my entire internet experience [including my email...]
      2) I do not want my information resold to everyone [especially when you are combining it with 1 above]
      3) I do not want my experience to be painful: install nonsense all over, slow down my browser, resize-popup/under, loud noise/alerts..., shake/vibrate...

      [I can handle some of the above to varying degrees but I think we can all agree that some ads go beyond what they should]

      For the server:
      1) The web world has become about free content [and it is incredibly hard to compete with free], so that is the most common business model and depending on the market the ONLY viable business model. If we are not willing to accept it then we will not get sites that we use and LOVE [hello /. anyone]
      2) Content servers do have costs [data center, bandwidth, salary...] and they should be able to recoup this and hopefully make a profit provided they actually provide a useful service

      Of course the topic goes much deeper than this. However, as a user are you willing to pay for /. or are you willing to view some of their ads. And /. are you going to misuse your users trust with in proper ad models or will you try to provide useful ads with minimal privacy and experience issues.

    87. Re:Oh boo hoo by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      1) download adds.
      3) Profit....for somebody else.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    88. Re:Oh boo hoo by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Yeah but you're supposed to use addition not multiplication :)

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    89. Re:Oh boo hoo by aldousd666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      that still doesn't take into account the people who read sites without javascript enabled, don't have a flash plugin, or use text only browsers. it's not their moral obligation to install firefox or use IE, or install plugins to view the ads. That's ridiculous. If you want to host a site, and you dont plan on paying for the hosting without income, then find some way to generate income that actually generates income. Relying on people loading ads doesn't actually do you any good if they don't load the ads. For example, I can be an outdoor icebox salesman in Siberia, but that doesn't mean that because I'm selling it they have to buy it in order for my business to succeed, obviously I just have a bad business plan and it's my fault if my business fails. Same thing with picking the wrong revenue stream for your site. Don't use ads if you don't think they're effective, for whatever reason.

      --
      Speak for yourself.
    90. Re:Oh boo hoo by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      And two Wrights make ...

    91. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "It is my computer. It is my browser.

      Actually, it is not your browser. Unless you wrote the code and own the copyrights. You just are granted a license to use it.

    92. Re:Oh boo hoo by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are there advertisers who still pay by the view? I think I just found a use for the university's cluster....

    93. Re:Oh boo hoo by Lobster+Quadrille · · Score: 1

      Content providers can send me all the advertisements that they want, but I have no obligation to view it. MAYBE if they put that in as a condition of their terms of use, which the user has to agree to before viewing the content, they would have a case, but as it is, it's hard to steal free content.

      --
      "The cup is in turn designed for holding hot or cold liquids, and has an open rim and closed base." --US Patent #5425497
    94. Re:Oh boo hoo by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      If you think that just because the content provider makes the content available without charging you, you have no obligation to access it any particular way, think about just what you can justify with this argument. I mean, many providers make email servers available without charging anyone. Is spamming okay?

      From where does the obligation not to use mail servers that way come from? Why is it okay for you to use someone else's web server any way you want (even against their wishes and even when it imposes real costs on other people) when it's not okay to do the same thing to a mail server?

      If you want to use other people's free services, you have an obligation to use them the way the providers intended. The same applies in the physical world. Many newspapers are available for free outside my local supermarket. Can I go by every day and throw them all in the nearby (free) garbage can?

      (However, I do agree that if content providers abuse the agreement by providing broken, irrelevant, malicious, or criminal ads, you have every right to abuse the agreement right back. You don't have to "take it or leave it".)

    95. Re:Oh boo hoo by PlatyPaul · · Score: 1

      Modulo 2, beotch!

      --
      Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
    96. Re:Oh boo hoo by ajs · · Score: 1

      Two wrongs don't make a right. Someone explain to me where the wrong is....

      The more I think about this, the more it smells like some sort of ill-conceived right-to-profit argument that would come out of the RIAA, MPAA or a telco. That is, "we currently make money, so any change to the landscape that would threaten that is ( immoral | illegal | etc. )"

      I have ads on my site. I welcome visitors to said site. If I wanted it to be a pay-only site, I would require a login that cost money to get. If CNN wants to do that, they certainly can. They don't want that, though. They want you do view their content, but ONLY ON THEIR TERMS. The correct answer is: this is the market. Cope or die.

    97. Re:Oh boo hoo by I_Voter · · Score: 1

      I didn't bother blocking ads in the past. It didn't seem that important to me. However, I run distributed computing (BOINC) applications. One day, after exiting BOINC, and with six browser pages open, noticed that task manager indicated a 15% CPU load.

      addios animated ads!

    98. Re:Oh boo hoo by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      If you don't retaliate when someone does you wrong, they will keep doing it.

      It may not be the right thing to do to punch someone back when they hit you, but if you don't they will just do it again.

    99. Re:Oh boo hoo by plover · · Score: 1
      I disagree. I think automated block lists (such as filterset G) are a bad idea, because not everyone is intentionally "uninterested" in their ads. Do you know which ads are blocked by that list? I don't.

      I look at ad blocking as a personal activity. If I don't like an ad, I block it, and if it's particularly annoying I block its server. But I do not subscribe to ad blocking lists -- my idea of ads to be blocked is my own. The list may block some company I deem worthy, without my knowledge.

      And partly for this reason, I do not install adblocking software on other people's computers. If they get fed up or offended by advertising, then they can take on the burden of learning how to deal with the problem. But I'm not going to make that judgment for them. (The other reason I don't install adblockers on other people's equipment is that I don't want to encourage the "blocker/anti-blocker wars", as that would just be more work for me personally.)

      So while Adblock is one of the coolest filters ever, I don't personally spread its use to others.

      --
      John
    100. Re:Oh boo hoo by Twitchie · · Score: 1

      Most older Net users remember the days og popup literally taking over one's screen. They would spawn another and another and another. Maybe if they hadn't tried to spam my machine, I wouldn't have looked for a way, or 5, to bloack them. Maybe if they didn't install cookies, trackers, software, etc. I wouldn't block them. It's like a porn dealer getting mad because parents use parental controls on cable to block their stuff from being shown to their children!!!!!!! It's like Hitler being ticked that our tanks were better. It's like Satan being mad that you read the Bible. Get over it! If people hadn't tried to use ads to control your computer, there wouldn't be a need for blockers. Advertisers vreated the need now they must live with it. They must EARN my trust and desire to watch.

    101. Re:Oh boo hoo by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      1) Tivo users are less guilty of stealing content because the cost of broadcasting is relatively fixed.
      False


      Not false. A TV station or network pays the same cost whether 0 people or 100 Million people watch its content. That's a fixed cost. Regardless of whether or not advertisers pay to compensate that, it's a fixed cost. Compare that to web browsing. Some people have a fixed cost, unlimited bandwidth provider, but most people don't. They pay by the GB, or they pay $x a month for so much bandwidth and then pay by the GB after they go over that.

      Therefore, most web site owners pay less if 0 people view their site than they do if 100 million people view it. Not the same with TV broadcasters.

      What if I view the page and fail to click on the advertisement? Is that also theft?

      No. You were given the opportunity to view the ad. You are not required to do so, just that you are given the opportunity for an advertiser to get your attention. If they fail to do so, that's their problem.

      As I said in another post, Web sites are basically the same thing as the "honor system" of selling products. If you take the product without paying the requested (but not enforced) price, it's not moral. It may not be the smartest way to do things, but it's still not moral to take advantage.

    102. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's more to the defective business model than just that.
      There is the notion that just because some money CAN be made on the Internet, somehow anyone who tries automatically has some kind of "right" to make money on the Internet.
      But there is no "right" to money; there is only "earnings" of money.
      Compare this to a retail store, where some people merely walk in to browse, and don't buy anything, because the store didn't offer anything wanted by those people.
      Most Web sites don't offer what most people want, so why do they deserve money?
      One of the key points about the Internet is that it becomes easy to select a niche market, and cater to that. There is no NEED to accommodate every taste. So if your chosen niche is viable, you will have enough customers for your business to continue, and there is no need to ram junk down the throats of all the casual browsing visitors.

    103. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me play devil's advocate here:

      It's your computer and most likely an internet connection that you're leasing for you and your family. You have the ability to do just about anything you want to your computer and to your home network.

      But, the website's owners didn't make you come to their site. If you don't like the site exactly how it's created, then you don't have to go to it. If you go to it the first time and decide that you don't like it, you don't have to come back.

      Are you 'stealing' from the website owner by blocking their ads? Yes, but only technically. Is it criminal? No and I think you would be hard pressed to find anyone on Slashdot who would disagree with me. But you *are* preventing the website admins or the hosting company from making money from their per-click revenue ads.

    104. Re:Oh boo hoo by FlyingCheese · · Score: 1

      Why would I want to waste bandwidth on things I can't see?

    105. Re:Oh boo hoo by clickety6 · · Score: 1

      -1 * -1 = 1, so two negatives do make for a positive

      Reminds me of the lecturer telling his students that in English two negative statements (a double negative) , make a positive statement, but there is no such thing a a double positive statement making a negative statement. A voice from the back pipes up: "yeah, right".

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
    106. Re:Oh boo hoo by plover · · Score: 1
      What has been "stolen" is bandwidth, a.k.a. opportunity cost. Site operators pay to carry all their site's traffic. If they are paying to have a 6GB pipe to carry their user load, and 5.4GB of that is delivered ad-free, it costs them actual real cash.

      In the case of Walm*rt, you might be there only to warm up on a cold winter day, or to cool down in their air conditioning, or to use their bathroom and their soap and towels. They still let you in the door even though you have no intention of purchasing anything from them, because they can't "see" your intentions. Did that cost them anything? Sure, it cost a bit of lost heat while the door was open, maybe two cents for the toilet paper, and maybe even fifty cents for the attention of the security person who thinks you look suspicious. It's part of their cost of doing business.

      But they got something out of it, too. You set foot in their store: statistically, you're much closer to buying something from them than someone who never entered their store. They delivered dozens of advertising impressions to you, from the logos on the walls to the products on the shelves to the giant ugly floor stickers. They may even have left a favorable impression on you, such that you would choose walm*rt again if you ever needed to buy plastic Chinese crap.

      In the case of a web site, none of that happened. They paid for the bandwidth for you to view their stuff. That's the end. No benefit went to the site owner. You might have liked their site, and you might return, but that doesn't help them at all if you don't view the ads next time, either. Their only possibility of recompense is if they are selling a product or service, (even if it's just a "gift shop" featuring site-logoed t-shirts from kewlshirts.com)

      It may not be exactly "stealing," but there is real monetary loss to the web site owner attributable directly to every site visitor; and that fact doesn't change regardless of your claims of "there is no agreement or EULA."

      --
      John
    107. Re:Oh boo hoo by geohump · · Score: 1

      Superb response. If I hadn't already commented on this thread I'd be modding you up.

      Well written, well structured, well put. Nice job. :-)

    108. Re:Oh boo hoo by duncanmhor · · Score: 1

      An aeroplane? Twice as many wheels/ships/carts?

    109. Re:Oh boo hoo by Chabil+Ha' · · Score: 1

      Well, why not pipe their ad to /dev/null. Page viewed by the computer, not by user.

      --
      We're all hypocrites. We all have hidden parts, it's the contrast between them that make us more a hypocrite than others
    110. Re:Oh boo hoo by Vicissidude · · Score: 3, Insightful

      By circumventing that implied intent, you are morally in the wrong.

      Bullshit. I never agreed to download the ad. I never agreed to even view the ad. I have no obligation to do anything just because the webmaster placed the ad on his publically accessible webserver, wanted me to view the ad, and placed an img tag to the ad on his page. My actions are not wrong and thus are not immoral.
       
      ...you do not morally have the right to disregard the owners wishes and block ads...

      Again, I have no responsibility to download ad files from websites I visit. I have no responsibility to view those ad files. That's my bandwidth I'm saving, which the webmaster wants to use. I have a right to control my bandwidth, thank you very much. My actions are not wrong and thus are not immoral.

      YOU webmasters are attempting to create a responsibility where NONE exists. YOU webmasters offered these pages free for ANYONE to view. And now YOU webmasters are intimidating people unless they download your ads down OUR bandwidth and view your ads on OUR time. Last time I checked, that is called extortion. So sorry, if anyone is in the wrong it is YOU webmasters. That is where the immorality lies.

    111. Re:Oh boo hoo by xraso · · Score: 1

      The reason (the ONLY reason) that adblock works is that the ads being blocked are linked from an ad farm. If the website runner would store the ads locally then adblock wouldn't work, it would just be another HTML item in the page. But, this would make the website owner be responsible (and possibly liable - IANAL) for the content within those ads, which I am all for BTW. If the website owner can be held responsible for whatever spyware/crapware/malware that might be being served from the ads on their site we might have a little less obnoxious advertising environment, and adblock would not be gaining ground as fast as it is. I do not necessarily change channels on TV whenever an commercial comes on (unless it is especially annoying), if the web advertising scene was less annoying and potentially harmful to your machine, this issue would be a lot less impacting.

    112. Re:Oh boo hoo by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      I notice you are conveniently ignoring the part of my argument in which I illustrate how a similar circumstance is obviously not moral.

      Do you think it's moral to take the entire stack of newspapers from a newsbox simply because the newsvendor doesn't enforce that you pay for each one? If that is not moral, why is taking bandwidth that web site owner implicitly provides in exchange for the opportunity to view ads moral?

      It's simple. Don't want to watch the ads, don't go to the web site. Just because it's publicly accessible doesn't give you a moral right to take whatever bandwidth you can without honoring the website owners wishes.

    113. Re:Oh boo hoo by emaname · · Score: 1

      Hey PalmerEldritch, what an excellent assessment!

      We cancelled our cable subscription several years ago, because what was originally going to be advertising-free TV (because it was based on subscriptions) had turned into a freakin' nightmare of obnoxious ads.

      Now we watch broadcast TV and on every remote that we've owned, the first button that fails is the MUTE button because it gets used so much. If I'm guilty of stealing ad revenue from these web sites by using an ad-blocker, then the makers of TV remotes are guilty of the same by enabling me to ignore the intellectually insulting TV ads.

      Here is the same flawed perception by rookie, half-witted marketers that, simply by putting an ad in front of me, they are going to create a need. Ah, HELLO!!! Are there ANY marketing people out there? Remember Marketing 101? The need comes from the consumer, it is not generated by the manufacturers' pitchmen.

      To finish my rant, what's up with all the goofy video effects now? I'm waiting for someone to do their Masters or Doctorate about TV commercials and how they are contributing to the attention deficit in our children (not to mention adults). And the sudden increase of volume is enough to make me toss my TV out the window (like at the beginning of SCTV).

      Web advertisers must learn to provide informative advertising that is not intellectually insulting, irritating, and intrusive. If the need exists, consumers will buy it given that it is reasonably priced and has quality. If they don't, then you guys don't understand your market. As for my ad-blocker, you can have it when you pry it out of my cold dead hands.

      --
      An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.
    114. Re:Oh boo hoo by FewClues · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem with PDF is that they can't get all that sickening motion that they overdo! I block ads because they are so damned obnoxious in their blaring motion that I find it difficult to read the text on the page. I don't block Google Ads because they are small and unobtrusive. I actually click on the Google ads. The blaring running monkey would never get my business.

    115. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about TV.
      is it moral to change to another channel with the commercials adds come?

      maybe it is not.
      burn/boycott the remotes!!!

    116. Re:Oh boo hoo by Cameroon · · Score: 1

      Oh for the love of god, no, no one is stealing a damn thing. Not in any sense of the word. If a site doesn't want people to view something that they've put up without paying to see it, then use a subscription model and login. What, that's not going to have the same amount of revenue as ad views? Well, gee, that's just too bad and perhaps no one cares enough to keep your content online. Just because their business model doesn't work doesn't mean I should go out and subsidize them (or feel bad that I'm not subsidizing them). Nope, sorry, too bad you're not going to be online any more.

    117. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BMSMA (Bender)

      Too many sites blindly signs deal with "Add Campaing" specialist, and loose control over content.
      A site owner has a responsibility to keep adds tolerable to keep people around.
      Some sites do not accept ads with adult content, because their visitors would go away. It's the same thing with annoying ads.
      They did not care about the abusive ads, the market reacted with add blockers.

      I use Firefox with "AddBlock Plus" and "Addblock Filterset.G Updater" (barely read the description). When I do get some ads I don't care. I have not been annoyed to quit a site yet.

      I actually can gobble up a lot of ads online, when I stop visiting a site ads are usually distracting with my reading 2 or 3 times per article. My worst is a car driving around.
      The CNN insurance ad with all states flipping thru in a red and yellow flash would kept me away for months (I visited once a week or less instead of every day, and I would read 3-4 articles instead of 20). Thats a 35x drop of my page loads.

    118. Re:Oh boo hoo by dkarma · · Score: 1

      maybe someone forgot to tell you that the internet is free. I don't pay to view a page and the webmaster certainly doesn't DESERVE to get paid from ad revenue from everyone who visits the page. Actually i do have the moral right to disregard ANY advertisers wishes online or not. Your argument is in essence you have to watch the commercials when you watch tv...you have a moral obligation to because if you don't someone loses money. That's the definition of idiocy, and as a result 4k boo hoo threads on /.

    119. Re:Oh boo hoo by Tangent128 · · Score: 1

      So, it's immoral to try and keep one's site solvent, so that the public can view it for free? Or should all the ad-supported sites switch to subscription models?

    120. Re:Oh boo hoo by belroth · · Score: 1

      I use adblock.
      I don't use Filterset.G. I manually add ads that annoy me - if I'm not annoyed why should I bother blocking the ads? The obvious example is Google - the ads are unobtrusive and sometimes useful so I won't be irritated enough to block them.

      --
      I hereby inform you that I have NOT been required to provide any decryption keys.
    121. Re:Oh boo hoo by PalmerEldritch42 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but it is absolutely nothing like waiting for someone else to pay for a newspaper then taking the whole stack of them. There are 2 reasons that it is different:

      1) The newspaper is a physical item. If you remove it without paying, then no one else can purchase that item. That is theft. It is the not-so-subtle difference that the MPAA/RIAA/etc do not understand. You have actually stolen a physical good. Bandwidth is not a finite commodity. The webmaster may need to pay more for their bandwidth, but your use of that bandwidth does not remove anything that someone else, in turn, is now unable to purchase.

      2) There is a posted notice that in order to purchase the newspaper, you must pay $x. You know, in advance, exactly what you are getting (1 newspaper) and you know what you are paying ($x). While it may not be a legally binding contract, all parties involved know what they are getting into. With a website's advertisements, that is not the case. There is no entry page saying "There will be ads on this site. You must click on at least 1 of them to proceed". There is not even a posted note saying "There are ads on this site. Please look at them in order to help fund the site and help pay for the bandwidth". If there was such a sign, then the non-ad-watching crowd could opt-out. Much like the non-newspaper-buying crowd can opt-out of purchasing a paper from that machine.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig.

      :wq!

    122. Re:Oh boo hoo by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Or if they were actually intelligent and relevant, a lot of people wouldn't bitch even if it did track their internet experience. But I forgot, ads by definition seem to have to assume that their viewers are idiots, because that's the largest demographic.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    123. Re:Oh boo hoo by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      No, because that's a conscious decision on your part. The channel doesn't automatically change everytime a commercial comes on. If you do nothing, the commercial plays. Whether you look at it or not, is up to you.

    124. Re:Oh boo hoo by Ari+Rahikkala · · Score: 1

      For sufficiently large values of left, one is enough.

    125. Re:Oh boo hoo by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Actually, yes. Bandwidth in a metered site means that if you use any given bandwidth, that particular bandwidth is unavailable for anyone else to use. This is easily shown by what happens when a site runs out of bandwidth. The site gets shut off. You, as the last user to view a page before that site was shut off just used the last of the bandwidth, and now nobody else can use either. Bandwidth is not infinite. It *IS* a finite commodity, no different than say, water or electricity.

      Further, the paperbox doesn't say "Don't take all the papers", in fact it doesn't even say ".25 each" it just says ".25". There's nothing explicit said about not taking all the papers, but doing so would be a morally wrong thing to do. Even if you don't take all of them, only take half of them, it's still immoral.

      The thing is, there's an *IMPLIED* statement of use. It's *IMPLIED* that you shouldnt' take all the newspapers, just like it's *IMPLIED* that you shouldn't block the ads wholesale, by virtue of there being ads to block in the first place.

      Whether or not you're likely to click on the ads, or even look at them is irrelelvant to whether or not the advertiser has the opportunity to show those ads to you (whether or not you take advantage of that). Adblockers remove that opportunity without giving you the choice to decide to view the ad or not.

      I mean, let's face it, NOBODY likes ads, but occasionally we see ads we like, and are surprised by them. The advertiser went to a lot of work to create an ad that got your attention, and it succeeded.

    126. Re:Oh boo hoo by arashi+no+garou · · Score: 1

      It's not even the tracking that bugs me so much, it's the resource-sapping flash ads. I went to Digg last night and there was this little flash thing that had a "cool" mouseover-trails effect that was all the rage back in 1999. The problem? It had some sort of memory leak, because Firefox slowed to a crawl and the system monitor showed close to 300MB RAM in use for the Firefox executable. When I was finally able to do so, I adblocked it and reloaded the page. No more memory leak, no more slow browser.

      That, in essence, is the only time I use adblock. Static banners and even animated GIFs don't bother me, as long as they aren't trying to induce an epileptic seizure anyway. But, anything with sound that I can't turn off without clicking the fake mute button that registers as a clickthrough, and anything that slows my browser down or changes its dimensions, gets blocked. Just like with television, if the commercial annoys me I make a point of not buying the product. If the commercial is cool or at least sane, I might just look into it.

    127. Re:Oh boo hoo by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Maybe someone forgot to tell you that the internet IS NOT free (as in cost) and in many cases is not free (as in speech) either. It costs money to run the internet. A lot of it. Everyone pays for it, somehow, either through you tuition at school, or your taxes at the library, etc..

      It's easy. If you take something that costs someone money, and you do so against their wishes, regardless of whether they left the door unlocked, it's not moral.

    128. Re:Oh boo hoo by MrLint · · Score: 1

      You are quite right, however this is really only an extension of this idea of a 'phantom contract'. You get content and youa re forced to watch ads. The tv/cable guys have been whining about this for a good long while now. For instance, notice how while VCRs could read the break signal and pause your recording to skip the commercials, but they arent made that way anymore?

      Notice that John Dvorak says "Now take that fast processor and add a big hard disk and you have the slowly emerging personal video recorder. In many ways the device is similar to MP3 technology: It's a way to steal programming. This has gone unnoticed because PVRs haven't caught on, yet. " So skipping commercials is theft. Again the phantom contract delusion. (link is here http://www.forbes.com/2001/04/16/0416dvorak.html) I am not hot linking because the content is only available by clicking on a pass thru flash advert page.. to the article page that is also filled with advertising. So Forbes and John.. bite me.

      Its has often been asked of the 'mandatory advertisement viewing" crowd "Am I still a thief if i have to pee?" Im sorry your broadcasting/cable tv/publically accessible web page in no way puts me on the hook to be screamed at with autoplay flash popup ads for soap.

    129. Re:Oh boo hoo by Zeio · · Score: 1

      Non issue. Don't send me something you don't want me to take out. If I listen to the radio, and ads come on I flip the station. This can never be illegal. The legs of people who claim that cutting out advertisements is theft should be cut off. This is still a free country. Information wants to be free. Binding the public with these Promethean chains will cause resistance.

      Scum lying advertisers trying to lie about products to sell them: "This is blasphemy, this is madness..."
      A mythTV user: "This is AMERICAAAAAA!" and he kicks the scum liar advertiser down the well.

      So punch this monkey, scum advertisers!

      --
      Legalize the constitution. Think for yourself question authority.
    130. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean there is some reasonable fee that will remove 100% of Google served ads and script from my web browsing experience? That'd be awesome. I get pretty fucking tired of "text" banner ads in the middle of every web page I visit.

    131. Re:Oh boo hoo by dissy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you want to force people to view the content so rigidly, use a PNG or PDF. Off the main topic, but that comment reminded me of just such a system I ended up designing for a client of a past company. Basically I used the exact same argument when he made a similar complaint, and he thought it over and asked what it would cost for a cgi package to render all pages as a single image, as an imagemap in a form. For each 'page' it keeps track of what areas look like links and all were 640x480. I explained all of the downsides right up front before I even put thought into how this could be done; bandwidth costs to him, limited image size, very slow page loads, zero handycap access in any form, no mobal browsers, dialup users would not put up with that and you chase them away before your home page finishes loading, and potentially extra fees from his web designer, and someone would have to make those image->url cordinate mappings whenever a page is to be changed, which will not be my job, and not likely to become the web designers job (but he could ask.)

      He used it for a month. We noticed in the logs that the traffic actually dropped. Only a handful of IPs actually sent a request for anything but the main page, a couple of which were myself and the site owner.
      An interesting detail about the version of apache we used at the time.. Sometimes, when a user hits stop in the browser and the connection is reset is a specific but common way, the entry goes to errorlog instead of accesslog.
      The 'less page hits' was compared to html (not all hits like images etc) on the old site, to both access and error entrys together for the new.

      Anyways, needless to say, afterward he replaced that mess with his old website, however a few more ads to makeup for lost visitors. The traffic level dropped due to using html instead of one jpg, then rose slowly, but never came close to what it was before all the changes.

      Just thought i'd share that experence.

    132. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Compare this to a retail store, where some people merely walk in to browse, and don't buy anything, because the store didn't offer anything wanted by those people.

      That's what loitering laws are for.

    133. Re:Oh boo hoo by FreakWent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Weirdo. Repeat after me:

      "THE INTERNET IS NOT JUST FOR PROFIT". Shove your capitalism up your arse. I will determine the data that is downloaded to my computer and the manne rin which it is downloaded. It's _mine_.

      If you want me to pay a price to consume a product or use a service, charge me money! Thousands of sites do this, now even including Kuro5hin.

      It's not acceptable to charge advertisers money for providing a service to the advertisers, then complain that someone else isn't doing their bit. WTF? If you want me to watch the ads, give me a cut of the money! If you think your content is so good, then charge me for it. just because it took you hours and you spellchecked it doesn't mean I'm obligated to you.

      I'm not consuming a product, I'm reading text, which someone allows me to connect to and download. It is legal for me to do this, there is no licence or contract involved, no matter what TOS you slap on the site.

      Whether or not I choose to also download some other additional articles, or favicon bmps, or other images or advertisements has nothing to do with you.

      If you don't want people to download your content, don't spend time and money putting it online.

      If you can't get enough advertising dollars to do it, don't do it. The world will not crumble if a few websites go missing, even if they are popular good ones.

      Your example of physical theft is childish. Noone said that something was moral just because it could be done.

      Also, because you read this informative comment, you are now obligated to send me a grovelling email explaining in your own words how well you understand the concepts of freedom and individual choice. No? See? Stupid isn't it?

    134. Re:Oh boo hoo by FreakWent · · Score: 1

      The customer is the one who pays you.

      This means that the customer is the advertiser. Access to the readers, or viewers, is the product being sold.

    135. Re:Oh boo hoo by jp10558 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sure, why not. I'll think they are a little stupid as I can just get around anything that isn't asking for a password before sending me info, but hey whatever they like.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    136. Re:Oh boo hoo by misleb · · Score: 1

      It's simple. Don't want to watch the ads, don't go to the web site. Just because it's publicly accessible doesn't give you a moral right to take whatever bandwidth you can without honoring the website owners wishes.


      As a matter of fact, it does. If a webmaster demanded that all visitors of his site stand up and do a chicken dance before proceeding into the site, would you do it? Probably not. Are you morally obligated to do it? Of course not. The expectation that you will view ads is no less arbitrary (although slightly more reasonable) than doing a chicken dance. If the webmaster wants to be reimbursed for the resources, he/she should just come out and ask for it... whether it be donations or subscriptions.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    137. Re:Oh boo hoo by misleb · · Score: 1

      Whether you look at it or not, is up to you.


      But according to you, if I don't look at it, I am morally corrupt.

      Don't you see how stupid that is?

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    138. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 1

      "It is my computer. It is my licensed copy of the browser. It is my browser process. It's my pair of eyes. I'll decide what shows up on my screen. I have all the power in this relationship. I don't want ads. Ner ner ni ner ner."

      --
      Software patents delenda est.
    139. Re:Oh boo hoo by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      Are they of the belief that those of use who go out of the way to avoid these adverts, will somehow fall under their magic when we see their latest animations?

      Yes.

      Advertisers think they're smarter than everyone, and can tric^H^H^H^Hconvince anyone of the value in the product/experience they are trying to sell.

      The truth is that they are only smarter than a portion of the population (I'll leave the percentage up for debate). And the group of people using AdBlock+ and a subscribed list are not in this portion to begin with. So they aren't losing any customers they would have had otherwise.
    140. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because circumvention can happen doesn't mean you are morally in the right to do it. A web site proprietary puts ads on his website with the intention that you at least give him the opportunity to view his ads (you don't have to watch them, but you at least give him the opportunity to sell to you). By circumventing that implied intent, you are morally in the wrong.

      Wait a minute. That's like me checking out the nice BMW sitting in your drive way, but dismissing your naked wife standing two feet from it since I'm gay, and then you getting upset that I didn't look at your wife, since that was supposed to be an ego booster for your wife. If you want me to look at her, put a sign around her neck that says "Free Pussy". That would be like an ad on a web page promissing totally free (as in beer, with no shipping and handling) samples.

    141. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To support the site. If the ads are pay-per-view, loading but hiding them will benefit the site owner. If they are pay-per-click, showing an outline labelled "ad", then open them all in new tabs while reading the site you want to support, then just close the tabs without looking at them. That way you help out the site whose content you enjoy, and it just costs you a trifle of bandwidth and a few mouse-clicks. The only loser in this equation is the advertiser, and, well, who cares? Better to gouge some useless third party, than the people who produce the content you crave.

      Bandwidth is not a big concern. Most ads don't take more than a few kilobytes. Unless you're living in some third-world country, bandwidth costs are insignificant.

      Come to think of it, adblock could use two new options: 1: load but hide ads. 2: "click" all ads in background, to generate revenue for site you're viewing.

      --
      Software patents delenda est.
    142. Re:Oh boo hoo by the_womble · · Score: 1

      I find it tremendously amusing that when big media companies try to defend their right to their business model
      Except that, in this case, it is not just the big media companies that are affected. They can evade the ad blockers if they want to (e.g. by inserting the ads server side so they are hard to distinguish from content). It is Fred Blogger with an Adsense adblock on his site who is worst affected.
    143. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. I think automated block lists (such as filterset G) are a bad idea, because not everyone is intentionally "uninterested" in their ads. Do you know which ads are blocked by that list? I don't.

      No, not everyone is intentionally "uninterested," but I am. I'm tired of being solicited everywhere I go. The only welcome serious solicitations that could be made to me are those that would be illegal to make or would be illegal for me to accept. ;-) Since I can be fairly confident that no website is going to deliver me one of those (and even granting that unlikely possibility, that I might be able to then find it among the sea of crap that passes for mass advertising these days), I choose to exercise whatever means I can avail myself of with my own computer, my own browser, and my own Internet connection not to be harassed by unwelcome solicitation.

      To suggest I have some obligation otherwise is to suggest (to use the aforementioned newspaper analogy) that, since my .25 clearly doesn't cover the full cost to produce the newspaper -- hence all the advertising within it -- I'm somehow obliged to at least view every ad in the whole paper, and if I should discard the sports or lifestyles section unexamined, I've somehow ripped off the newspaper company or its advertisers.

      Get real.

    144. Re:Oh boo hoo by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      Am I still a thief if i have to pee?

      Not if you turn off the television before you go pee.

    145. Re:Oh boo hoo by skeeto · · Score: 1

      Yep, I can arrange the bits in my computer in any way I want. No one should be able to dictate the order of my bits for any reason, nor decide if my arrangement is "wrong". For me, I don't think any arrangements of bits (like letters or words) is wrong.

    146. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, yeah... and two positives make a negative.

    147. Re:Oh boo hoo by plover · · Score: 1
      My point is "block it yourself." If you want to be honest with the web page owners (and I realize you think you don't owe them even that much) you'll take the responsibility for blocking the ads you don't want to see. The real problem is automating the process and sharing adblock lists with everyone is going to speed up adoption of the counter-ad-blocker movement, and then we'll have yet another stupid technology arms race.

      The bottom line is I'm selfish. I like adblock, and I like that I put ad sites in it and I never see them again. I like the status quo. I do not care if other people don't block ads, or don't know how to block ads, or are never smart enough to figure it out on their own. I do not want to see the rise of the ad-blocker-detectors, because then I'm going to have to adapt to counter their strategies. It'll add complexity to the browser and to the adblocking software, causing more bugs and more false-positives. It'll cost me time and effort that could be better spent on other things.

      --
      John
    148. Re:Oh boo hoo by Technician · · Score: 1

      but I never, repeat NEVER, click on banner ads or anything like that.

      I do when the ad is revelant, informative, quiet, unobtrusive, and sponsors my favorite webpages sometimes gets clicked. For example, without product place banner ads from Think Geek, I would not have found "Got Root" and "I read your email" T shirts. I whitelist (remove from hosts file) some ad servers because they do a nice job. Flash advertisements are on the other hand dead meat.

      As an example at the top of this page is an advertisement for Dice advertising tech jobs. It's URL is http://m1.2mdn.net/viewad/982522/dice_q107_jobsuck2_728x90_NT.gif.

      It sponsors Slashdot, behaves, revelant to the tech industry (Geeks) and doesn't cover anything. If slashdot tried to do Flash cover the page advertisements like the Yahoo home page is doing now, the ad server would hit the bin in a heartbeat. (yes I sometimes turn off the hosts file and enable flash to check the state of affairs.)

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    149. Re:Oh boo hoo by pseudochaos · · Score: 1

      So it's okay to defraud the advertisers just because they're 'third party'? Harsh, man.

      --
      "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle
    150. Re:Oh boo hoo by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should talk to these guys.

      I think their homepage pretty much sums up the typical marketer's mindset, and why I tend to agree with Bill Hicks about this.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    151. Re:Oh boo hoo by Lavene · · Score: 1

      The advertisers just don't get it. We don't want the flashing, jumping, beeping stuff because it is annoying, not because it's an ad. I have never blocked a Google text ad in my life, I have even clicked on a lot of them because it looked interesting. They don't annoy me as they are just sitting quietly in the margin informing me of their presence. And that's what the advertisers need to understand: it's not the users that's defective, it's their strategy. Make the ads non intrusive, interesting and 'on topic' and people wont bother blocking them but start clicking them instead.

      Making stuff people hates then blame the same people for not watching it is just stupid. Why is that so hard to understand for the advertisers?

    152. Re:Oh boo hoo by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Brand recognition.

      Could work. I'm still going to block it.

      it's possible the right ad will come up just when you're looking for something, and you'll click it.

      Not if it's a gigantic, animated Flash thing that popped up right on top of whatever I was actually looking at. Do that, and you guarantee that ad gets blocked, even if it was what I was looking for. Do it enough, and you guarantee some negative brand recognition -- you guarantee that I absolutely will not buy your product, ever.

      Even if you're not going to buy something, if a brand gets tied to a purpose in your head, you may tell someone else about it if they ask on that topic.

      Which goes back to brand recognition.

      The whole reason they NEED the animations is because people are not interested in it.

      In which case, why is it my moral imperative to look at those animations?

      I mean, if they have an inherently uninteresting product that I don't want to buy, then their advertisement is a waste of my bandwidth, attention, and patience. If they want my intention, then follow the iPhone's example -- make a product that's interesting enough that a text ad will catch my eye, because I don't block text ads.

      with browsing you're incurring direct costs for the host each time you visit and not fulfilling your half of the bargain in letting them deliver the ads to you.

      A "bargain" which is never spelled out. Period.

      I don't mean legally. I mean it's absolutely fucking nowhere to be found, which just leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

      Have you ever been to a third-world country? Everyone will be very helpful in some way, but depending on the country and the place, they will often expect some reward -- after the fact. That's right -- some adorable little kid will guide you across the river or whatever, and then demand payment.

      This isn't naivete -- they know you might not accept their service, if you knew the cost. And they know you might feel guilty enough to pay them anyway -- after all, you're a foreigner, so you're used to feeling like you've violated local custom, because often, you have -- but in this case, they're just preying on you.

      In this case, I would say to the child, if you want to be paid, name your price up front. And I would say that to the webmaster, as well -- if you are so convinced that there's a bargain here, name your terms up front, before I enter the website. Or block me, with an explanation of which ads I must allow through to be unblocked. Or better yet -- use ads that I won't block!

      Otherwise, I'll block them, and you'll whine all day about how it's immoral, and you'll get nowhere.

      If you don't like the ads, don't visit the site.

      You should be grateful more people don't actually take this attitude. Your revenue would collapse overnight.

      My guess is, if people are deliberately blocking your ads, chances are, you have some pretty intrusive ones. Thus, the people who actually manage to make it to your content are those who either don't like the ads, but don't know how to block them, and those who happily block them, and are maybe blissfully unaware.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    153. Re:Oh boo hoo by wordsnyc · · Score: 1

      "You were given the opportunity to view the ad. You are not required to do so, just that you are given the opportunity for an advertiser to get your attention. If they fail to do so, that's their problem."

      And if web advertisers have adopted increasingly obnoxious and offensive methods of advertising, making me unwilling to look at their ads at all, is that not their problem too?

      And if I have learned that most web advertisers are selling crap that no one wants or needs (Free Spyware scan, anyone?), and have a reputation for cheating their customers, haven't they themselves, as a class, killed the golden goose? There were popup ads long before ad blocking became popular. Let's not confuse cause and effect.

      I don't block Google text ads. If you want to reach me, there's your avenue of access. Flash? Javascript? Not on my machine.

      --
      Sent from the iPad I found in your car.
    154. Re:Oh boo hoo by gevantry · · Score: 1

      You pick up an advertising "newspaper" wherever they put them for people to pick them up. They're free. They exist for the advertising. You flip through it. You toss it in the trash. You don't buy a thing that was advertised. Have you cheated the publisher by ignoring the ads? No. The publisher gave the paper away and the advertisers hoped you might see their ads and remember them, but if you didn't, that's fine. Web pages are the same. The site owners put their pages up in the hope that people will use them and generate ad revenue for them, but that's as far as it goes. The owners have no right to force you to look at the adds, nor do the advertisers.

    155. Re:Oh boo hoo by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      There is no legal agreement between you and the newspaper company either, but it's expected that when you plop a quarter into a paperbox that you don't take the entire stack of papers.

      Yes. There are also usually signs there which say "take one", as well as a slot that clearly expects 25 cents.

      It's called the honor system.

      There's generally little chance of anyone being confused about this "honor system", or much incentive for circumventing it -- after all, what use would you have with more than one newspaper?

      But notice: In places where there is significant incentive to break the honor system, there's usually significantly more security in place than an honor system. That newspaper box, for instance, might be sitting next to a Coke machine, which, short of vandalism, is only going to give you one Coke for your dollar. (Or your $1.25, as the case may be.)

      Why? Well, I don't know about you, but I could drink two cokes. Or drink one, and save one for later. Or drink one, and get one for my friend. None of which is especially true of the newspaper -- I can easily share my one copy with my friend, and there'd be no point in reading two copies, now or later.

      Moral or not, when you build your business model on the honor system, don't expect much sympathy when it fails.

      By circumventing that implied intent, you are morally in the wrong.

      Where's it implied?

      And, you are under no moral imperative to watch any ad, but you do not morally have the right to disregard the owners wishes and block ads, not even giving him the opportunity to interest you in ads.

      If the owner has such a wish, they should state it for me, clearly.

      And by the way, how do you explain the moral right of a webmaster to push content to me that I don't want, using my bandwidth, CPU, and attention? Sorry, but it's my computer.

      If you start paying for my bandwidth, hardware, and power, then we'll talk about me watching your ads. Until then, consider yourself lucky that I generally do not use filtersets, but rather block things manually -- and only after they've sufficiently pissed me off.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    156. Re:Oh boo hoo by random0xff · · Score: 0

      Of course they ignore your argument about stealing a stack of papers. It's not a similar circumstance at all.

    157. Re:Oh boo hoo by Coniptor · · Score: 1

      It's not like they can't use server side scripting on the web server to detect whether their ads are transferred and not display the requested page if not. I've been to sites that do and that suites me just fine. Only takes a moment to close the tab.

    158. Re:Oh boo hoo by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Whether the medium is push or pull is irrelevant, so as far as ad-blocking goes, there's no difference between TV and the Web.

      Basically: ad blocking is not illegal, because you haven't signed anything saying you'll view the ads. It so happens that enough people do to make advertising profitable, but this is a happy accident, not some corporate right.

      You could say there's an implied contract that you'll view the ads, and thus blocking them is somehow wrong. Even if that's true, though, the implied contract is broken if the ads get too annoying.

    159. Re:Oh boo hoo by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Wow, that's horrible. Not just dialup users, but I suspect all but the most hopeless MySpace users would realize no content could be worth putting up with such a horrible website. No copy-n-paste, can't select text for something to do while reading, etc...

      That reminds me: I've noticed some websites are getting around the popup blocker by launching windows when I click on the text. That's not cool. Maybe we should design the blocker to deny by default, and try to identify legit reasons (e.g. non-dragging click on image or underlined text) to open new windows, instead of just blocking the most common abuses.

    160. Re:Oh boo hoo by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      I use Adblock to get rid of "annoying" ads, like the ones screaming into my speakers that I won a free iPod Nano, or the ones who make huge flash overlays over half the page so I can't read the damn article. It's not immoral, it's pushback.

      That's exactly the process I use. Most ads I don't bother with blocking, but when something particularly annoying comes up, I AdBlock it (and anything else coming from that server). So, the problem for web-designers (or more precisely, the database designers who track the downloads of the adverts, and possibly track their actual viewing ; I distinguish between these two, but I bet the advert-sellers don't) is actually to determine which adverts are being downloaded and which ones are not even being requested, then report back to (for example) DoublClick that "your series of adverts X, Y, and Z are literally turning the viewers off ; you'd better fix them".

      I neither know nor care if AdBlock sends messages back to sites to the effect "this user has specified to see no content from [insert name of blocked site here] ; this is [blocked site]'s problem, not yours ; tell them about it if you want to improve your user's experience". I seem to remember that the old Internet Junkbuster had an option to send abusive or informative content back to sites that appeared in it's black-list, so I guess it's not impossible.

      I do see, but not necessarily agree with, the "morality" issues over blocking adverts ; the technical issues of feeding information about user's requests/ preferences back to the website in question would lead effectively to a "survival of the most effective" selection war amongst advertisers, which is quite fine with me.

      I suppose I should now go through my AdBlock list and clear it to give the likes of DoubleClick a chance to redeem themselves. Well, maybe not DoubleClick, but everyone else. Now, is there a way I can re-configure AdBlock to allow me to keep some note about when I want to start seeing adverts from [insert advertiser's name here]? Maybe variable timeouts for each blocking which AdBlock examines on startup, and if a listing is approaching expiry to flag it some way. That'd allow a way out of the black hole for advertisers who are trying to be effective as opposed to blocked.
      Ah, sod it. I'll give the fuckers a chance and clear my filters just now. I wonder how long it'll be until DoubleClick are back in there?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    161. Re:Oh boo hoo by null.account · · Score: 1

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it. Are they of the belief that those of use who go out of the way to avoid these adverts, will somehow fall under their magic when we see their latest animations? Yes.

      Retarded, isn't it ?
    162. Re:Oh boo hoo by JeremyDuffy · · Score: 1

      No kidding! It's so stupid to even debate this. As long as the ad blocking only gets rid of "Ad services" and rotating banners, I don't disagree with it at all. If it starts to block my individual ads (which are always simple links to sites that have products that I ACTUALLY recommend, then I'll have a problem. So far, so good.

      --
      Informing people about the scams, shams, and bunk that assault them on a daily basis. http://www.jeremyduffy.com
    163. Re:Oh boo hoo by Tirs · · Score: 1

      I do not agree with you [but I will defend with my life your right to disagree with me].

      Please re-read the sentence: "don't buy anything BECAUSE THE STORE DIDN'T OFFER ANYTHING WANTED BY THOSE PEOPLE". In other words: they would have bought if they would have found anything interesting. This is not loitering.
      Even if they have no initial intention of buying, it can happen that they enter and say: "oh, look at this, how convenient/cute/interesting/whatever" and buy it. In marketing this is called "impulse purchase". Supermarkets use a variation of this when they put non-essential articles by the cashier lines so people buy them without initial intention.

      But going back to the point: Allowing customers to enter and walk around the shop hoping that they will be interested in something is one thing. A very different thing, and totally unethical from my point of view, is when the shop owner (or someone hired) stands in front of the shop and, when somebody passes in front, suddenly takes their arm and pulls them inside, not allowing them out until they have browsed the entire shop and seen the merchandise. THIS IS THE WEB ADVERTISING WHICH SHOULD BE BLOCKED: they force you to see uninteresting ads when you visit any unrelated web page.

      Web advertising is acceptable if:

      1) The format is not intrusive, i.e. it does not distract me from the main content.
      2) The ads are related to the topic I'm visiting, i.e. if I'm visiting a gardening forum, I don't mind seeing ads about watering systems, but I DO mind seeing ads about insurance or loans.

      Well, just my 2.68 cents (according to the Euro/USD change of today).

      --
      Strength, balance, courage and reason. If you know what's this about, contact me!
    164. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After advertisers began their war by forcing us to view their popup ads I decided i would NEVER EVER EVER click on any advertisement WHATSOEVER! That was years ago and I have yet to click on anything. I will do a Google search on the product and go directly to the site. Sorry /. I no clicky on your banners.

    165. Re:Oh boo hoo by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1

      This is the nice thing about PithHelmet (Mac only) —you can set Slashdot to allow ads, but never animate images. You'd still want to block Flash, of course, since that setting only affects GIFs.

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    166. Re:Oh boo hoo by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      Somehow, people still found a way to afford to publish their sites. In the unlikely case that all advertisements on the web were to suddenly stop paying off, the web would still exist.

      The lens on your wayback machine needs cleaning, I think. Before advertising, the web sites that existed fell into these categories:

      1. corporate, government and university sites, funded to host whatever content they deem appropriate
      2. subscription or donation-supported sites, where the viewers paid actual money for the site's content
      3. hobbyist sites, where only the passion of the owner and his willingness to spend some of his discretionary income kept the site alive

      Those hobbyist sites that attracted too much attention would usually go offline, because the person supporting it couldn't afford to anymore. Most of your big/interesting projects were hosted on university networks, where bandwidth was effectively free to students and faculty.

      Do you think Slashdot of today would exist in a world without advertising revenue? What about Google?

      So yeah, the web would continue to exist, but I'd wager that most of the sites on it would disappear. On the bright side, though, most of your typosquatting and search spam would disappear too.

    167. Re:Oh boo hoo by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      This is at most an inconvenience for those people who choose to make revenue this way, not theft or an immoral activity.

      I won't go so far as to say it's theft or immoral, but I wouldn't say that it's a mere inconvenience either. Most of the interesting content on the Internet is provided by sites that (a) do not sell anything; (b) do not have a big corporate/government/university sponsor funding them; and (c) don't have enough of a draw to attract enough subscriptions or donations. They exist solely because the advertising model allows them to exist. Make it more expensive for them to continue running by consuming more of their content without allowing them to make as much money from advertising, and many of these sites will start to disappear.

      Is this simply "their problem" because they couldn't find a better business model? Not all web sites are or want to be businesses. I'd argue that the loss of much of the Internet's content would be a loss for us all. Your average blog owner might have no problem ponying up some cash each month to keep his site running, but what happens when that blog gets popular?

    168. Re:Oh boo hoo by capnchicken · · Score: 1

      Nope, I'm still of the opinion that a broken business model is not the same as the taking away of a right. No one has a right to make a profit not big media, not small media, not mom and pop. If your users really like the service and your ads aren't intrusive they'll unblock your ads. Maybe try asking politely, instead heavy handedly asserting your supposed rights to profit?

      --
      A libertarian shat on my carpet once. Claimed the free market would sort it out. -Ford Prefect(8777)
    169. Re:Oh boo hoo by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      Why are these people so intent on advertising to people who are clearly not interested in it.

      It's funny. Whenever people complain about television advertising, a marketeer's first response is nearly always "Just change the channel. No one's forcing you to watch them."

      Seems to me that this is exactly what Ad Block is enabling people to do with web sites.

      Marketeers need to wake up to the fact that people want commercials delivered to them on their terms, not on a ad company's terms.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    170. Re:Oh boo hoo by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      Some of the youngsters on /. may not remember this, but there was a time when there were no advertisements on the web.

      Hell, I remember a time where there were no pictures on the web and all the pages were gray. Seems like . . . 15 years ago . . .

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    171. Re:Oh boo hoo by Supergibbs · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. When walking in to a retail store you are there to buy stuff, or at least look if there is anything you want to buy. You could compare this to browsing newegg.com; not NEEDING anything, but checking on the latest deals to see if there is anything you'd like. When I go to to my favorite webcomics or blogs, I am there for the entertainment of the site. Even if I don't buy anything, I get some entertainment value out of it and the owners do deserve some money for it. Nobody goes to the circus then leaves thinking, I didn't buy any food or souvenirs so I shouldn't of had to pay.

      My only problem was with the analogy. That being said, I completely disapprove of popup, plugin installing, personal info stealing ads and have no problem blocking those. If I like the site though, I don't mind text or tastefully displayed image ads, especially if they are related to the site.

      --
      First post! (just in case I am...)
    172. Re:Oh boo hoo by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Not everyone agrees with you.

      That's because they're evil or stupid, obviously. You aren't going to listen to stupid and evil people, now are you ?-)

      Seriously speaking, capitalism is an economic system, which may or may not be morally desirable or undesirable. It is not, however, a system of morals, altought such system may or may not underlay it.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    173. Re:Oh boo hoo by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      I meant offensive in a wider sense.
      I would call ads that slow down your page loads offensive.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    174. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This article is dangerously wrong in the way it portrays the use of internet traffic, all ad related talk aside. Both the client and server have paid for net access, there is no "theft of resources".

    175. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So called "metered" sites are suffering from a contractual obligation on their own end, there is no such contract for the viewer. These are two separate, though related transactions. The web site owner is paying someone to put up his site and provide access to the internet, the end user is paying his ISP for access to the internet, both have fulfilled their contractual obligations in full.

    176. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      doing it's job

      "its".

    177. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the F are you

      "fuck".

      again, who the F are you

      Again, "fuck".

    178. Re:Oh boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      add it's absolute value

      "its".

    179. Re:Oh boo hoo by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      > > What if I view the page and fail to click on the advertisement? Is that also theft?
      >
      > No. You were given the opportunity to view the ad. You are not required to do so, just
      > that you are given the opportunity for an advertiser to get your attention. If they
      > fail to do so, that's their problem.


      OTOH, by blocking web ads (as i have done since banner ads started being animated in the mid 90s), i am giving the advertiser the opportunity to not annoy me enough that they end up on my boycott list. i *routinely* boycott advertisers that annoy me, and there are many ways for them to get on my shitlist, including: distracting animated gifs, flash (particularly bug-ridden or spyware crap), javascript, spyware, and popups on the web; loud or annoying voices or sounds, soft-porn(*) and other emotional manipulations (including children, especially those with speech impediments) on TV; and banal feel-good and other branding exercises on any medium. they stay boycotted until the annoyance fades and i forget about them...so the more annoying, the longer before i forget.

      since they intrude on my home, i hate telemarketers, god-botherers and door-knockers with a passion and when it's my turn to be God Emperor of the Universe, they'll *ALL* be amongst the first lined up against the wall. until then, i'll just have to continue being as rude to them as i possibly can (their obnoxiously rude intrusion deserves a rude response).

      since i don't like advertising or the creeps who create the manipulative crap (especially those who think they're being "funny" or "artistic"), there is NO opportunity for an advertiser to engender a positive response in me, ONLY a negative response ranging from mild dislike to vehement loathing and outrage. it truly is far better for the advertiser if i don't see or hear their ad at all.

      (but that's not why i block ads - it's not for their benefit at all. i block them because they annoy the hell out of me. my life is far more pleasant when i can block out the raucous arseholes screaming at me to buy their shit)

      BTW, when i watch TV it is generally either the ad-free Australian ABC, or with a book in my hand for the ad breaks and a mute button on the remote control.

      also btw, i don't bother blocking google ads because they're text - they don't flash, they're not animated, they're not distracting, and they're not annoying. sometimes they're even relevant. i do block google's click-tracking cookie and javascript shit because i don't want them spying on me.

      (*) i have nothing against porn in general (other than the fact that 99.99999% of it is tacky crap catering to, and/or creating, an extremely unsophisticated audience with bad taste and backward sexist attitudes - i.e. my attitude to porn is aesthetic and political/philosophical rather than "moral"), but i do object very strongly to emotional manipulation in advertising, including the use of tits and bums and semi-naked women (and men, these days).

  2. Oh my. by croddy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd like to live in a fantasy world where I'm simply entitled by default to ad revenue, and I only have to deal with insidious "users of web ad-blocking technology" who are "actively denying" me my solid gold razor scooter. Fortunately for users, in the real world, a webmaster has to earn ad revenue by finding content that users want and ads they are willing to accept -- not by taking it for granted that they will just gaze longingly into the CRT clicking on everything that swirls.

    For a long time, advertisers were able to support a huge number of frivolous web sites, partly because they could bombard the user with page after page of obnoxious flashing garbage for which no technical countermeasures existed. The collapse of the dot-com bubble eliminated the most unviable popup-pushers, and the rest are beginning to get the message. Popup blockers are normal mainstream software, and Google has had significant success selling all-text advertisements.

    The website owners seem to think that we've pushed back hard enough, and should just deal with the sea of repellant Flash banners they want to drown us in. I guess those website owners are wrong, because clearly there are plenty of people who are not willing to tolerate the barrage of useless ads. We'll find a balance eventually, somewhere in between no ads at all and the websites whose masters believe they are entitled to a tithe every time their server sends a 200 status.

    1. Re:Oh my. by XenoPhage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Personally, I have no aversion to ads at all, provided they're done in a clean, consistent, unobtrusive manner. I realize that many websites exist solely on the revenue from advertising, and I don't think that's a bad thing.

      What drives me absolutely bonkers are sites that insist on using popups, especially those that work to circumvent any popup blocker I have installed. Sites that use CSS/Flash ads that glide over the screen, obscure text, etc. are equally annoying as they detract from the site itself.

      Other sites insist on using ads from servers that can't keep up with the traffic and often take forever to respond, leaving my browser chugging away at nothing. All too often this prevents parts of the page from loading.

      Slightly less annoying are the ads that are purposely put right in the middle of the text I'm trying to read, interrupting my train of thought and seriously impeding anything I'm learning from the article. These are slightly less annoying as they are usually simplistic text ads or small banners.

      Slashdot seems to have a decent handle on ads. They exist, I see them, and occasionally I click on them because they actually happen to be relevant. They're unobtrusive, and even the flash based ones seem to load relatively quickly. Rarely, if ever, do I have any problems with the advertising here.

      So I think there definitely is a place for advertising on a web site. And web sites that strive to ensure that the ads are both relevant and in good taste are sites that I will visit again. I don't mind so much the tracking and whatnot as I don't see it having any effect on me. And I clear out cookies and whatnot often enough that it should disrupt them anyway.

      That said, I don't see ad blocking software being anything illegal. You're putting your content on the net and expecting people to visit it. If I don't want to see the ads and I use a blocker to prevent that, then so be it. Perhaps you as the site owner should find another way to entice me to view those ads. Perhaps linking within the articles themselves? I've seen that on a number of sites and it seems to work well.

      Another quick thought.. If we classify Ad blockers as "illegal" because they prevent the website owner from earning revenue through ads, does that mean that text-only browsers like elinks and lynx are illegal as well? They don't load images either....

      --
      XenoPhage
      Technological Musings
    2. Re:Oh my. by notasheep · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Fortunately for users, in the real world, a webmaster has to earn ad revenue by finding content that users want and ads they are willing to accept -- not by taking it for granted that they will just gaze longingly into the CRT clicking on everything that swirls."

      How exactly will a webmaster find ads that users are willing to accept if the ads are blocked and nobody ever sees them? I agree with TFA that ad-blocking software poses an issue for web sites and for the users of the web in general. In the Webs current state the ads are what is supporting the production of most of the content you see. What happens when that support gets pulled out from under the web site owners? (Webmasters could get around the issue by inserting the ads directly in to the content instead of having them served by a third party.)

      On the other hand, I wouldn't equate ad-blocking with theft. Websites are posting content in a public infrastructure where the viewing public has a great deal of control over how they see that content. If they don't like it then they can just charge for access, or engage in an ever escalating (and losing) technology war against the user.

      --
      Your mind looks a little cramped. Why don't you stretch it a little?
    3. Re:Oh my. by ShatteredArm · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'd like to live in a fantasy world where I'm simply entitled by default to free content, and I only have to deal with insidious "detestable advertisers" who are "actively denying" me my solid gold razor scooter. Fortunately for web developers, in the real world, a user has to earn content by being potentially interested in products that advertisers are willing to fork out cash to advertise -- not by taking it for granted that the web developers are just willing to donate their time and money in building and maintaining a web site.

      For a long time, users were not able to browse a very large number of frivolous web sites, partly because there was no viable way of profitably advertising. The collapse of the dot-com bubble created a more targeted, profitable way of advertising, and now it is a multi-billion dollar industry. Popup blockers are normal mainstream software, and Google has had significant success selling all-text advertisements.

      The content moochers seem to think that they've pushed back hard enough, and should be able to just not have to look at the repellant Flash banners anymore. I guess those users are wrong, because clearly there are plenty of websites who are not willing to tolerate the barrage of unethical ad-blocking techniques. We'll find a balance eventually, somewhere in between no ads at all and the websites whose masters believe they are entitled to a tithe every time their server sends a 200 status.

    4. Re:Oh my. by __aaaehb3101 · · Score: 1

      I use Firefox and Adblock. I also support a lot of sites through donation. I do not see 99% of ads thanks to adblock and it makes using the internet more productive and more enjoyable. Saying I can not visit a site because I use Firefox is like saying I can not walk into a store or office because I might not buy anything. This is more of an attention grab than anything else but a few small sites are getting millions in free advertising by raising this non-issue.

    5. Re:Oh my. by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      How exactly will a webmaster find ads that users are willing to accept if the ads are blocked and nobody ever sees them?

      Here is a hint. I have ad block plus installed and see several ads on numerous web sites that I visit. Additionally, I don't go to the effort of adding them to the filter list.

      Or to be more direct: I think your question could be more accurately rephrased as...

      How exactly will a webmaster find annoying flashy ads that attempt to force users to divert attention from my content, that users are willing to accept, if the ads are blocked and nobody ever sees them?

      The ads in themselves will be the reason why people do or don't block them.

    6. Re:Oh my. by Halow8888 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Saying I can not visit a site because I use Firefox is like saying I can not walk into a store or office because I might not buy anything. I have to agree wholeheartedly with you on that. How many people are willing to go to a store with an annoying salesperson sitting over your shoulder, pushing everything in sight into your basket? That is roughly the same thing being done when flashing, dizzying, and in some cases head-ache or nausea inducing ads bombard you while you're trying to absorb information on a website. I have a tendancy to stop going to certain sites if/when ads make me grab for the pain killers.
    7. Re:Oh my. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that some ads are rediculous like the ones that take up the whole page or the bonk the *.. those should be shot and banned and whatever. but
      some sites really do rely on the banners at the top of the page for revenue to keep sites running. and it really isn't your god given right to adblock them.
      thats equivalent to.. you paying the mailman off to not send you the ad pack each week. its not the equivalent to you getting it sifting through and throwing it out. theres a difference.
      people pay for stuff to get to you. whether you click it, or ignore it, thats your business but if you prevent it from getting to you at all, then its not a question of whether or not it interests you or not. i agree that its not theft to do this, but, it certainly isn't moral.

      give it a rest (talking to trolls thats against anything companies ever do), you're getting free content, for the price of ignoring ads. or would you rather the internet content model change to a "you have to pay for whatever you view on the vast majority of sites" model??

    8. Re:Oh my. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      How exactly will a webmaster find ads that users are willing to accept if the ads are blocked The ads are blocked when they get unacceptable.
      Anything that flashes, moves, makes noises, pops or crawls gets blocked. Google's text ads don't get blocked because they don't get in the way, they just sit there quietly being relevant.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    9. Re:Oh my. by mrvan · · Score: 1

      [quote]Slashdot seems to have a decent handle on ads[/qoute]

      Slashdot has ads? Who would have thought that! *starting IE*

      Hmm 1 flash animation for blackberry, using javascript to document.write link to a javascript file hosted by doubleclick with context info and the fact that I am not logged in. This means that

      - doubleclick gets to send random code to my machine which IE will execute, presumably sandboxed but who knows what vulnerabilities are in there.
      - doubleclick gets my IP, my logged in status, and what article I am viewing
      - I get an animated flash in the middle of my screen

      I wouldn't mind inserting text based ads into the static html, but I will not consent to any ad that 1) sends information to a third party 2) asks my computer to execute javascript from somewhere else (or execute anything at all, really) or 3) moves

    10. Re:Oh my. by starfishsystems · · Score: 1
      How exactly will a webmaster find ads that users are willing to accept if the ads are blocked and nobody ever sees them?

      Yep, it sure does hurt when you shoot yourself in the foot like that.

      --
      Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
    11. Re:Oh my. by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's time for... *gasp* ...a different business model!

      There are basically 3 kinds of sites on the web.

      1) Non-profit sites.
      2) For-profit corporate sites, sometimes with an online store.
      3) Aggregation sites, frequently ad-supported.

      Type 1 will always be around, though quantity will fluctuate. There are always people who like to publish stuff just to provide information.
      Type 2 will always be around. Why would corporations remove their personal presence from the web?
      Type 3 will die. Soon. But it will be reborn.

      Supporting a news site with ads is a surefire way to piss off web users. Sure, it worked great for "old media", since old media lacked the web's unequaled ability to deliver annoying crap to your eyeballs. So, how does a site like this get its funding without ads? The same way as anything else - corporate sponsors. Watch PBS sometime. Sure, there's "Viewers Like You" that make everything possible. But more importantly, there's special interest sponsorship money going into those programs. Norm Abram's Old Yankee Workshop? Delta woodworking tools. This Old House? GMC. America's Test Kitchen? Thermador appliances. So... Slashdot? Intel, Microsoft (they'd love to buy us all, right?), and whoever else sends in press releases for posting as "news". In between press releases, we could get real news, since the site would probably be swimming in dough. And everyone would be happy except the ad-banner people. They can starve for all I care, though.

    12. Re:Oh my. by neonfrog · · Score: 1

      In the Webs current state the ads are what is supporting the production of most of the content you see.

      But is most content good? You could be arguing for better content that has more worth (and value), not low value content that requires ads to support its existence. By blocking ads I'm saying "your content is NOT worth my extra time on your ad." The answer isn't find another skeezy way to serve me the same ad. The answer is make your content balance with the ads such that I'll consume both! Better yet, make your content so amazing I'd buy it outright! DVD sales of TV shows anyone?

      What happens when that support gets pulled out from under the web site owners?

      They try a new business model that isn't based on a poor content to ad ratio. Use Wikipedia, IMDb, and Google as a reference, not X10.com.

      (Webmasters could get around the issue by inserting the ads directly in to the content instead of having them served by a third party.)

      Are you saying that content generators might have to work harder to get me to view their ad-riddled content in a manner more palatable to me? Why, yes, I'd like that. I'm sorry they can't see that themselves. That would fall into the category of "not my fault." Generic annoying flashing banner/skyscrapers are content providers trying to make a quick buck on little work. I can't support that business model.

      Most of the content I consume is NOT advertisement-based, interestingly. And I don't use Adblocking stuff. I just don't consume ad-riddled content! Who do I make my theft check out to, exactly?

      --

      I'm thinking about it, therefore I might be.

    13. Re:Oh my. by AnotherDaveB · · Score: 1

      Slashdot seems to have a decent handle on ads. They exist, I see them, and occasionally I click on them because they actually happen to be relevant. They're unobtrusive, and even the flash based ones seem to load relatively quickly. Rarely, if ever, do I have any problems with the advertising here.

      Just to add to the Slashdot love-in for a mo'

      If you use dial-up internet, Slashdot can take an age to load. Knowing this, the good eggs at Slashdot have a 'dial-up' preference in your account options that tinkers with the CSS to show you a smaller homepage, (I think with fewer adverts than the default) and the page load times become bearable again.

    14. Re:Oh my. by bbbaldie · · Score: 1

      I run several sites, and have always had a no-banner policy. However, I was surprised and disappointed that Firefox right out of the box on Ubuntu comes with an ad blocker that blocks my Google ads. Sure, everybody hates banners, Flash garbage, and lurid flashing colors. But as a website owner with lots of overhead, I think blocking Google's text ads out of the box is going a bit far.

    15. Re:Oh my. by XenoPhage · · Score: 1

      Slashdot has ads? Who would have thought that! *starting IE* IE? IE????? That's it, you're banned from Slashdot, you money-grubbing Microsoft-loving Zealot!

      Hmm 1 flash animation for blackberry, using javascript to document.write link to a javascript file hosted by doubleclick with context info and the fact that I am not logged in. This means that

      - doubleclick gets to send random code to my machine which IE will execute, presumably sandboxed but who knows what vulnerabilities are in there.
      - doubleclick gets my IP, my logged in status, and what article I am viewing
      - I get an animated flash in the middle of my screen

      I wouldn't mind inserting text based ads into the static html, but I will not consent to any ad that 1) sends information to a third party 2) asks my computer to execute javascript from somewhere else (or execute anything at all, really) or 3) moves Ok, so maybe slashdot was a bad example.. My point was that these ads were unobtrusive and relevant. I like that. As for the javascript and whatnot, I tend to ignore what doubleclick does. Granted I do have an anti-virus installed as well as an anti-spyware package. It seems to me that while doubleclick does "potentially" have power to harm the end-users computer, it wouldn't exactly be in their best interests to do so. Obviously other sites may be less scrupulous. Of course, those other sites might not be advertisers and not blocked by your ad-blocking plugin, so that may be a moot point.
      --
      XenoPhage
      Technological Musings
    16. Re:Oh my. by XenoPhage · · Score: 1

      Just to add to the Slashdot love-in for a mo'



      If you use dial-up internet, Slashdot can take an age to load. Knowing this, the good eggs at Slashdot have a 'dial-up' preference in your account options that tinkers with the CSS to show you a smaller homepage, (I think with fewer adverts than the default) and the page load times become bearable again.

      What is this "dial-up internet" you speak of? Are you referring perhaps to the text-to-speech stuff that [all hail]Google[/all hail] offers?

      Seriously, though, I was unaware of this apparently very cool feature..
      --
      XenoPhage
      Technological Musings
    17. Re:Oh my. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Sponsorship. The company's logo is hosted on your site and linked to their site. Adblock doesn't block it because it's hosted from the same site. It doesn't change constantly. It's relevant.

  3. next step? by mardin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's next step? Forcing people to actually look at the adds? Or press at it? Or are you a thief if you don't buy a product of an advertiser of a web page you visit?

    1. Re:next step? by y86 · · Score: 0

      What's next step? Forcing people to actually look at the adds? Or press at it? Or are you a thief if you don't buy a product of an advertiser of a web page you visit?


      This sounds like any recent DVD.

      Luckily for us the web is an open format and we only have to see what we want to see. If the site was smart they'd just rasterize the whole page and you'd be forced to look at all the adds (and they wouldn't by dynamic flash crap like they are now).
    2. Re:next step? by klenwell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Really. If they need my click so bad, why don't they just click the ad for me? If they don't think my personal preferences regarding the viewing of their ads are particularly germane, why is my personal inclination to click or not click on an ad any more sacred? Just click it for me already and cut me, the gratuitous middle man, out of the equation all together.

      Like a lot of others here, I didn't bother with adblock until the ads started actively interfering with my browsing.

      That said, I think this whole issue is just a troll for the purpose of, naturally, driving more traffic to another fluffy ad-laden website.

      --
      Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
    3. Re:next step? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just filed a patent on such a device. Got to make sure that Beethoven's ninth is not playing in the background, thats all.

  4. Use loaded questions much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There's no promise when I visit a site I will download what you offer. Images, CSS, Javascript, Flash, etc are all OPTIONAL. If I choose to save bandwidth by not downloading them, there is nothing morally wrong with that choice.

    1. Re:Use loaded questions much? by bogado · · Score: 1

      Even worst you are obliged to execute the content, since many blockers are in fact stopping javascript loaded to execute in the first place.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

  5. I feel so... pink? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 1

    Hmm... Where have I heard about a site actively blocking users who hit it too many times in a given period?

  6. Is it theft? by rah1420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    No more theft than it would be if you were viewing web content with a browser that couldn't physically render the content. What if everyone used Lynx, for example?

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
    1. Re:Is it theft? by kavehkh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seconding that: "Theft?" While you never pay attention to the ads and if you ever did, you never click on them anyway, blocking should not make a difference on the website owners(not designers really) expected revenue. The owners could similarly argue that, if the users don't care about the ads, they don't have to care about blocking them either. I guess this argument goes both ways, making the whole discussion "overhyped".

    2. Re:Is it theft? by neoform · · Score: 1

      I think of it as taking a magazine and ripping out the ads, then reading it.

      I've never heard anyone ever call that immoral before.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    3. Re:Is it theft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use the UserAgent plugin for Firefox and make it look like Lynx. Then everyone will be happy.

    4. Re:Is it theft? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      While I don't see blocking ads as theft, I do see the difference between using something that technically cannot render the ads and something that purposely removes them. It would be the site owners fault that they don't create the ad content that will display in Lynx.

      The real question that I think should be asked is, giving the appearance of free and in beer websites, are we as users just getting too greedy? Should everything have no costs to it at all? Should someone who creates a sit that is helpful to you and me have to fork the funding over completely on their own and from their own pocket? Because we demand it? Ads, like it or not, go into paying for what we don't want to pay. If an ad blocker was the default, you might start seeing site that just won't render if it senses that the ads aren't being displayed. Or maybe it gives out different or useless content. I guess we need to ask if this is what we want or not.

    5. Re:Is it theft? by Overzeetop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does it really matter that much? If free entertainment content disappeared from the internet, would it really be that bad? To me, the internet is both a tool and an entertainment device. The part that's really useful is the tool part, and much of the information I need is either pay-to-play or funded directly by the site creator (product data and such - call it self advertisement). I hate to bring it up, but the internet wasn't meant for the entertainment business or advertisers, and I don't see a whole lot of the "value" they're providing.

      Would I miss a free /.? Maybe. Or maybe I'd just get more work done.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    6. Re:Is it theft? by anagama · · Score: 1

      Ads, like it or not, go into paying for what we don't want to pay. If an ad blocker was the default, you might start seeing site that just won't render if it senses that the ads aren't being displayed.

      If a website wants to ensure that only those who view the ads see the content, well, that's perfectly fair as it is their content. However, when they give the content and ads to everyone, with no contractual restriction on how you display the content+ads, a user is completely in their rights to display only the content and round file the ads. So no, it isn't anywhere near theft of resources in the absence of an agreement otherwise. For those sites who really want to make sure ads and content go together and both are viewed, they need to prominently notify the user that viewing the site with adblocking turned on is a violation of the terms of use. This way, those who don't want to see the ads can go away unmolested (without viewing the content) and the company will get its way with its content. Only in that situation would an adblocker who then views the content in violation of the TOU be acting improperly in any fashion.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    7. Re:Is it theft? by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Is it really any different to driving past a billboard, or flicking past a magazine page, without buying the product? Is that theft as well? Each of those is paid for by the advertiser.

      It sounds like some of the anti-piracy crew have found a new job.

    8. Re:Is it theft? by misleb · · Score: 1

      Seconding that: "Theft?" While you never pay attention to the ads and if you ever did, you never click on them anyway, blocking should not make a difference on the website owners(not designers really) expected revenue.


      If you can avoid downloading the ad completely (which AdBlock Plus can do, AFAIK), you are actually helping a site's clickthrough ratio. That is assuming that you are like me and almost NEVER click on ads anyway.

      The argument that blocking ads is theft *might* have been valid back in the days when advertisers didn't require that users click on an ad. But now that you have have to actually click on it to generate revenue, the whole issue is moot. Blocking ads is no more immoral than ignoring them.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    9. Re:Is it theft? by Nossie · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Times like these I wish I had mod points :-| well said!

      Although

      "Would I miss a free /.? Maybe. Or maybe I'd just get more work done."

      Maybe you'd just go somewhere else? I was more than happy with the interweb before the last dotbomb, I don't understand why people seem to think it should become another content media platform, if I wanted to watch shite I'd turn the TV on.

      Actually I do... but I wont go into the American rhetoric of make a fast buck out of everything you can get your hands on and then some.

    10. Re:Is it theft? by misleb · · Score: 1

      Bad example. If you ripped out all the ads in your average magazine, you wouldn't have anything left!

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    11. Re:Is it theft? by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      You are likely old enough to remember usenet in its prime. We could lose every forum in the world and still have a good time if we could strike the advertisers from usenet. Now I just troll it for unmentionables in the binaries groups. Sad, really.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    12. Re:Is it theft? by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Interesting post.

      For me, personally, on the one hand, I'm willing to pay something to get something in return. I'm willing to pay for software if I think the price is worth it. If it's not, I don't feel entitled to it. The people that made it are entitled to set the terms, and if I don't agree then that's all there is to it - copyright infringement is not a valid alternative.

      Let's move on to television; since deregulation, TV commercials have become extremely overbearing. I admit I use Tivo and skip through the commercials. On the other hand, I'm not asking or forcing these companies to broadcast that content to my house. Secondly, it's of no value to them if I DO watch the ads, as all it does is annoy me. It's hard to figure what subconscious affects ads have had on me, but for the life of me I can't remember making any important decision based on what I saw in an adverstisement; if I needed a car, I started researching cars. If I needed a mobile phone, I started researching different plans from different companies.

      I DO find some commercials interesting, though... so while I'm fast forwarding, I often stop to look at one of the commercials. That's the targetting they should really want. Typically, it'll be a movie or an ad for an upcoming show. Isn't that how it should be?

      Here's an even better example - I missed several episodes of Heroes; when you downloaded those episodes from the website, they placed a SINGLE ad at the beginning of each segment. NOT A PROBLEM. I did nothing to try to defeat that.

      Websites are a bit different, though. It's more like when you're watching TV and the annoying animated "bugs" appear on the screen, usually advertising an upcoming show. They are extremely intrusive; and there's this mixing of the content with the advertising.

      Again, though, the business model is flawed, and only worked because consumers had no choice. They'd beam some content into your home, and hope you watched the commercials. I remember the Time-Warner (or was it Turner? I work for Turner and was horribly embarassed) that said skipping commercials was stealing (or, specifically, that there's a contract between the content provider and the viewer). Then someone asked "what if you go to the bathroom during the commercial?" and he mumbled a bit and said "I guess that'd be OK."

      There's no contract between me and the content provider; neither on the website nor on the TV. I understand completely their point of view, and if they blocked firefox users, that's entirely their choice. But for now, I have zero guilt. Imagine if MS sent a Windows Vista disc to every homeowner in the U.S. and said "if you use this, you need to pay." Well, no... you sent it to me without me asking. Now it's mine. If I'd wanted to pay for it, I would have gone out and paid for it. You can defeat me by putting a license key restriction on it, making it useless, and I'll throw it away. Either way, though, you get nothing from me.

      That's basically how advertising is... you'll get nothing from me whether I block it or not, so why should I put up with being annoyed? If you don't like it, lock it up (like MS and activation keys), and I just won't use it.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    13. Re:Is it theft? by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Another good post... I would hate to see a lot of the news sites go away, but the mainstream ones are making money on their TV and radio adverstising to subsidize their online presence which, with many offereing video, is costing them quite a bit to produce and host.

      Besides that, you still have banking and other financial institutions, internal company websites and even external websites that advertise open positions and so forth, online shopping like newegg and ebay... plenty of sites don't require advertising.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    14. Re:Is it theft? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, first, I said it wasn't theft. I don't want you to think I was inferring that.

      Now, there is a contractual obligation even though one isn't implicitly stated. When I present something to you, I present it in a way I want you to view it. If this means with ads sitting in the middle of the paper, then so be it. You can chose to ignore the ad and refuse to ever act on it. Now, in a digital world where everything is bits and packets, you have the ability to alter the presentation before you receive it. That is the only different between paper and the interweb in this same sense.

      This goes along the same lines as altering content like a movie and rendering it to people who don't want the violence or language. If the content owner didn't present it that way, then you are not entitled to receive it that way. A website is really no different except that you have programs available that can do the changes without my consent on the fly. But having the ability to do so doesn't mean you have an underlying right to do so. One could probably argue that Ad blockers redistribute content in an altered way because the blocker programs intercept the website as it is being loaded and then forward it sans the ads.

      When a browser does this by default, there are some issues (legally and morally and other) to deal with. If you as a consumer, get the blocking software and use it, a good portion of those issues if not all of them go away because you have made a conscious decision to ignore the ads. It isn't you making this decision when it is preloaded in a browser and turned on by default when you receive the browser.

      But as a consequence of you ignoring anything your not interested in, the website could need to find funding from other sources. Subscriptions or forced page ads where you have to site though a few pages of ads before viewing the content in order to get the content show to you might be the answer. Not giving the information to the public in the first place might be the answer too. Universities host a lot of stuff free, but they don't place ads on the pages there either so we are talking about the type of content that is provided by advertising revenue that you are wishing to view.

      In the end, you will have to support the site in some way or stop using it. It is really up to you on which is the most obnoxious way. Some sites might find something to work around it, but they haven't so far and they know how much people already hate the ads. So think about the alternatives.

    15. Re:Is it theft? by anagama · · Score: 1

      My apologies - I didn't mean to make it sound like you had called adblocking theft -- you clearly did not. My intent was a statement that largely agreed with your original post.

      I think where we differ is the part where you suggest the requirement to view the ads is implicit in serving the content. I would argue that the right to block the ads is implicit because it is widely known the technology exists and is frequently used. Secondly, I can think of no precedent in the regular print world that restricts the manner in which content is displayed to the extent some sites wish. For example, if I'm featured in a newspaper article, I don't think it would be a violation of copyright or any other duty, for me to cut out that article and put it in a scrapbook. Obviously I don't have a right to redistribute and so forth, but I can certainly cut the article out from its original presentation and read it that way anytime I wish. Newspapers could expressly forbid this behavior of course, but they don't. Thus, sites that want to prevent people from cutting out content and viewing it, should take steps to make it clear that such behavior violates their terms of service.

      Your original suggestion of technological means to block adblocking users, is something I think is perfectly appropriate for sites to take if they so desire. If sites wish to simply include an adblocking ban in their terms of use, I feel they have a duty draw users' attention to that provision. Either way, the site does have a right to control how it distributes content. However, I feel no qualms about adblocking if a site does not take any such steps because its owners are presumably aware of the technological ways in which users can manipulate received content to fit their preferences, e.g., changing font sizes, default colors, or heaven forbid, blocking ads. If a site is dead set against any of these activities, they should make that clear and I will simply avoid them if I feel those terms violate my personal sensibilities.

      While I don't believe I have carte blanche to other's content, I do feel I have the right to use the content in all ways not forbidden.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    16. Re:Is it theft? by sumdumass · · Score: 1
      I didn't think you intended to imply I thought it was theft but I wanted to make sure I was clear in case. Thanks.

      I think where we differ is the part where you suggest the requirement to view the ads is implicit in serving the content. I would argue that the right to block the ads is implicit because it is widely known the technology exists and is frequently used.
      Actually, I believe where we disagree is in the timing and steps necessary to block the ads. It seems that you want to filter the ads before your computer gets it, I think that the page in itself comprises a valid work and needs to be delivered before you cut the ads out. At least let me present the content/page before taking a black marker to the ads.

      The only real difference is that when I view the stats, I can see that with 2000 ads served, I get 2 responses compared to 200 ads served with 2 responses. Obviously with 2 out or 2000, I need to find a different model. With 2 out of 200, I would have 20 responses if I could get 2000 ads displayed. I know there are other stats that can be viewed to, I don't even display ads on my one single page site that I put up for fun. But I put it up as a whole and I think there is a difference between you only retrieving part of it and retrieving all of it but only paying attention to part of it. So it is really the timing of the steps and going through the motions I have the issue with.

      Secondly, I can think of no precedent in the regular print world that restricts the manner in which content is displayed to the extent some sites wish. For example, if I'm featured in a newspaper article, I don't think it would be a violation of copyright or any other duty, for me to cut out that article and put it in a scrapbook. Obviously I don't have a right to redistribute and so forth, but I can certainly cut the article out from its original presentation and read it that way anytime I wish. Newspapers could expressly forbid this behavior of course, but they don't. Thus, sites that want to prevent people from cutting out content and viewing it, should take steps to make it clear that such behavior violates their terms of service.
      I agree. But with print, you receive it as a whole before doing whatever you want to do. Even if that means a split second longer on the web, I think it should be the same way. You don't have to view them, just let them get to your computer and acknowledged before cutting them out. Sort of just like you would have to wait until you got your copy of the paper before cutting the articles and ads out.

      While I don't believe I have carte blanche to other's content, I do feel I have the right to use the content in all ways not forbidden.
      I hope I didn't suggest that you did believe that. But as a matter of principle, I think the way I present the page is the way it should be received, then you can cut anything you want away from it. I may be getting a little pedantic on this but I think this is a position we should be firm with. It is one of those slippery slop things that led most of the newspapers to use passwords and subscriptions. It gets really annoying having to juggle passwords, subscribe, or find a nonag or nopass site to steal someone generic login in order to view something that should be freely available. It would get really annoying if we had to do this to almost every site on the net. Or if sites just stopped displaying content and wilted away.

      Maybe I am looking at this too hard?
    17. Re:Is it theft? by anagama · · Score: 1

      But with print, you receive it as a whole before doing whatever you want to do. ... I think the way I present the page is the way it should be received, then you can cut anything you want away from it.

      Actually, I think that position makes sense and as you mention, it fits well with the print metaphor. You get the entire piece and then have the option to read/ignore what you don't want.

      Of course anti-adblocking proponents will take take issue with this process because the ads are blocked mechanically rather than by express user action (e.g., grabbing the scissors and cutting out paper articles). I suppose a browser plugin that would allow a user to temporarily block part of the page by clicking on it or selecting areas of it, would be a potential solution -- a virtual pair of scissors if you will. Still, I prefer the mechanical solution and I'd like to see websites who forbid adblocking just come out and say so. But I'm questioning a little now whether I should be as strident in my view that I have a right to block in the absence of a directive not to. I think so ... but I can see how I could be wrong about that.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    18. Re:Is it theft? by ricosalomar · · Score: 0

      Mod way up!!
      I have been blocking ads since privoxy. And I've been hearing the refrain the whole time: "The internet would be like it was back in 1993 if it weren't for the ads!"
      Sorry, I don't feel bad about blocking ads, if it makes the internet less profitable, so much the better. Think about how cheap the bandwidth would be if it wasn't being perpetually clogged up with ads and the shite sites that are supported by them! Most sites on the internet are spewing entertainment to clueless morons. We could just give them all CRTs showing flashy colors punctuated by ads for sugar with pork fat mixed in.
      If advertising is the only way you can make money, your business deserves to die. I hate advertising and, by extension, advertisers. Billboards, junkmail, commercials, spam, popups, etc. There is no difference. The wirld would be a better place if all of it went away, I'm just doing my part.

    19. Re:Is it theft? by sumdumass · · Score: 0, Troll

      I would say that you definitely have a right to ignore the ads. You might also have the right to block them from your view before you can actually see them. but at least let the server shove them your way first.

      I have been trying to figure out why I am stuck on that issue. For some reason it just seems like the proper thing to do, they present something, I should take it as a whole and not let them know their efforts are only half appreciated. I think the closest match would actually be when those video stores where pre-filtering movies, re-recording them, and you would send in a legit copy that you purchased so they would send you the clean version they made. This model lost in court but the strange thing is, the judge said that if they (the consumers) wanted to edit it before watching and then watch the clean versions, that was perfectly ok.

      I don't know anymore. I would say that I am still against putting an ad blocker into a web browser and turning it on by default. If someone doesn't want the ads, it is really easy to get around it with a google search (or any search engine for that matter).

  7. differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by i.r.id10t · · Score: 5, Interesting

    But is there a moral difference between not downloading the ad vs. not seeing the ad? For example, I use my userContent.css file to not display advertisements in older versions of Mozilla (I like the full suite of apps darn it!). *My* bandwidth is still used to get the file, *their* webserver still logs a request for /advert.php?foo.... but I never see the ad. As long as the request for the advert is made and it is sent, does it matter if someone sees it? Of course, if they don't see it they can't click it, but still...

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    1. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think ads are for? If you download it but don't look the ad provider pays for both bandwidth and to the site owner; they get nothing for their trouble.

    2. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by saterdaies · · Score: 1

      I think there is still a difference. A lot of web advertising is pay per click and not per impression so not seeing it does affect the site. There's also the fact that if users are blocking ads (yet they're still being downloaded), advertisers lower their cost per impression rates (at least in the long run).

    3. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I make it a point not to buy anything that I discover in an ad that irritates me. It seems like your talking about the same type of ads. I would suggest that if you download it, but chose to ignore it, might be the same thing as not displaying it. The website should still get their revenue and the Internet would still go on.

      But seriously, If you know from the start that you won't act on the ad, as long as the site is getting credit for pushing it, I don't see a problem with blocking them. I don't think it should be a default setting in a browser. Blocking them should be something each user who decides they don't want to see the ads or would never use/act on them has to go and download and install onto their computer. For those that don't want them, fine, for those that do or don't care, blocking them should be pushed onto them. Not when revenue is a prime reason some websites and content exist without access fees and such. I have seen more then one site I visited frequently goto a subscription model because they couldn't serve enough ads to cover the costs.

    4. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by Meneth · · Score: 1

      I like the full suite of apps darn it! I hope you use SeaMonkey then.
    5. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      You miss the point. People who are blocking ads don't click on them anyways. So, NOT displaying the ads yields the same results for both the site owner and the advertiser. After all, all they care about are impressions and click-thrus. Not blocking the ad yields 1 impression, and 0 click-thrus. Blocking the ad yields...1 impression, 0 click-thrus, and 1 user who's happy he doesn't have to see the ad.

      Neither the site owner nor the advertiser are losing anything here. Virtually no one clicks on ads anyways.

    6. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by greoff · · Score: 1
      I have never understood this argument. Well... I have not understood this argument since what? Sometime around 1999?

      as long as the site is getting credit for pushing it, I don't see a problem with blocking them No one gets paid for "pushing" the ad. People get paid for clicks generated by the ad.

      In my opinion the ad blocking software, in its current form, is causing more problems than it solves.

      1. Your browser requests the ad and burns server side bandwidth/CPU/other resources to deliver the ad.
      2. Your browser receives the ad and burns client side bandwidth/CPU/other resources to receive the ad.
      3. Your ad delivery is counted as a "view", since it was "pushed" to you.
      4. The number of views is now erroneously increased, since it was never viewed.
      5. The overall click through rate is driven down, since the ad was never viewed.
      6. Advertisers are forced to react to plummeting click through rates with more intrusive ads or inventive measures to get around your countermeasures.

      I personally feel the whole ad blocking idea needs to get over the "but I gave them credit for the view" idea and just not request the things at all. If there is no intention to display the ad, fine. Then do that. Just do it right.

      If the technology was not requesting the ads at all, advertisers would get more accurate numbers and may be inclined to pay more per click. The Internet as a whole would have more bandwidth. The webmaster would have more accurate numbers of how many of his viewers are actually accepting his forms of advertising/revenue and could better gauge the his own business model.

      Ad blocking technology needs to stop being an active part of the problem instead of trying to be the total solution.

      --
      I had the best sig, ever. But some fool tried to measure it. Now it is ruined.
    7. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by Drachemorder · · Score: 1

      I don't click on ads anyway. So what's the difference here? If they only get paid for clicks, they aren't getting any revenue from me either way.

    8. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by mochan_s · · Score: 1

      As long as /advert.php gets executed and such, the ad company is able to keep track of your browsing habits. That is more valuable on the long run than someone actually punching the monkey and buying after that.

      So, I think the ad companies aren't too worried about it.

    9. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by c · · Score: 1

      > But is there a moral difference between not downloading the ad vs. not seeing the ad?

      To use industry language, it's the difference between theft and fraud.

      However, since we're talking about morality in the context of the advertising industry, both are roughly equivalent to helping old ladies carry their groceries.

      c.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    10. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by Woldry · · Score: 1

      6. Advertisers are forced to react to plummeting click through rates with more intrusive ads or inventive measures to get around your countermeasures.

      I wouldn't say "forced". They have other options, such as reexamining whether click-through rates are a valid measure of consumer interest (which, to be fair, does resemble your point in your penultimate paragraph).

      I don't have a problem at all with ad blocking (as my other posts in this topic make clear), but I agree with you that there is some hypocrisy in the stance that there IS something wrong with it that giving credit for the view somehow expiates.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    11. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by QRDeNameland · · Score: 1

      I personally feel the whole ad blocking idea needs to get over the "but I gave them credit for the view" idea and just not request the things at all.

      I could be wrong, but it is my understanding that if Adblock is set to "Remove Ads" instead of "Hide Ads" (which is the default behavior), it does not request the ads.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    12. Re:differences in not dl ad vs. not seeing it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you are blocking the ad you are screwing the content provider, when you are hiding the ad you are screwing the ad provider... the content provider get paid for how many requests are made thru his site.

  8. Shift the example by gentimjs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Those poor innocent spammers need to pay (somewhere, at some level, be it money for bandwidth or time to write the virus..) to send you those viagra ads .. if we block those messages, and never see them, is it theft of some kind from the spammers or the viagra company?

    1. Re:Shift the example by notasheep · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Come on mods, that's not "Insightful". It's a poor understanding of the difference between actively going to a website to read content (you're soliciting them) and having some idiot send you mail (they're soliciting you).

      --
      Your mind looks a little cramped. Why don't you stretch it a little?
  9. A non-issue ... by Woldry · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein.

    --
    How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    1. Re:A non-issue ... by truesaer · · Score: 4, Informative
      I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein.


      You didn't even read the slashdot summary, much less the article obviously. The newspaper gets paid for including the ad, not for you viewing it. Websites often get paid by impressions, so if the ads aren't received by the customers then the revenue isn't received by the site. Totally different from the newspaper, who gets an "impression" with every paper sold guaranteed.


      Still not necessarily wrong given how parasitic a lot of ads are now, hogging resources and making annoying sounds. But lets focus on the actual argument raised in TFA.

    2. Re:A non-issue ... by dattaway · · Score: 1

      We not only throw out the newspaper advertisements at work for the single issue someone bought that morning, but its shared among about 100 people during the day. And we also use pens and markers to deface and editorialize the remaining ads. Its the community stealing back its own community!

    3. Re:A non-issue ... by CaptainPatent · · Score: 4, Funny

      I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein. You didn't even read the slashdot summary, much less the article obviously. The newspaper gets paid for including the ad, not for you viewing it. Websites often get paid by impressions, so if the ads aren't received by the customers then the revenue isn't received by the site. Totally different from the newspaper, who gets an "impression" with every paper sold guaranteed.

      Still not necessarily wrong given how parasitic a lot of ads are now, hogging resources and making annoying sounds. But lets focus on the actual argument raised in TFA. In other words it would be like acquiring newspaper gnomes that take the ads out of your paper before you get it, and the newspaper being paid less by advertisers for every newspaper gnome known to be on the loose.

      I hope that clears things up.
      --
      Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
    4. Re:A non-issue ... by Bluesman · · Score: 1

      There's a simple fix, then. Change the payment model to a newspaper/magazine one.

      Publishing a web site is extremely cheap compared to physical distribution. If your web site is so popular that you can't support it because people are blocking ads, then go to the advertisers and ask for flat rate. When they tell you to pound sand, then start charging for use of the site/membership benefits, etc.

      Nobody owes anyone a right to a living. If what you offer is valuable enough, people will pay for it. If you think what you offer is more valuable than what people are currently paying, then start charging them.

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    5. Re:A non-issue ... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      You pay for the paper.

      I'm thinking if you paid to go to a Website, they wouldn't call it stealing then.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    6. Re:A non-issue ... by trancemission · · Score: 0

      You didn't even read the slashdot summary, much less the article obviously. The newspaper gets paid for including the ad, not for you viewing it. Websites often get paid by impressions, so if the ads aren't received by the customers then the revenue isn't received by the site. Totally different from the newspaper, who gets an "impression" with every paper sold guaranteed. Maybe the issue to get to the bottom of is what you _actually_ pay for when you are buying advertising. If I have paid x pounds for y adverts to be displayed - then even if somebody is using ad-blocking software then it makes no difference [most decent ad-blocks don't even attempt to create an impression] - I will get a view the next time somebody who visits who doesn't have a ad blocker in place.

      If an ad-blocker downloads the content and hides it - again nothing is wasted - the fact I didn't view it is irrelevant. People use ad-blockers because they don't use the adverts which are blocked [otherwise they wouldn't block them and they would click on them]

      If you are marketing a product then any marketing costs money - anyways when did we work of the equation that x adverts = y profit?

    7. Re:A non-issue ... by lordtoran · · Score: 1

      That's the best point made in this discussion so far. People who decide to actively block web advertisements would have ignored them anyway. This means they have never been a target audience in the first place, so where is the financial loss here?

      But those greedy folks will not stop bitching until they have sold every eskimo a refrigerator.

      --
      Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
    8. Re:A non-issue ... by thebonafortuna · · Score: 1

      Did you purchase the newspaper? Because chances are you didn't purchase the right to view the website. At the very least, the newspaper is garnering some revenue by you buying it...most websites cannot make the same claim.

      Just playing Devil's advocate here.

    9. Re:A non-issue ... by Trojan35 · · Score: 1

      You at least pick up that section of the newspaper and look at it to throw it away. With adblock, you never even get the chance to see the ads.

      It's great. Everyone's "entitled" to block ads. So what happens when all the sites that provide stellar content get sick of your "push back" and start charging subscriptions? Then people go to the less reputable sites, and we get Dvorak as our reliable source of journalism.

    10. Re:A non-issue ... by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking if you paid to go to a Website, they wouldn't call it stealing then. I do pay to go to a website. I have to pay my ISP for bandwidth. If I go to a web site that is full of bandwidth-sucking ads, I am paying to download those ads. In fact, I have always been amazed that bandwidth get's charged double, that is they pay for hosting bandwidth, and I pay for ISP bandwidth, on the other end of the same pipe. The fact is, with advertising, the web site is paying extra for the bandwidth to serve those ads. Since, like other posters have mentioned, I am not going to click on their stupid flash-based ads anyway, so they are already losing money by paying for the bandwidth to send them to me. Instead of adblock, I propose that sites block their own ads at the server level, saving theirs and my bandwidth, but sadly that will probably not happen.
      --
      Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
    11. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      Websites often get paid by impressions,


      How often? I thought that was the old, dead advertising model. Google, for example, requires that you click on ads to generate revenue. Therefore, there is no difference between ignoring ads on the web and blocking them. ANd better, if you can avoid downloading the ads completely, you can save bandwidth so nobody even has to pay to send you an ad you'd just ignore anyway.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    12. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      Did you purchase the newspaper? Because chances are you didn't purchase the right to view the website. At the very least, the newspaper is garnering some revenue by you buying it...most websites cannot make the same claim.


      One important lesson that everyone should learn: We, as consumers, are not responsible for ensuring that a particular business model is viable or profitable. Whether or not someone is garnering some revenue is completely irrelevent to this discussion. As long as a site is open to the public, I have every right to view it however I please. I can block the ads, I can block the images. I can just read the raw HTML. There are no contracts implied.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    13. Re:A non-issue ... by thebonafortuna · · Score: 1
      Matthew,

      From parent post:

      I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein.

      Its important you view my comment in this context, which was clear. It was meant as a response to the parent comment, and was as relevant to the "topic" as any.

      We, as consumers, are not responsible for ensuring that a particular business model is viable or profitable. Whether or not someone is garnering some revenue is completely irrelevent to this discussion.

      Please feel free to point out where, exactly, I made such a claim. I think you'll have trouble arguing I said the consumer has any responsibility to ensure financial success. And I made no reference to an "implied contract". Simply pointing to the direct correlation between profit and buying a newspaper, and the discrepancy in that regard to online media.
    14. Re:A non-issue ... by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Er ... yes, actually, I did read both.

      There are differences in the effect on the web site owner (if their ads use a per-view model and not a per-click model), but there is no difference in what is morally incumbent on me in either case.

      That said, I should probably have indicated that I also fail to see how there is any moral obligation on the part of a web site owner to allow every browser to view the site. If the site owner wants to block Firefox in order to ensure that everyone who visits will see the ads, then that is within his or her rights, too.

      Either way, the ads will not sell me anything.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    15. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      We, as consumers, are not responsible for ensuring that a particular business model is viable or profitable. Whether or not someone is garnering some revenue is completely irrelevent to this discussion.

      Please feel free to point out where, exactly, I made such a claim.


      You said "At the very least, the newspaper is garnering some revenue by you buying it." That suggest that you feel it is important, or at least relevant, that someone garner some revenue. Why else would you mention it?

      I think you'll have trouble arguing I said the consumer has any responsibility to ensure financial success. And I made no reference to an "implied contract". Simply pointing to the direct correlation between profit and buying a newspaper, and the discrepancy in that regard to online media.


      Ok, so what is the significance of this correlation and discrepancy?

      What if I paid to access a website and it STILL had ads? Would that change anything? Would it be OK to block ads then because, at the very least, the website is garnering some revenue?

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    16. Re:A non-issue ... by grumpyman · · Score: 1
      Still not necessarily wrong given how parasitic a lot of ads are now, hogging resources and making annoying sounds.


      Those ads make annoying sounds? OM MI GOD! NO WAY!

    17. Re:A non-issue ... by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      In other words it would be like acquiring newspaper gnomes that take the ads out of your paper before you get it, and the newspaper being paid less by advertisers for every newspaper gnome known to be on the loose.


      Or put more simply

      1) Collect ads
      2) ???
      3) Profit!

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    18. Re:A non-issue ... by Woldry · · Score: 1

      Not all papers. Weekly free papers are distributed in many cities. I still feel no obligation to pay any attention whatsoever to the ads in those.

      And you're dead wrong. They would still call it stealing if we paid for the web sites, as the cable and satellite companies would for equipment that let you skip the commercials altogether.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    19. Re:A non-issue ... by Woldry · · Score: 1

      You at least pick up that section of the newspaper and look at it to throw it away

      Perhaps I wasn't clear. I said without glancing at the ads therein.

      I still see no moral difference between ignoring ads on a web site (by blocking them) and ignoring ads in print (by not looking at them). Or, for that matter, between ignoring web ads by blocking them and ignoring web ads by not looking at them.

      Sites are perfectly within their rights to charge for subscriptions. I am perfectly within mine to decline to subscribe. Everybody wins.

      --
      How can a post be modded "overrated" or "underrated" when it hasn't been rated yet?
    20. Re:A non-issue ... by thebonafortuna · · Score: 1

      You said "At the very least, the newspaper is garnering some revenue by you buying it." That suggest that you feel it is important, or at least relevant, that someone garner some revenue. Why else would you mention it? I mentioned it because it is an indisputable fact (in most cases). It is relevant to the discussion because someone IS garnering revenue. Since someone is garnering revenue, that is the difference to this point:

      I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein. Morally, it is different because newspapers still profit, and (potentially, though in most cases not) can continue to function, without ad revenue. Morally, you can rest assured that since you paid for the paper, you shouldn't be forced to view ads imposed on you by the paper. Is there an implied contract between the publisher and the consumer to view the ads? Perhaps, but that is irrelevant - profit in this case is made regardless. And yes, profit is important. If we're dealing in reality, consumers should recognize this. That does not, however, mean they should view ads. Anyways, this profit is the difference between throwing out the ads in a newspaper and blocking the ads on a website.

      That being said, I actually like looking through some of the ads in the Sunday morning papers. I'm generally curious to see what products are going for at places like Best Buy and Circuit City. Do you ever do that?

      And, just to clarify, I can't stand obtrusive ads on the internet either.
    21. Re:A non-issue ... by Talsan · · Score: 1

      I can think of a few off hand. A lot of independent sites are still per impression (I'm pretty sure sites like Penny Arcade, PVP, and others are). Also, I believe 37signals and a bunch of other sites have their "The Deck" ad network which is not per impression, but is per month with X number of ads rotated among the sites during the month.

      That said, for the most part, I don't have any sort of moral objection to blocking ads, although I don't bother to block the Google text ads, and I usually don't start adding things to adblock unless there's something on the site that's making noise or is visually annoying. --In those cases, I pretty much go out of my way to kill every add I can find on the site.

    22. Re:A non-issue ... by Myopic · · Score: 1

      What if I have my son to go thru the paper and take out all the ads before I pick up the newspaper. Say furthermore that it is a free little paper paid for by its advertisements.

      THEN have I stolen from the paper company?

    23. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      Morally, it is different because newspapers still profit, and (potentially, though in most cases not) can continue to function, without ad revenue. Morally, you can rest assured that since you paid for the paper, you shouldn't be forced to view ads imposed on you by the paper.


      There you go again... tying morality to profit. Saying that we, as consumers, have some moral obligation to ensure that content providers profit in some way. And that is absolute hogwash.

      Is there an implied contract between the publisher and the consumer to view the ads?


      No.

      Perhaps, but that is irrelevant - profit in this case is made regardless.


      Actually, it is the only thing that *is* relevent. Profit is irrelvent.

      And yes, profit is important.


      Only to the publishers. Not the consumer.

      If we're dealing in reality, consumers should recognize this. That does not, however, mean they should view ads. Anyways, this profit is the difference between throwing out the ads in a newspaper and blocking the ads on a website.


      Wait a minute, if there is no moral obligation to view ads either way, then what difference does profit make?

      That being said, I actually like looking through some of the ads in the Sunday morning papers. I'm generally curious to see what products are going for at places like Best Buy and Circuit City. Do you ever do that?


      I don't, personally. But my wife does. The difference there is that a choice is made to look at the ads. And it is all about choice. I can choose to look at ads and I can choose not to. 99.9% of the time, I choose not to. So I block them all. And there is nothing wrong with that.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    24. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      That said, for the most part, I don't have any sort of moral objection to blocking ads, although I don't bother to block the Google text ads, and I usually don't start adding things to adblock unless there's something on the site that's making noise or is visually annoying. --In those cases, I pretty much go out of my way to kill every add I can find on the site.


      Or you could just subscribe to EasyList and EasyElement in Adblock Plus and not have to bother doing ANYTHING. It is actually easier to just block everything by subscribing to good lists than it is to selectively block. It would actually be a bother for me to NOT block Google ads. It really is kind of beautiful. ;-)

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    25. Re:A non-issue ... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      My point is you can choose not to view something. The content provider can also choose not to let you see it. You don't have a right to anything there. Just like they don't have a right to force you to watch it. They do however hold the chips because they have a right to show it to you or not under their terms.

      In the instance of TV content providers over private networks such as cable, if they wanted to devise a system such that skipping commercials was basically impossible, they'd have every right to do that. If you don't like it then don't use it.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    26. Re:A non-issue ... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Where do I get one of these newspaper gnomes? Do they do flyers?

      The other day my mailbox was so stuffed with advertising the mailman had to put the actual mail on the little newspaper holder thing on the outside, underneath it. Fortunately it wasn't raining.

    27. Re:A non-issue ... by thebonafortuna · · Score: 1
      I guess we'll have to agree to disagree. This all started with somebody saying they didn't see the moral difference between throwing out ads in a paper, and blocking ads on the internet. I guess we abide by different morals, and you side with the parent poster. Morally, I see a huge difference between the two, because I recognize that without revenue, these outlets we choose to view would cease to exist. Since I enjoy having unique content brought to me at the time and expense of others, I feel there is a moral difference between potentially stealing profit from online media sources by refusing to view their ads, and by throwing out ads in the Sunday paper, which has no consequence for the newspaper. I think that's a pretty realistic argument. You say profit is irrelevant - to you, yes...until everyone adopts your attitude, blocks ads, and content not driven by companies obligated by commercial pressures ceases to exist. Professional outlets would just become a PR piece. Don't like that idea very much.

      Oh, and I should clarify the above comment I made, because I didn't articulate the point well:

      If we're dealing in reality, consumers should recognize this. That does not, however, mean they should view ads. Anyways, this profit is the difference between throwing out the ads in a newspaper and blocking the ads on a website. I should have said "consumers should recognize this - that does not, however, mean they should be subjected to obtrusive, flash style ads."
    28. Re:A non-issue ... by Kelson · · Score: 1

      Websites often get paid by impressions, so if the ads aren't received by the customers then the revenue isn't received by the site. Totally different from the newspaper, who gets an "impression" with every paper sold guaranteed.


      Or worse, by click. That's like only paying the newspaper for the people who actually walk into your store -- and only if they happen to mention the ad or bring it along.

    29. Re:A non-issue ... by misleb · · Score: 1

      I guess we'll have to agree to disagree.


      I'd like to be clear on what we disagree on. You seem to be contradicting yourself. At first you denied saying that we have a moral obligation to look at ads if that is how a publisher makes money (therefore ensuring that their business model is viable). And now you are contradicting yourself by saying exactly that.

      I think that's a pretty realistic argument. You say profit is irrelevant - to you, yes...until everyone adopts your attitude, blocks ads, and content not driven by companies obligated by commercial pressures ceases to exist. Professional outlets would just become a PR piece. Don't like that idea very much.


      So your argument for morality is based on what would happen if everyone acted like me? You could make the same argument against vegetarianism by saying that if everyone was a vegetarian, that would put meat packers out of business. I don't want to see people lose their jobs any more than you do, but it doesn't make a sound moral argument. Business is business. Consumers are not obligated to ensure that any particular business model is viable. If nobody wants to view ads, nobody will view ads. Tough shit for advertisers. They'll just have to find a different line of work just like the meat packers if nobody wanted to eat meat.

      I should have said "consumers should recognize this - that does not, however, mean they should be subjected to obtrusive, flash style ads."


      So how do you draw the line, morally? According to you, we are morally obligated to look at (or just not actively ignore? This isn't clear) whatever the publishers wants us to look at if it involves their profit margins. If they want us to look at obnoxious flash ads, then that is what we have to look at, right? Who are you to decide what kind of ads are appropriate? Is there some objective standard? What difference does it make, morally speaking, whether or not the ads are obtrusive or not? What if I think ALL ads are obtrusive by their very nature? Am I exempt?

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    30. Re:A non-issue ... by Random832 · · Score: 1

      I mentioned it because it is an indisputable fact (in most cases). It is relevant to the discussion because someone IS garnering revenue. Since someone is garnering revenue, that is the difference to this point:

      I fail to see how using Firefox to ignore the ad banners and such is morally any different than throwing out the advertising supplements to the newspaper without glancing at the ads therein. (emphasis mine)
      How does your answer relate to his question? if someone garnering revenue is the only measurable difference of any kind, there is no moral difference, because we have no moral obligation to ensure that people get revenue for their business model.
      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    31. Re:A non-issue ... by Random832 · · Score: 1

      by throwing out ads in the Sunday paper, which has no consequence for the newspaper So you don't get that in the long run, if fewer people read the ads and fewer people buy the stuff, that the advertisers will start not being willing to pay as much for ad placement, so the newspapers will make less money (either from being forced to lower their rates or not being able to get as many contracts at the unchanged rates)?

      Why don't websites move to a business model where it doesn't matter if you block the ad? How do I know that some particular website isn't using such a business model?
      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    32. Re:A non-issue ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Websites often get paid by impressions"

      Nice but wrong, they are generally paid for AD CLICKS not AD views. The original persons metaphor is accurate.

  10. I'm immoral for blocking ads??? by BiloxiGeek · · Score: 1

    Well I guess better make my reservation for a nice room in hell since I'm so immoral. Because I run AdBlock Plus and I use it extensively. Not about to stop using it either. I pay for the bandwidth to download pages when I surf so I get to choose what gets downloaded and what doesn't.

    --
    Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, For you are crunchy and go well with ketchup.
  11. Depends on what kind of ads they are by shbazjinkens · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the website owner feels it is necessary to use ads to support the cost of being on the internet, then the least they can do is avoid the flash "Bonk the _____ and get a ______" ads. If they aren't willing to do that then whether they like it or not I'm blocking their ads.

    I go to websites primarily for content, and if thats disrupted by advertisement then I'm not getting what I went there for.

    1. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by ericlondaits · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, but when we use AdBlock we block ALL ads, whether they're obnoxious or not.

      What this might cause, eventually, is for ads to be served through the same server and directories as content (to avoid URL pattern matching), for content to be served through the ads (like a flash file that provides both the ad and text content) or that ads sneak inside content (which they already do, in the form of sponsored articles, sponsored tv shows, on-screen banners during shows, etc.)

      It'd probably be in the best interest of consumers to find a good middle ground.

      --
      As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
    2. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      I'm just trying to understand what a creepy dancing alien has to do with mortgage rates.

    3. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by KiltedKnight · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't mind the ads so much if they weren't so intrusive. There is no need to have huge flashing, blinking things in the middle of the screen to damage my retinas. If you want to put a small link in there, that's fine. What I don't want are these banners that take up some chunk of screen real estate, the popup windows/tabs that seem to take over my desktop, and the waste of bandwidth.

      What ever happened to, "<h2>This website sponsored, in part, by <a href='company uri'>Company</a></h2>"? (Pick your favorite header level.) Do that, and you won't have people complaining about ads on websites as much as they do. There are still far too many people out there on dialup for whom all these image- or flash-based ads are doing nothing but hindering their entire experience on the web.

      --
      OCO is Loco
    4. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but when we use AdBlock we block ALL ads, whether they're obnoxious or not. Not true. I block only adservers that won't let me ignore their crap.

      So when I'm done reading the content in the middle of the page, I can scan the surrounding links and read any ads that stayed in its corner nice and quiet while I was busy. If I try to read the content and an ad keeps taking my attention away from the content, then I will never again see and ad from that server, and after I'm done adding them to my ban list, I can resume my reading.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    5. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      "It'd probably be in the best interest of consumers to find a good middle ground."

      Absolutely. And in the best interest of the ad writers. Interesting that they
      dont see that, and are willing to take advantage. And willing to whine about the
      state of things when the consumer gets a bit of leverage for themselves.

      My advice to the ad persons ( I use that term advisedly ) is to dry their eyes,
      stop the sniveling, write some ads that dont annoy, badger, bother, extort, or
      otherwise cross "the line". Maybe if they considered how they would feel being
      on the receiving end of such an ad? Just like I am not "entitled to a job",
      you are not "entitled to revenue". Go earn it. The right way.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    6. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by ericlondaits · · Score: 1

      Well... I should do the same, but since I installed adBlock I configured it with subscription to filter lists (as advised everywhere).

      If "power users" were the only one blocking ads we probably wouldn't have this article... but the problem is with widespread usage of adBlock, which is only likely with filter lists since otherwise you have to know how to create decent URL filter patterns, which is no big science but probably beyond the possibilities of the average user.

      Someone could come up with "bad ad servers" list, but we know how this kind of thing usually goes...

      --
      As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
    7. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It'd probably be in the best interest of consumers to find a good middle ground.

      Perhaps, but an arms race really would be much more fun. Do the advertisers really believe that they will defeat the nerds at their own game on their home field (i.e. technology and network protocols)? The advertisers would do better to not publicize the fact that such tools exist by engaging in open warfare with Firefox extension authors and open source software. The general public is still largely unaware that these tools exist (and they will never exist on Internet Explorer) so it makes no sense for the advertisers to give AdBlock and NoScript the spotlight and their 15 minutes on the national news. They would just be shooting themselves in their collective feet.

    8. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Tom · · Score: 1

      It'd probably be in the best interest of consumers to find a good middle ground. Why?

      If your business model relies on advertisement, then your business model is broken. Why? Because you are selling something that you do not own: Viewers' eyes. If your illusion about controlling them gets shattered by real life, maybe you should blame your false assumption instead of real life?

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    9. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by ericlondaits · · Score: 1

      And yet, advertising is bigger and more invasive every day. Companies want to get your eyes, and they have money to spend on it... so if people start ignoring TV ads they'll take their money elsewhere... like sponsoring school programs in exchange for vending machines and such... or covering part of the screen with their ads while you watch a show (heavily used in sports events, at least here in Argentina) or doing more and more obvious product placements in movies and TV programs (which can have ugly consequences when they start meddling with the script, or choosing which movies they give their money to based on content, which then creates pressure from the studio to the scriptwriter or director).

      But yet, we want/need some amount of advertising... it keeps us informed about new products and services which we might find useful. It gives us a very subjective and imperfect sense of "quality" which is immensely useful when we're in the supermarket and have to pick a product from 30 different offerings.

      I find myself blocking a lot of advertisements daily, blocking spam, and rejecting every single "information newsletter" when signing up in sites which use some sort of sponsoring. And yet, I want to be more informed (not less) about certain products, alternatives, offers, and such. I can assume the same of many slashdotters that like me get their daily dose of rumor and hype about new video games, gadgets, computer products, etc. through this site.

      So I'd rather accept some sort of not-so-invasive advertising if advertisers are willing to stay off my content, off my schools, off my streets, and so on.

      --
      As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
    10. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't block everything, or even close to it. I block ads that make noise; I have a popup blocker, and rapidly block any site that bypasses it. That's it. Text ads, graphical ads of any type, animated ads, flash ads, those are A-OK with me. I know the site owner has to get revenue, and sometimes the ads are even good enough I click on them.

    11. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Tom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But yet, we want/need some amount of advertising... Why?

      It doesn't serve the information purpose you mention. Advertisement is, almost by definition, biased and one-sided. I'd very much prefer comparisons, reviews and independent suggestions.

      I, personally, very, very seldomly gain any information from advertisement. When I'm looking for something, a search engine works much better. For news about new gadgets, games, etc. I prefer (online) magazines to ads.

      Frankly, I am convinced there is no legitimate use for advertisement, in the sense that it makes a positive contribution to society. Everything that ads do can be replaced by better independent alternatives.
      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    12. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Do the advertisers really believe that they will defeat the nerds at their own game on their home field (i.e. technology and network protocols)? My guess is they'll fight by declaring the nerds' method to be "circumvention technology" and see about getting it outlawed.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    13. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      You know, it's an interesting thing. I don't know if other people are at all like me; I hate ads, but am in some ways sympathetic to advertisers. Each time I set up a new machine, I install Firefox, without AdBlock. I then start using it. Invariably, within a week, I encounter a site on which I experience total denial of service from an ad - or some kind of wake-the-neighbours or scare-you-stupid behaviour that I cannot tolerate starting. The technology employed has changed over the years, but it has happened every single time. At this point, I once again install AdBlock, and subscribe to a listing service to knock out all ads pre-emptively. Why? Not because I want to 'steal' from anyone, but because I do not want my computer taken down, and after I have already loaded an attack-ad, it's already too late. Manual blacklisting cannot do the job when I have no UI - and is already too late when people I need to get along with are banging on the walls.

      What does this mean? Either browser technology has to become less co-opertive with the advertisers, and make all programmable features, all audio, and all UI-modifying techniques disabled by default, enabled only on a per-site basis, and with a feature that if the browser locks up it automatically resets itself and re-disables the offending feature - or the advertising industry must find some means of policing itself. Nothing short of this is a solution in any way, because even if I wanted to view the ads, in the world as it is, I cannot.

    14. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      to paraphrase Charlton Heston, "They can snatch the compiler from my cold dead hands."

    15. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All ads are obnoxious.

    16. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1

      "Bonk the _____ and get a ______"

      What is "bimbo" and "vereneal disease", Alex?

      I go to websites primarily for content

      Welcome to /.. Hope you enjoyed your stay.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
    17. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by shbazjinkens · · Score: 1

      Welcome to /.. Hope you enjoyed your stay.
      I was here first, I welcome you!
    18. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      I use FlashBlock and moderate javascript rules.

      I come accross obnoxious commercials about once a week. The only annoying aspect is when takes a little while extra to connect to ad servers. And in firefox, the 'ESC' key will stop any animated gif in its tracks.

      So I don't bother with AdBlock for the time being. I tried it once, maybe it's gotten better. For me, the restructuring of content was more annoying than the occational moving commercial.

      --
      I lost my sig.
    19. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by necro2607 · · Score: 1

      Big deal... I already pay $40/mo for net access.. I have NO interest in seeing unsolicited advertisements. If I want to know about upcoming products I visit tech review sites, movie trailer sites, or friends' blogs and journals. I don't pay for net access so I can look at ugly-ass shit quality animations, listen to REALLY irritating sounds when I mouse over certain parts of a web page, etc.

      Frankly, if advertisers weren't pissing me off so much, maybe I wouldn't feel so inclined to block any/all advertisements. That's all there is to it. It's their own responsibility to effectively advertise (if they want to make money), and right now they're not (hence the very existence of AdBlock plugin to begin with)!

    20. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      > Yeah, but when we use AdBlock we block ALL ads, whether they're obnoxious or not.

      That isn't entirely true. For example I have about 10 websites where I have adblock disabled on it. Why? Because the website owners aren't dicks about how they advertise and they make content worth reading.

      adblocking certain sites actually makes the content download faster. Which means I am paying for wasted bandwidth. Do you think the advertisers will pay for that?

    21. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Random832 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think there is a very limited legitimate information purpose for ads—A TV commercial for, say, a new menu item at a fast food restaurant does more to tell me it exists than quietly adding it to the menu. While I can’t necessarily trust a biased/one-sided/etc ad for any further information, they’re generally reliable (there are exceptions, but in general it works well) for telling me something exists (and, then, if I decide I care, I can find comparisons, reviews, independent suggestions, search to see if there are similar products from other vendors, etc)

      Gas price signs (price advertising in general, really) are an example of truly useful advertising that goes beyond “it exists”. They’re one-sided in that they only show one station’s prices, but they’re much more useful than if I had to pull in and read the price off the pumps. They’re not making any claims that are subjective, so bias is immaterial, and having it in four-foot-high digits makes it easier to choose, from the street, which place to go to.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    22. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Tom · · Score: 1

      I agree, in that very limited sense it might be useful. I wouldn't call gas price signs advertisement, as long as they are actually at the gas station. Their size is probably more caused by the fact that people should be able to read them while driving by then by advertisement value.

      I don't agree on general "it exists" or "it costs this much" advertisement. I have one of those in my (physical) mail box every other day, and they all go to the trash can without a second glance.

      I still prefer getting my info on, say, which new games exist, from an independent source than from the manufacturer's advertisement, which never tells me just that "it exists", but also usually that it's the best thing since sliced bread, will cure cancer and bring world peace.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    23. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Random832 · · Score: 1

      Well, even ignoring "best thing since sliced bread", you can get relatively honest details like "It contains two all-beef patties, special sauce (likely to be some sort of mayo based stuff, "special sauce"s usually are), lettuce, cheese (probably american plastic pseudo-cheese, as it's fast food), pickles, onions, on a sesame seed bun, and likely does not contain anything else such as tomato slices, mustard, bacon, or they would have mentioned it in such an otherwise exhaustive listing". Even without a jingle like that, a picture of the product can be helpful - for fast food in particular, the "fake" pictures are actually more informative than a picture of the actual product can bee, since you can actually see what stuff it has on it instead of having everything mashed together like the actual product.

      Another kind of "it exists" advertising are the oversized signs that are meant to be seen from five miles away on the highway - like, a mcdonalds [etc] logo on a 500-foot pole. (And, if you say that it's not advertising, it seems to me more like you're determined to say any advertising you don't hate isn't really advertising)

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    24. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Tom · · Score: 1

      If these actually were honest information. Most of the stuff printed on boxes these days, especially in food, is at best misleading. "Natural strawberry flavour", for example, has nothing whatsoever in common with strawberries, except tasting like that. Most likely, it's really fungus.
      Likewise, "no preservatives" usually has a (*) behind it and very, very small print at the bottom saying "according to the law" or something, which simply means they used preservatives that aren't on the list (yet), or are for whatever technical or bureaucratic reason not considered preservatives.

      And so on, the list is practically endless. Even the pictures are misleading. There is a whole special branch of photography dealing with food and how to present it optimally. Yes, you can see what's in there, but it appears bigger and more, and it is carefully tuned to manipulate you.

      And yes, I quite do count those huge signs as ads. And I do hate them. They're a horrible destruction of scenery. A smaller sign next to the nearest exit would serve the same informative purpose.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    25. Re:Depends on what kind of ads they are by Random832 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And so on, the list is practically endless. Even the pictures are misleading. There is a whole special branch of photography dealing with food and how to present it optimally. Yes, you can see what's in there, but it appears bigger and more, and it is carefully tuned to manipulate you. It's not "misleading" if you don't interpret it as meaning the food literally looks like that - the POINT is that you can _see_ it's got lettuce on it, even though you know with the real burger the lettuce will be hidden under the bun. You can _see_ that it has sour cream, guacamole, beans, and rice, even though you know they'll all be mixed together in the actual burrito.

      All burgers look the same in real life. All you can see is the bun, the meat, and maybe some cheese sticking out the sides. The fake pictures will show you that there's ketchup and pickles on this one, tomatoes and bacon on that one, and lettuce and special sauce on this other one.
      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
  12. And by Vexorian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Going to the bathroom during TV commercials is theft!

    --

    Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    1. Re:And by athdemo · · Score: 0

      I wonder if blinking during them is a misdemeanor?

    2. Re:And by click2005 · · Score: 1

      Thats why adverts are louder. So you can hear them while taking a piss/making a cup of coffee.

      --
      I am a free slashdotter. I will not be modded, blogged, DRM'd, patented, podcasted or RFID'd. My life is my own.
    3. Re:And by mopslik · · Score: 1

      Thats why adverts are louder.

      Pretty soon, the "mute" button will be considered a theft-enabling device.

    4. Re:And by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Going to the bathroom during TV commercials is theft! Taking a shit vs. giving a shit, don't see much of a difference.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    5. Re:And by multisync · · Score: 1

      Going to the bathroom during TV commercials is theft!


      Apparently.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    6. Re:And by click2005 · · Score: 1

      Pretty soon, the "mute" button will be considered a theft-enabling device.

      Especially if you were watching MTV. The RIAA will sue your ass for lost revenue.

      --
      I am a free slashdotter. I will not be modded, blogged, DRM'd, patented, podcasted or RFID'd. My life is my own.
    7. Re:And by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going to the bathroom during TV commercials is theft!

      So is driving down Woodward and not getting out at 6 mile too. It deprives the hookers of revenue from sucking my dick.

    8. Re:And by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      You appear to be under the mistaken illusion that MTV has Music.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  13. No by cerelib · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, it is not theft. I ask a server for a page and it gives it to me. I control which parts of the page will load and which parts won't. If websites don't like it, then they need to find a better business model.

    1. Re:No by Trigun · · Score: 1

      Then, should we not send advertisers a bill for computing cycles used to render the ads?

      What was IBM's rate for on-demand computing cycles?

    2. Re:No by rabbit994 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And as the server, I can control who I talk to. I don't see all the bitching, this is a two way street. If the server doesn't like a clients behavior, server can stop talking to client. Same thing in real life, if I no longer wish to have a conversation with someone, I walk away thereby ending the conversation. If these sites are sick of the "freeloading" Adblock users, don't "talk" to them anymore. Issue a 403 Forbidden, say your server will not talk to Adblock users and call it a day.

    3. Re:No by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Totally agree. What's next, boycotting google image search because it doesn't automatically load all the blinking flash ads on the pages the thumbnails came from?

      Top-tip for people using advertising - if you really want to make money from your website, then start charging registration fees. If the content is that compelling, people will surely pay for it. If you're pissed by a drive-by viewer from google not clicking all your ads and buying everything in sight, don't put it out where any public request will hand over copies of the web-page automatically. Just because you stick adverts on something does not mean you have any right to compel me to see them or click on them, especially given how totally irrelevent most advertising is.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    4. Re:No by Trigun · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wow, a logical and technically sound argument? Holy crap, Slashdot's going to implode.

    5. Re:No by nate+nice · · Score: 0, Troll

      Of course (at this time anyways) it isn't modded up at all.

      I love how 90% of the arguments here are lying around the "it's my computer, my bandwidth too...I can block whatever I want". But no one gets it that a server should be able to block what they want too. All of a sudden it's a terrible thing!

      The feeling of entitlement here is amazing. People who actually make things, spend time on things, are creative, etc are always being chastised here for wanting to get paid for their efforts.

      If a Website operator thinks a user is blocking their ads, then they have every right to block them. If a Website user can't browse a site in their favorite browser, they have every right to go somewhere else.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    6. Re:No by JoeMarzen · · Score: 1

      Yeah I agree they have every right to block users who block ads. We'll see what effect that has on the popularity of the site. What percentage of people are using ad blockers? I have a pop-up blocker, I believe, but other then that don't do anything. I am guessing 90% of people don't. Web sites make more money allowing users who block ads then they would otherwise because adblockers still help to spread the popularity of the site to the great majority of people who don't use adblocking software. Until there are adblocking usage statistics available I think this is a pointless conversation.

    7. Re:No by Trigun · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the sense of entitlement is on both sides. I will block ads. If they block me, I don't piss and moan, I either don't visit, or I disable the ad blocker for their site. They don't call me a thief, I don't call them a bastard. It seems to be a quasi-rational relationship.

    8. Re:No by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      I love how 90% of the arguments here are lying around the "it's my computer, my bandwidth too...I can block whatever I want". But no one gets it that a server should be able to block what they want too. All of a sudden it's a terrible thing!

      I haven't seen a single post saying that the server has to serve. If a server doesn't want to give me a page, that's fine with me. I won't whine about it, and I won't come back.

      I've seen a few posts like yours saying that the client has to download everything the web site owner wants them to download. That's not fine with me, that's "a feeling of entitlement". I'll download what I want. That doesn't include flash or popups, but it does normally include embedded ads (as long as they don't need Javascript running in order to load).

      If you're putting expensive content online for free, make sure your ads aren't the kind that most people hate and find easy to block, or they will. Make sure your *whole page* is worth looking at, and people will do that.

      It's not really very complicated.

    9. Re:No by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

      What's next, boycotting google image search because it doesn't automatically load all the blinking flash ads on the pages the thumbnails came from? If I remember correctly, a few web sites were upset with Google for just that. I've also noticed that some sites have somehow managed to get their pages to show up in normal search results, while the images on those pages won't show up in an image search.
    10. Re:No by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How are you going to test if people are using Adblock?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:No by edbob · · Score: 1

      The issue is that the server doesn't know when someone is using AdBlock, so these people are blocking anyone using a gecko-based browser. Supposedly, the block is based on some peculiarity of the browser itself, not the user agent string. Of course what is missing is the fact that it is possible to block ads in any browser, including IE.

    12. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Granted, as the owner of a webserver you have every right to block any visitors you want, but then you have to ask yourself: is it more effective to annoy 15% of your web traffic (more for certain segments), many of which are *not* blocking ads? Or is it more effective reformat your ads to defeat most kinds of ad blocking? Or is it more effective to do nothing?

      Most ad-blocking software is easy to defeat: it just filters out content from certain URLs. Other software relies on standard banner sizes and element ids. If you hosted the ads on your site and sent users to the advertisers via redirects, you could easily fool the former technique. And if you make important content on your site use banner sizes or element ids, you can annoy users to turn off their blocking software. (And if the ads on your site turn out to be non-annoying, maybe they won't turn it back on...)

      But I don't see advertisers doing this. Why not? For one thing, it's extra effort. The current model of hosting advertising material on ad servers is too convenient; hosting it on the content server makes it harder to change ads, keep track of ad view counts (even when paying per-click), track users via cookies, etc.

      Another reason that advertisers aren't doing much about the ad blockers is that there aren't too many of them. It's not standard in the browser (yet), unlike popup blocking. Most people expend minimal effort when browsing, using the default browser with default extensions, just as most people are willing to sit through TV ads with the sound on. And, so far, ad blocking is only done by people who really care about not seeing ads. They are the least likely to click on an ad, even if it did go through, so the effort expended to force them to see ads is largely wasted.

      If this blogger wants to piss off some of his readers by blocking them, it's his call, but I think he is making an ill-considered marketing decision.

    13. Re:No by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Issue a 403 Forbidden, say your server will not talk to Adblock users and call it a day.

      There are probably many server operators out there who would like nothing better, but as it stands right now the appearance of advanced client side tools like AdBlock and NoScript has caught the server operators unprepared to filter based upon whether certain content was delivered or not and good remote detection of add-ons or plugins is either spotty or easily circumvented by the client or just not generally possible. Think of it this way...for many years the web masters and the advertisers had the upper hand with their popup, popunder, flashing banners, and finally (the last insult) rich media ads. Now the users have been given some powerful tools with which to fight back and will enjoy some period of payback until the server side tools catch up. You might complain that you are an honest web master who is caught up in the collateral damage of a larger war going on right now between aggressive advertisers and site operators and informed and fed up users who own a compiler and aren't afraid to use it and there have been casualties on both sides since this war began (I know people who had "given up" on the Internet under the crushing load of spam and ads prior to AdBlock, NoScript, and SpamBayes), but as for the site operators, to quote Winston Churchill, "They sowed the wind and now they shall reap the whirlwind." Welcome to the jungle.

    14. Re:No by prockcore · · Score: 1

      If a server doesn't want to give me a page, that's fine with me. I won't whine about it, and I won't come back.


      Well then you're an exception. Most of the time, there are tons of complaints and people requesting a mirror.
    15. Re:No by Westech · · Score: 1

      "Totally agree. What's next, boycotting google image search because it doesn't automatically load all the blinking flash ads on the pages the thumbnails came from?"

      The difference between adblock and Google image search is that individual webmasters can opt out of having their images listed in Google image search. If a webmaster decides that the cost of serving the images without the ads outweighs the benefit of bringing more people to their site then they can choose to exclude their content from the image results. There's currently no way for webmasters to effectively choose not to serve content to users of adblock.

    16. Re:No by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Well, one way would be to load ads into an iframe, along with some javascript that makes a callback to the server. Block the frame, block the javascript, get blocked.

      Alternatively, assuming adblock blocks the request, rather than simply stripping the object from the rendered page, if a given client fails to request too many ad items in a given session, block it. (That's a reasonable assumption I think - I don't know how it's implemented, but if it could be done that way, that's certainly the way I'd do it. Making a page look ugly is only one reason ads are annoying...)

      As the server admin, you don't need to detect adblock, you need to detect a lack of requests for/viewing of ads. No method is perfect, but then neither is any method of blocking ads. It'll be an arms race.

    17. Re:No by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      But then someone mirrors the site minus the ads and the site operator is out. This is stealing.

      It's the same with music. Simply copying a song and making it available to anyone without compensation to the owner of the music is stealing. At least according to the US Judicial system.

      So people that set up mirrors to sites - the ads are stealing as well.

      Personally, I think the easy solution is for content providers (Websites) to not use annoying ads. Text ads that are generated to suit the users probable desires are more effective and reasonable. Pop ups are trash IMO. Ugly banner ads are annoying as well. So there's a real reason people block them.

      I believe in pragmatic business. So in this instance realize people are going to work around it and develop a system that won't inspire as many people to work around. Obviously people are interested in your content, so design a system to keep them interested and not try and block the ads. TV has started to do this with product placement more and more. Not to mention ad companies have gone out of their way to make them entertaining. Net ads are generally obnoxious and annoying. The first effect is negative. They need to change this and systems like Google AdSense has helped.

      Most business doesn't take this approach.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    18. Re:No by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Put up a registration page at the front, put 'you will watch all adverts and allow them to place non-expiring cookies' in the terms and conditions for registration. Have the adverts place cookies and then check for their presence in the content section; redirect to 'YOU THIEF, YOU THIEF, YOU THIEF' page if cookie not present. Or, add 'you must enable javascript' in the terms and use a script to check for the adverts still in the rendered page.

      DON'T post something in your shop window for anybody to read, and then get pissed nobody came in to buy something afterwards, mutting 'thieves stealing the electricity of my display in my window and not knowing they're supposed to pay me $20 for the privilege'

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    19. Re:No by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, I fully agree with you. I am an AdBlock user and if sites that are bent on pushing ads into everybody's face (not just those who would be actually willing to click) start blocking me, I will be more than happy to go elsewhere. These are exactly the same capitalistic marketing forces; it would drive positive change to the internet if both clients blocked selected servers, and servers blocked selected clients.

    20. Re:No by garbletext · · Score: 1

      This method won't work, as it would block all non-javascript user-agents, as well as text-mode browsers and some screen-readers, which would be illegal under section 508 of the ADA.

    21. Re:No by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      How are you going to test if people are using Adblock?
      I'm not going to. If you, or anyone else, wants to, it's their problem, not mine.
    22. Re:No by atamido · · Score: 1

      Adblock Plus has a neat feature where you can sort the number of items blocked by each filter rule. Number 7 out of hundreds is "*/ads/*", and two of the ones above it are for specific sites I go to. This tells me that any decent ad blocker is going to block "/ads/" directories. So, load an image on your page from a directory labeled "ads". Then check for clients that load some image from some other random directory and don't load the one from /ads/. Finally, just pass that client a message that you don't serve pages to people blocking ads.

      And yes, I do recognize that I just used my working install of Adblock Plus to show how to block it.

    23. Re:No by garbletext · · Score: 1

      (kind of a dead thread at this pont but what the hell...) True, that would be fairly simple to implement as an apache module, but ff any companies actually start doing this all adblock plus needs to do is configure itself to download everything and strip the ads from the dom pre-render. That's literally the only thing a website can forcibly find out about you: what you've downloaded. Everything else can be altered by the user, from the user agent string, to some kind of nefarious javascript that attempts to see if you're displaying ads. That is, after all, the point of javascript. It's a client side scripting language and can't be "trusted" by the server. At this point most companies have little to fear from adbock, since hardly anyone uses it, and as other people have pointed out, those that do rarely click on ads. But if real people start to use it, most web sites' business models are in jepoardy.

    24. Re:No by atamido · · Score: 1

      Well stated, and very true. However, there are more blocking programs than Adblock. I'm pretty sure that it's a feature in Norton Internet Security now to block ads. Ad blocking is becoming a little more mainstream, though not necessarily something people purposely seek out. My guess is that even if such a module were implemented, if Adblock switched to just stripping the DOM or setting the visibility:none; on those elements, it wouldn't make a big enough impact financially for website operators to do anything.

  14. Honestly... by MiKM · · Score: 1

    No. Did you honestly expect any other answer, especially from the Slashdot crowd?

    1. Re:Honestly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes

  15. Ads? by reaktor · · Score: 5, Funny

    What ads?

    1. Re:Ads? by gemada · · Score: 1

      i would like to reply to your post but i didn't read it as i have just finished installing the new Firefox PostBlocker(tm) plugin.

  16. We're using their bits? They're using my CPU. by Guspaz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm using their bits, eh? Well, they're using my CPU with all their annoying flash ads.

    As soon as people learn that annoying (and often intrusive) Flash ads aren't appreciated, then there won't be a major reason for adblock.

    1. Re:We're using their bits? They're using my CPU. by E++99 · · Score: 1

      I'm using their bits, eh? Well, they're using my CPU with all their annoying flash ads.

      This gives me a great idea. Instead of an ad-based model, web pages could have a bit of javascript that does some processing for the host for however long you're looking at the page. They can then rent out the processing power of the computers looking at their web pages to distributed computing problems, like cracking encryption keys, SETI-like scientific searches, etc.
    2. Re:We're using their bits? They're using my CPU. by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      Forget your CPU. More importantly, they're using your bandwidth which is a much more limited resource. But my real impetus is the danger of exposing yourself to arbitrary code & data that some virtually anonymous Joe Schmoe somewhere in the world paid a fraction of a penny to download & run on your machine.

  17. IIRC, one of the joys of FOSS is that the community creates modifications (or, in this case, extensions). Why aren't people talking about boycotting the maker of the extension rather than Firefox themselves? I don't think there's any blame to be placed here, but if there is, at least place blame where blame is due...

  18. Don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When advertisers stop thinking me as "a consumer who needs to be trained to consume more" - I'll start giving a damn about what they have to say.

    1. Re:Don't care by Gazzonyx · · Score: 1
      Not to mention a consumer who:
      "...our records indicate that you have spyware on your computer (well, we're about to install some if you click here), using our flashy technology to enum some public properties of your computer (that the framework we're using isn't allowed to touch, other than display this read only data), you can see that you are not safe! Luckily, you can buy our (vastly inferior) monthly subscription (where we install crapware on your machine, hold it hostage, and you pay us to remove it), for only $19.95 (...more than the superior freeware product that we're hoping you don't know about). Aren't you glad we opened up this unsolicited window that is obviously made to make you think it's part of your operating system (in an attempt to steal your hard earned money; we hope you're elderly and don't have a grandson who could code circles around us. Please don't let him know you actually paid for our product! We haven't patched our servers in years!)"


      I don't know about you, but if I find that my parents bought one of these programs, the last thing they'd hear are my packets screaming down their pipe when I smurfed them. "01d 5K001 pwn3d", for the script kiddies here. ;)

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

  19. It is worth noting... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    That they are providing you all of the bits, including the advertising ones. It is no more immoral to refuse to display them than it would be to simply cover them up with little bits of paper.

    More importantly, this brings up a nastily annoying bug of mine:

    Morality is simply motivation based on a sense of right or wrong.

    Something is moral, therefore, if you do it believe it to be right, and immoral if you do it believe it to be wrong. Generally, therefore, people do not participate in immoral acts.

    I am quite certain that most (>90%) if not all of the population who performs ad-blocking, therefore, considers it quite moral.

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    1. Re:It is worth noting... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I would consider ad blocking to be amoral, actually.

    2. Re:It is worth noting... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

      Er... damn lack of previewing.

      "Do it believing it to be right", and "do it believing it to be wrong".

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    3. Re:It is worth noting... by Trigun · · Score: 1

      At the risk of going off-topic, you are incorrect with that statement. Everyone does things that go against their own set of morals. The proof is the feeling of guilt. If people were unable to act immorally, then there would be no sense of guilt.

      Although, what you are most likely leaning towards is the difference between morals and ethics. Given that ethics are loosely defined as a set of morals shared by a majority of a society, then, I would also care to submit that there are more internet users than online advertisers, and we as internet users do not mind blocking ads on the web, then the advertisers are attempting to hijack and redefine the ethics of an online community. And for that, they should be shot and pissed on, or a similar punishment that most of us would not have a problem with.

    4. Re:It is worth noting... by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

      At the risk of going off-topic, you are incorrect with that statement. Everyone does things that go against their own set of morals. The proof is the feeling of guilt. If people were unable to act immorally, then there would be no sense of guilt.


      I didn't say that. I said: "Generally, therefore, people do not participate in immoral acts." The point of the entire digression on morality is that morality is inherently relative because it depends on one's individual conceptions of nebulous concepts ('right' and 'wrong') and therefore asking whether something is immoral is like asking whether everybody likes blue cheese or cheddar. It doesn't work that way.

      Although, what you are most likely leaning towards is the difference between morals and ethics. Given that ethics are loosely defined as a set of morals shared by a majority of a society, then, I would also care to submit that there are more internet users than online advertisers, and we as internet users do not mind blocking ads on the web, then the advertisers are attempting to hijack and redefine the ethics of an online community. And for that, they should be shot and pissed on, or a similar punishment that most of us would not have a problem with.

      Indeed. However, I think those punishments are exceedingly pointless. Why bother? Just continue to block the ads.
      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    5. Re:It is worth noting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am quite certain that most (>90%) if not all of the population who performs ad-blocking, therefore, considers it quite moral.

      I am quite certain that most (>90%) if not all of the population who performs ad-blocking, therefore, considers it quite moral. I would consider that you fall into the category (<10%) posited by GP.
    6. Re:It is worth noting... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I would speculate that most people would fall into the category of thinking it was amoral, personally. If the GGP had said that most of the population that blocks ads did not consider it immoral, I would be in 100% complete agreement with it, but I expect that most people who block ads don't tie any morality to it whatsoever, which is what amoral actually means.

  20. Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    when the web first started there where no banners, dataminers, iframes, adware, spyware, mfa's
    and yet there where websites by the millions all paid for and maintained by the users for the LOVE of it
    much like open source is developed today

    everything that is wrong with the web is because of advertising as "entrepreneurs" get increasingly more and more desperate to earn as much money as they can for as little effort as they can

    i for one shall welcome their demise standing on my chair clapping

  21. Sounds like the MAFIAA by kerohazel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Our revenue model is broken, and exploiting said brokenness should be illegal."

    --
    Skype is too convoluted... Now I'm reverse-engineering the Kyoto Protocol.
    1. Re:Sounds like the MAFIAA by merreborn · · Score: 1

      The slashdot account you used to post that message is supported by the same "broken" revenue model. Do you really think the internet would be a better place if slashdot switched to a for-pay model?

      I, for one, don't use adblock, because I prefer using google, slashdot, digg, etc. without paying. I'm pleased with the services these sites provide me with, and am more than happy to compensate their owners by displaying their ads.

  22. Theft? No. by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

    Morally dubious? Not really. It's not like you have a contract with the person serving up the web page in the vast majority of cases. The standard non-fee service model is "I present you information, my advertisers pay for that presentation", but the web page visitor is a guest, and the payment arrangement exists independently of anything the visitor has agreed to. Until there is an explicit arrangement that the guest agrees to, it's a bad assumption on the presenter's part to assume that the guest is going to be equally interested in the advertising.

  23. Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by J'raxis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As far as I understand it, the pay-per-view advertising model has gone the way of the dodo, and they're all pay-per-click now. Telling me I have to let the ads through on a site, when I have zero intention of ever clicking on them, is pointless. In fact, since I'm never going to click on them, by not displaying them, I'm saving the advertiser bandwidth.

    1. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by TheReaperD · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You make a good point. I, like you, have no intention, and I never change my mind, of clicking on the ads. Even if it was a product I was interested in, I do not trust sites that use Flash advertisements. In all likelihood, they have paid top dollar for marketing bobble heads and thus, very anemic when it comes to their actual business.

      Most of the websites that I actually buy from focus on good prices and service and have one, probably underpaid, web geek that keeps their site limping along. They don't need all of the fancy Flash ads because they actually deliver a good product and people know it.

      --
      "Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
    2. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of CPM (cost per thousand) advertising out there - many of the "punch the monkey" type banners are CPM. And if you're never going to click the adverts, CPM is the only way the web site publisher is going to make any money from you.

    3. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      And if you're never going to click the adverts, CPM is the only way the web site publisher is going to make any money from you. No they won't. Sane ad network will pay less for ads on sites with low a CTR (well conversion rate). As a result if you show ads to users who you know won't click on them you may actually LOSE money (as the ad network still needs to pay bandwidth which comes out of how much they will pay you for showing the ads).
    4. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by Technician · · Score: 1

      As far as I understand it, the pay-per-view advertising model has gone the way of the dodo,

      It depends on the website and the advertiser. Not all site owners sell all kinds of advertising space. Product placement advertisement is still out there building name recognition.

      Im pretty certain the advertisers on these pages paid for the banner space and not just clickthroughs.
      http://www.autotrader.com/
      and sponsor results here
      http://dir.yahoo.com/Health/Pharmacy/

      What is funny is abusive advertisements are what get ad servers and the companies domain added to my hosts file. Then if they do show up in a Google search for something I am looking for (example, lost a fuser in my old laser printer and needed a replacement asap) when they do show up in the Google results, the link to their site is now dead. Abuse of advertising puts black marbles in the box.

      Did you know X-10 is in my hosts file simply due to the wireless cam advertisements that covered content?

      On the other hand, ThinkGeek is whitelisted in support of Slashdot.

      Website owners need to know what the impact is when they sell advertising space. Some things are an abuse of the visitor. They may pay well only while you still have remaining visitors.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    5. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by haeger · · Score: 1
      Hey, that's an even better idea. Who wants to write an extension that downloads but never displays the ad. If you don't pay for your bandwidth then how about re-downloading the ad 100 times, or more.

      Should be fun. I hear IE7 can have extensions now too. Let's write one for them too while we're at it.

       

      .haeger

      --
      You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. -- Harlan Ellison
    6. Re:Pay-per-view is dead, isn't it? by VP · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The only reason there are CPM ads out there, is for sites that spread malware - viruses, trojans, and other spammer tools. All those who claim that ad blocking is immoral, or even theft, are criminal spammers, who want to infect your computer and add it to their botnet.

  24. Theft? Immoral? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    I would say no - there is no obligation on the part of any viewer to view ads - print, web, TV or whatever. Just as you are fee to discard, cut out or mark over any ads in a magazine (or have someone do that to you copy before you read it) you can block ads from web pages.

    If that becomes widespread - several things will happen:

    1. Websites will block certain browsers (can they tell if FF spoofs itself as IE?) and lose the corresponding web traffic; getting less revenue from advertisers
    2. They won't block ads but advertisers will be willing to pay less since they will assume x% of their ads are blocked and adjust their payments accordingly.

    Either way websites will get less money - a logical market response.

    Companies will also find new ways to deliver ads - and those that do so in a way that results in more viewer ship will make money.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  25. I think it's interesting... by Flimzy · · Score: 1

    ...that when we watch TV, we expect commercials. We think "public TV" is a novelty, so to speak. Same goes for radio. The same is even true for newspapers and magazines--which we even pay a subscription fee to read.

    When we browse the web, however, commercials are an intrusion. We expect web sites to be free, and we think it's a violation if we see advertisements.

    Why is this?

    My guess is it's just a difference in the culture the different technologies grew out of. Traditional "mass media" grew out of commercial interests, the Internet grew out of the educational industries. I could be seeing things far too narrowly, though :)

    1. Re:I think it's interesting... by Sciros · · Score: 1

      "Expecting commercials" on TV doesn't mean we wouldn't take the option to rid ourselves of them if we had it. (Which those that DVR TV do...) I find advertisements to be annoying anywhere they may be.

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    2. Re:I think it's interesting... by BiloxiGeek · · Score: 1

      ...that when we watch TV, we expect commercials.
      When I watch TV I expect to hit the fast forward button on my Tivo remote to zoom past the commercials. Guess I'm also an immoral thief for that now too.

      Correction: I fastforward unless it's a new Mac/PC or Caveman/Geico commercial. Those at least have some comedic value.
      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, For you are crunchy and go well with ketchup.
  26. Flip this around on them... by cavtroop · · Score: 1

    ...what gives them the right to use my bandwidth to advertise to me? I whitelist sites that I visit often, and find useful - they deserve my revenue. the others? I surely don't care.

  27. An analogy by pongo000 · · Score: 1

    I rarely read ads in the newspaper, and throw away the glossy Sunday inserts. Am I stealing advertising revenue from the newspaper publisher?

    1. Re:An analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As mentioned elsewhere, that is a poor analogy as the newspaper doesn't get paid when you read the ads. Try again.

  28. The Morality of Brochure Advertisement Ignoring by Blnky · · Score: 1

    If the building designer has to pay for utilities, such as air conditioning, each time you enter their building without reading their affiliated advertisement brochures, are you engaged in theft?

  29. Does it matter... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does it matter whether a bit-bucket "sees" the ads and doesn't click on the link, or a human sees the ad and doesn't click the link? Or another way, since ad revenue is meted out by click-throughs, what does it matter if he views or does not view the ad, if he never clicks it? (Popups disguised as modal dialog boxes notwithstanding, as those SHOULD be blocked)

  30. No. by Wavicle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    In order for me to view their banner ads, my browser must actively request the data for that banner in a separate transaction from the one used to get the rest of the contents of the page. I see no reason for me, as the computer's owner and operator, not to forbid the browser from doing so.

    As a good citizen of the internet, I think it a good thing that I don't clog the tubes with advertising bandwidth which I do not care to see.

    --
    Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
    Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    1. Re:No. by Skapare · · Score: 1

      As a good citizen of the internet, I think it a good thing that I don't clog the tubes with advertising bandwidth which I do not care to see.

      As a good citizen of the internet, I think it a good thing that I don't clog the tubes with content the reader does not want to help support through a quick glance across a non-abusive, non-invasive, non-flashy, non-animated, non-popup, ad banner just in case there is something that might be of interest to them.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    2. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a good citizen of the internet, I think it a good thing that I don't clog the tubes with advertising bandwidth which I do not care to see.

      Unless adverts are the laxative that flush those tubes clear of all that pesky clogging data.

    3. Re:No. by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      In order for you to block their banner ads, your browser must actively not request the data for that banner in a separate transaction from the one used to get the rest of the contents of the page. I see no reason for a Website owner, as the server's owner and operator, to forbid the browser from doing so.

      As a good Website on the internet, I think it a good thing that I don't waste my money serving up free pages.

      It's a two way street. You don't have to ask for data and they don't have to give you data. You don't have a right to anything. Your argument is piss.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    4. Re:No. by v0x0j · · Score: 1

      Nobody is complaining that wall street journal does not serve everything for free. It's their right to charge subscribers for some content. So if you want - don't serve anything. Trust me, you won't be missed.

    5. Re:No. by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      It's a two way street. You don't have to ask for data and they don't have to give you data. You don't have a right to anything.

      Not exactly true. The computer is my property. I have the right to change how it operates. When you send my computer information, it is my right to decide how the computer manipulates that data. If you don't like it, don't send out data. Or get a data-handling contract with everyone you do send out data to.

      Your real problem is that you want to force how someones browser works in order to force the browser to display ads. It is your prerogative to want that, but not your right. There are alternatives, but you do not like them because they would decrease traffic. You don't get to dictate or change the rules of computing in order to support your business model. If you don't like the openness of the internet, go somewhere else. We don't owe you anything.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    6. Re:No. by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Or just not allow my server to serve your client data. When you come to my site I do in fact get to dictate the rules. You play by my rules or you don't get my data. It's very simple. You want my data, I want your business. If you can't provide me with my business then I won't provide you with my data.

      If i believe certain clients are not getting me ads then I have every right on Earth to not serve them anything. In fact, I have every right to instead serve up a page with a link to a client of my choice.

      I don't care how their browser works so long as they generate income for me when they visit my site. You want to dictate what data is given to you and what is not. Fair enough, you have that right. The server operator also has the right to no give it to you then.

      On a personal level, I wouldn't block anyone. I also wouldn't put up annoying banner ads or pop ups of any kind. I would display text ad's tastefully that offer things to users they might actually be interested in.

      Should ad blockers me made illegal? God no, that's silly. but I also can understand if a content provider blocks clients they suspect of blocking their ads. I know full well I don't have a right to anything that isn't mine and someone else's Website isn't mine.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    7. Re:No. by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      When you come to my site I do in fact get to dictate the rules.

      No. You only get to dictate the rules the server lives by, not the client. One of those rules can be "I will not serve data to clients not viewing ads." That is not being contested. How you determine who is in compliance and who isn't is up to you, but the only methods that I envision working will also drive traffic away from your site. More to the point: not viewing ads is not theft.

      If i believe certain clients are not getting me ads then I have every right on Earth to not serve them anything.

      That is not a topic ripe for debate here. As my past postings have indicated, serving up nothing is an option you may fall back on. Making a charge of theft is not.

      I don't care how their browser works so long as they generate income for me when they visit my site.

      Again, it's your prerogative to want that, not your right.

      You want to dictate what data is given to you and what is not.

      No. I want to make clear that you have no authority to dictate how I will consume that data once you give it to me, except in that I do not violate your copyright.

      The server operator also has the right to no give it to you then.

      Haven't I said that already?

      but I also can understand if a content provider blocks clients they suspect of blocking their ads.

      Also not an issue for debate here. Refusing to do business with someone is always their prerogative so long as such refusal does not discriminate against a protected class.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    8. Re:No. by toddestan · · Score: 1

      The obvious solution to that for someone who doesn't want to see the ads but still wants to load your page is have their computer download your ad but not display it. This actually makes things worse for you, as this will cost you more bandwidth for no benefit.

  31. There will come a breaking point.... by HerculesMO · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and it's why I don't use AdBlock...

    But people are going to be paid to write good articles about products, instead of advertising. Your beloved Engadgets and Gizmodos will write articles saying "THIS THING IS AWESOME", paid for by the manufacturer. They won't be making any ground with traditional advertising since we are blocking it all. Tivo removes the ads as well.

    So you are going to have to make a choice... do you want simple ads on the side that accompany your article or TV show, or ones that are embedded into them, and influence them? You can't have it both ways, and at some point marketing/ad companies will realize they are losing money because of Firefox and try alternative methods of syndicating their content. Probably at our expense.

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
    1. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by russotto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Companies have been buying good reviews since before there was an Internet. Not blocking Internet ads won't stop them from doing so. YOU can't have it both ways, you can't have neither. But the advertisers can and do have it both ways, both ads on the side and embedded ones.

    2. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 1

      So, do you click on ads, or just look at them? Unless you click on them, I don't think anyone is getting paid. If you forgo adblock AND click on ads just to preclude the widespread use of astroturfing....well, that's an interesting choice.

      It seems to me that a person is either going to respond to ads or they are not. By using adblock, they are just making that choice a little further in advance. I think anyone who uses adblock has made a categorical decision that they will not be clicking on any web ads.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    3. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by xENoLocO · · Score: 1

      Yes, because all advertisers are evil! God forbid someone wants to entice you to check out their product in a non obtrusive, friendly way!

      --
      "The need to build the internet comes from something inside us, something programmed... something we can't resist."
    4. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by amuro98 · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, Tivo does not remove ads. You can FF through them, you can enable a backdoor giving you a 30-sec skip button, but Tivo does not automatically skip over ads like the Replay did. Perhaps you're thinking of MythTV?

      As for press releases and ads thinly disguised as content, we already have that NOW - AND they still use ADS. Have you looked at many magazines lately? Most of them are owned by the company whose products they write about - glowingly I might add. Why take out an ad when you can pretend to be "legitimate" media and pay someone to toot your own horn? And as a bonus, you now have a quote from a "real" journalist to use in your other advertising collateral! It's win-win!

      Meanwhile, other sources of information, such as blogs, usenet and other boards are still good sources for information that's relatively free of bias and ads (spammers, trolls and fanboys, on the other hand...well, they're easily filtered.)

      Then there's Consumer Reports, which is supported solely by its supporters, and accepts ZERO ads or money from any company.

      So, no, we don't have to compromise on anything.

    5. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by thebonafortuna · · Score: 1

      People do get paid, in many cases, even when you don't click on an ad. There are many models for online advertising.

      Another side to this nobody seems to be mentioning is that, in some cases, believe it or not, advertisers aren't necessarily trying to sell you something at the moment you see the ad. In some cases, they are merely trying to build their brand by getting the name of their company or their new product out there. Their logic for this is that if you start seeing it, perhaps it will start building a connection in your mind for the next time you decide you're interested in buying whatever service said product offers. Another side to it -- when you see a company has been advertising for some length of time, it builds a sort of familiarity with the company. It builds a sense of legitimacy.

      Again, just playing devil's advocate here people.

    6. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Your beloved Engadgets and Gizmodos will write articles saying "THIS THING IS AWESOME", paid for by the manufacturer.

      ...but since it is the manufacturers who sometimes pay for the ads is there such a huge difference? Could they afford to right lots of reviews panning products without suffering a hit to their ad revenue? It might not be quite as tightly coupled as you suggest but there is still some coupling there even with ads.

    7. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by zoney_ie · · Score: 1

      I object to any attempts to get me to buy something I don't want or need. If there's something I do want, I'll go look for it. In fairness, with the Internet to research products on demand and get manufacturers sugar-coated fluff, end-users rants, actual prices and where to buy, who needs ads?

      I'm OK with products being presented in a way that tries to make them look good, that's perfectly reasonable even if one can be fooled sometimes. Fortunately we have pretty good governmental regulation here in Europe to attempt to ensure packaging etc. doesn't have fraudulant claims and includes necessary information. I'm rather happy that we're starting to have more obvious content information on food products, e.g. salt content as % recommended daily intake. Although it's mindboggling the likes of instant noodle snacks don't reduce their salt rather than baldly print the equivalent of "this will kill you" on the packet.

      --
      -- *~()____) This message will self-destruct in 5 seconds...
    8. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by russotto · · Score: 1

      Yes, because all advertisers are evil!
      STRAWMAN ALERT, STRAWMAN ALERT

      God forbid someone wants to entice you to check out their product in a non obtrusive, friendly way!
      If they'd stuck to that, most adblocker users would have been far too lazy to install them, and I dare say most adblocker writers would have been far too lazy to write them. But there's always the temptation in advertising to try to get the flashiest, most noticable message, and once one advertiser starts down that road many more feel the need to race for the bottom and make their own advertising even more obtrusive, lest it be overlooked.
    9. Re:There will come a breaking point.... by xENoLocO · · Score: 1

      The site publishers are just as at fault, probably moreso. I have ads on some of my sites, but I don't have any popups, interstitials, etc. You can control the type of ads on your page.

      That said, if you've clicked on even one of the last 1000 ads you've seen, then you're average. That's about the normal click through rate on most sites. Now, if you never saw that ad, you wouldn't have clicked it. And you can't just write it off as "I never click ads", because most people will click 1 in 1000, or even 1 in 5000, because it caught their eye and they found the offer appealing or interesting.

      --
      "The need to build the internet comes from something inside us, something programmed... something we can't resist."
  32. Oh-Oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Surfing the web without ads like watching PBS without sending money.

    Proof in the form of a Simpsons Transcript.

  33. Exactly. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From TFA:

    In the end, a few things are clear: Users of advertisement skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources.

    No. If you do not get the reaction you expected from me, then you have simply lost that portion of your investment. I have not stolen anything from you.

    Next up on Slashdot, if she won't blow you after you buy her a drink, is she guilty of "theft of resources"?
    1. Re:Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Next up on Slashdot, if she won't blow you after you buy her a drink, is she guilty of "theft of resources"?"
      no that doesn't apply until 2 drinks and 3 shots of tequila

    2. Re:Exactly. by Maximum+Prophet · · Score: 1

      Interesting senerio: Imagine a world where she was guilty, and had to pay a fine. Every gift would come with fine print, and everytime two humans exchanged *anything*, they'd have to thumbstamp a contract. That's a plot right out of a "If this goes on" type of Science Fiction novel. We'd each have to carry an AI lawyer around, and rich people would trick others into signing away there organs. "I have 6 kidneys, 3 hearts and an extra spleen!" Society would grind to a halt, and eventually the last woman on earth (women live longer), wouldn't have anyone left to sign a contract with.

      --
      All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
    3. Re:Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're damn right she is!!!!

    4. Re:Exactly. by discord5 · · Score: 1

      Next up on Slashdot, if she won't blow you after you buy her a drink, is she guilty of "theft of resources"?

      If this worked, I'd be a rich man or just a very content man because of out of court settlements.

    5. Re:Exactly. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I could consider (and I do, frankly) that their pushing quantities of advertising data which exceed the actual content by orders of magnitude to be misuse of my resources. Why should an article composed of a few thousand bytes of text (what I'm really interested in) be surrounded by half a megabyte of CRAP? Who is stealing from whom, exactly? ISPs complain about some of their customers "abusing" the service (bandwidth hogs and so forth), but honestly they should consider the number of Web sites that simply spew gigabytes of unadulterated pure cruft every minute. It's really getting out of hand. Any way you slice it, ad-blocking is legitimate self-defense against abusive advertising, particularly if you have a bandwidth cap. Hell, my ISP should give me a discount for running Privoxy, since it avoids a lot of unnecessary transfers.

      Google makes money by a. providing a valuable service and b. not irritating the hell out of their users. Google found a tradeoff that works because it is acceptable to users, and if they try to shift it too much further in the direction of advertising it won't. Work, that is. Other sites need to learn that same lesson: they are not entitled to my bandwidth or my eyeballs. Period. Now, they can make a similar claim: I'm not entitled to their content unless I give them my eyeballs and my bandwidth. So fine: if they can detect that I'm blocking their ads they're free to block their content.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    6. Re:Exactly. by Spazholio · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but can you imagine the legal precedent that would set?

      "I find in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of one blowjob." *bangs gavel*

      The number of lawsuits (and chap stick sales) would skyrocket!

    7. Re:Exactly. by Minwee · · Score: 1

      To be fair, she would have the option of simply returning the drink.

      The only people getting rich would be your lawyer and your dry cleaner.

    8. Re:Exactly. by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      John Brunner's novel Total Eclipse: An alien race uses the right to breed with superior blood lines as backing for its currency. Those bloodlines eventually accumulate bad recessive genes, but their equivalent of the stock market doesn't dare devalue them as the whole economy would enter a deep recession. Eventually, the last alien dies, a pitiful, deformed, eyeless creature, half normal size and with its shell mottled with parasitic fungi its distant ancestors had resistances to. The human colonial explorers who discover the aliens go through their own collapse and die. The parent human culture dies without getting off any other colony vessels. In every case except for the colonists, some form of economic rule dictates that the 'rational' thing to do is actually something that leads to the extinction of the entire species, and even the colonists die in large part because Earth made bad economic based decisions.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    9. Re:Exactly. by OldManAndTheC++ · · Score: 5, Funny

      Next up on Slashdot, if she won't blow you after you buy her a drink, is she guilty of "theft of resources"?

      No, that is "denial of service".

      And if it happens with every woman in the bar, it's "distributed denial of service".

      --
      Soylent Green is peoplicious!
    10. Re:Exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Next up on Slashdot, if she won't blow you after you buy her a drink, is she guilty of "theft of resources"?


      No, that happens if she swallows whilst being in her fertile days...

  34. Why does adblock exist? by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

    That's the question they need to be asking themselves. We felt the need to use software like adblock because bandwidth-intensive and site-obscuring ads began to dominate the scene. They became so desperate for our attention that they resorted to noisy flash animations that actively get between web users and the sites they want to view. Of COURSE we're going to try to block ads after that...it's like having a commercial playing DURING the big game.

    Site owners have every right to deny Firefox users access to their sites on the basis of lost ad revenue. It's their server, it's their bandwidth, and it's their choice. But I'd suggest a better solution: establish a list of sites that do not host those ads that are a part of the problem, and work with the adblock staff to not block them by default.

    Acceptable ads: banners, sidebars, and inserts that always stay within their defined borders, do not flash or otherwise use animation to overtly draw attention to themselves, do not use rollovers for more than highlighting, and do not play audio without being clicked. Basically an image or set of images that won't chew up large amounts of bandwidth and won't interfere with the operation of the site.

    --
    120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    1. Re:Why does adblock exist? by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Forgot to put this as part of acceptable ads: does not use a global tracking cookie or any other means of tracking a user who has simply seen an ad that was on a random site somewhere.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    2. Re:Why does adblock exist? by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      So If I use another (non-firefox) browser that does add-blocking that's OK is it?

      and If I use firefox but don't block adverts why can't I see the website?

      Firefox is not the problem, a broken advertising model is the problem

      - I never buy from cold callers
      - I never buy from the door
      - I never click on Web Ads

      the only thing an advert is doing is letting me know their product exists (and almost always I already know that)
      Adverts seem to have the opposite of the desired effect on me, If I see something actively being advertised I avoid buying it since it will be overpriced rubbish....

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    3. Re:Why does adblock exist? by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      So If I use another (non-firefox) browser that does add-blocking that's OK is it?

      and If I use firefox but don't block adverts why can't I see the website?

      Frankly, I don't care who hits my sites and whether they block ads or not. My point is that it's well within the rights of site owners to block anyone they want. The reason Firefox is being singled out is because it's the biggest non-IE browser on the market, and adblock is so ubiquitous among Firefox installations.

      This is a proactive (and desperate) attempt at keeping adblock-type programs from going mainstream and seriously impacting ad revenue by making it inconvenient to use them.

      As I said, the better way to deal with the "problem" is to work with developers of Firefox and Adblock and establish a whitelist of ad sites that don't break a certain set of rules so that they can be allowed by default and must be blocked manually.

      Firefox is not the problem, a broken advertising model is the problem

      I'll agree with that, to a point. Just off the top of my head, a stop-gap solution to this would be a server-side include that simply makes the ad a part of the page...it makes it significantly harder to filter out instead of simply pointing to an ad site somewhere else.

      In the end, site operators are going to have to learn the same lessons television is learning: people learn to recognize and ignore ads in their traditional setting (right-side blindness, anyone?).

      the only thing an advert is doing is letting me know their product exists (and almost always I already know that)
      Adverts seem to have the opposite of the desired effect on me, If I see something actively being advertised I avoid buying it since it will be overpriced rubbish....

      I can't see their ads right now (they're killed at our content filter at work), but hardocp.com does a good job of having ads users might want to click. The ads are well-placed, unobtrusive, and relevant. I've seen newegg.com advertisements there that list a specific product and its price, usually a good deal. That's a great example of good advertising: relevant to the site, informative, of interest, and easy enough to ignore if it doesn't interest you.
      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    4. Re:Why does adblock exist? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I take it you've never worked for a small company, or tried to sell something you made.

      My background: I run a theater troupe. We make a product that you may want (extremely insightful performances of Shakespeare), but you have many other entertainment options and it may not occur to you to go looking around for live theater (especially amateur live theater) when you can go see a movie, play a video game, etc.

      Advertising of some form is the only way we can get an initial audience. Even once you're aware of the existence of my troupe, not everybody will sign up for our mailing list or check the web page often enough to know when performances are. Eventually, with luck, word of mouth spreads, but that takes literally years. Yes, advertising raises my costs, but in fact I can't put on the plays at all without advertising because nobody at all will see them if I don't let people know that they're out there.

      I'm simply saying that advertising is not inherently evil. There are bad people who abuse the mechanism, and I keep around a variety of flash blockers and Javascript blockers to get rid of those. But polite advertising may actually show me something I want, and I'd actually prefer to click on the ad to let them know that this is a good form of advertising.

      Otherwise you're just ceding the space to those who want to make louder and louder ads with more and more devious ways of bypassing the protection mechanisms.

    5. Re:Why does adblock exist? by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      As I said above the only kind of advertising that works on me is to let me know a product exists at all (mostly I know they exist, I know Ford does cars....) but the kind of advert you describe "hey look were a small theatre company *in your area* and we have a new production" is just the kind of ad I might not mentally edit out.

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
  35. Responsible advertising by truesaer · · Score: 1
    I don't know if this would be a successful business, but it would be nice to see an ad serving company that is "responsible." I never used adblock plus until a month ago, I finally got fed up with flash ads that crash my browser or use 80% of the CPU, ads with sound like those buzzing bee ads, etc.


    Ads more and more are like malware than a passive banner you might decide to click. If there were an ad company out there that vetted the ads they serve to ensure they weren't impacting performance and weren't unusually annoying, I would be perfectly willing to install a subscription that did not block those ads.


    So....point here is maybe we can come to an agreement, a comprimise. Websites could choose to go with the responsible ad server, and fewer people would block there ads.

  36. It would be illegal... by Dan+East · · Score: 1

    It would be illegal if the website had a EULA that forbid me from blocking ads, that I explicitly agreed to. In that case I would be in breach of contract.

    However, I have never entered to any such agreement, so I have no remorse or legal concern for blocking flash or anything else that I don't want my browser to display.

    Next thing you know, some company will be whining because someone with poor eyesight has their font size cranked way up, which pushes content down the page, interfering with the company's high-dollar advertising spot that used to be visible without scrolling.

    Dan East

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:It would be illegal... by colesw · · Score: 1

      Oh god don't give them ideas. I can't wait to start visiting web pages and having to agree to a EULA, verifying my age, in case they have a article that may talk about "naughty" things that people will be upset about letting minors see (talking about anything sexual/violent is evil remeber).

  37. I'm not so sure. by n2art2 · · Score: 1

    I'm not so sure it is theft.

    Think of museums or state parks. You place yourself in a posistion that your doors are open for all to come in. Some charge admissions for enterance while other's do not. Maybe that park of museum decides that their method of paying for the services they provide is to put billboards up all around. Does that mean that if I enjoy the freedom of eating lunch under a shade tree in the park or I decide to walk through your "free" museum and look at all the paintings, that I also have to be forced to look at the billboard you placed there?

    If you want to use that method of income then so be it, but don't expect me to look. There are other methods. You could charge a fee for access to your site. You could ask for donations. You can do all sorts of things.

    --
    Self proclaimed wannabe geek. You know how it is. Most of us who read this stuff probably fit in that category.
    1. Re:I'm not so sure. by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure it is theft.

      It's not.

      What's being stolen here? If I don't click on ads, then not displaying them will have the same net effect from the point of view of the site owner and advertiser.

  38. then Quit screaming at me. by Shivetya · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you want me to view your advertisement it better not.

    1. Have sound. If it does your so forever block from my browser and wallet its not even funny

    2. Overlay what I am reading. Having to click your ad away from the article text means I know exactly who I am never buying from.

    3. Pop a window, over or under, its the same, your gone.

    4. Any ad which causes my HD to spin up to load the damn support required for it, aka Flash and JAVA. If it pauses my experience it ends your chances.

    5. Heaven forbid you dare ask me to download something.

    You want might business. Then target those pages with simple and to the point banners and block ads. Do not animate my webpage. Put in bold letters why I should even pay attention to you. If you animate, make noise, or otherwise disturb my surfing you are intruding into my life and don't have that right

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:then Quit screaming at me. by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      You forgot:

      6. Has so much javascript and such a slow ad server that my browser freezes for 20 seconds while the ad loads.

      Personally if an ad annoys me I block the whole ad network.

    2. Re:then Quit screaming at me. by Matt+Perry · · Score: 2
      I would like to add:


      6. It better not move or animate in any way. Static pictures only.


      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    3. Re:then Quit screaming at me. by Hatta · · Score: 1


      1. Have sound. If it does your so forever block from my browser and wallet its not even funny


      This is an interesting issue. I can't see any reason to ever, EVER allow my web browser access to my sound device. Is there some way to stop it? SELinux maybe?

      Anyway, I have to agree whole-heartedly with your entire list.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:then Quit screaming at me. by Cervantes · · Score: 1

      Amen. That'd be my list exactly. Nothing drives me batty more than ads with sound. Mostly because I browse a dozen tabs at a time. One opens up with those annoying, stupid, squeaky voices banging through my speakers, and I have to go hunting for it... arg.

      Google has it right. Text ads ftw. Or inobtrusive sidebar ads. Anything but flashy, gimmicky, horrid little pieces of crap choking my computer and telling me I have Just Won! Seriously, some of that flash is so badly written I can see a measurable decrease in computer performance. Nothing like that will ever get me to buy whatever you're hocking.

      --
      If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
    5. Re:then Quit screaming at me. by Kalriath · · Score: 1


      1. Have sound. If it does your so forever block from my browser and wallet its not even funny


      This is an interesting issue. I can't see any reason to ever, EVER allow my web browser access to my sound device. Is there some way to stop it? SELinux maybe? You have options on Windows. You can either download FlashMute (which can actually prevent the entire browser from being able to make any sounds, although it was originally designed to mute Flash only), or if you have Vista you can simply click the Mute button for "Internet Explorer" or "Firefox" or "Opera" in the mixer (which nowadays allows you to mute or control the volume of individual applications). Damn, I wish that feature of Vista could be ported to other Operating Systems.

      I presume that since it can be done on Windows, there is some way somehow to do this on Linux or MacOS X.
      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  39. Theft? by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bah, that's as bad as calling copyright infringement theft.

    Are we going to start getting take down notices from ad agencies now too due to this twisted logic?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  40. Look at it this way: by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Let ad content consist of a bytes. Let useful content consist of c bytes.

    When I transfer a + c bytes, that's OK. When I transfer only c bytes, I'm stealing. So in this case, it's stealing when I take less than normal?

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    1. Re:Look at it this way: by iainl · · Score: 1

      The thing is, Adblock works because most advertisers host their own adverts. So it's not even that you're taking less than normal, but that you're downloading c's useful content without your browser automatically following the link to download the stuff from a's server as well.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  41. No guaranteed business model by Telvin_3d · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is no such thing as a guaranteed business model. Just because it would be convenient for the world to work a certain way, or because it has worked that way in the past, does not mean that it will continue to work that way.

    These businesses (and many others) have been built on the assumption that in return for content, consumers are willing to be exposed to advertising. If that assumption proves to be false, then they are going to either have to find a new business model, or else convince the consumers that they should watch the adds. If the business is build on people looking at advertisements, and the consumers are refusing to look at advertisements, there is a basic disconnect there that does not bode well.

    The other side is that if consumers as a whole refuse to support add supported business, we are going to have to pay in some other way. Figuring out the balance of this struggle isn't just important for websites. It is the same disconnect that we are seeing right now in television.

    1. Re:No guaranteed business model by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

      The other side is that if consumers as a whole refuse to support add supported business, we are going to have to pay in some other way. Figuring out the balance of this struggle isn't just important for websites. It is the same disconnect that we are seeing right now in television.


      No. It means we just get our useful Internet back.
    2. Re:No guaranteed business model by prockcore · · Score: 1

      No. It means we just get our useful Internet back.


      No it doesn't. It means the internet turns into nothing but company websites and ads. The only people who will be on the internet are the people who can afford it.. and those are... wait for it.. advertisers.
  42. Yes, it's exactly right by ciscoguy01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, it's exactly right to block ads if you like.
    No one has to read someone else's ads.

    It's obvious that some television ads are being made much more interesting and clever to combat the tivos. They have to MAKE you WANT TO WATCH THE ADS.
    They have been succesfull. I watch more ads now than I did 2 years ago.
    Largely gone are the brief playlets and illustrated lectures on the purchase of consumer goods.

    If web ads were more interesting and less obnoxious perhaps they would be more successful.

    The worst:
    Intellitext popup ads.
    Catch the monkey animated ads
    Those ridiculous floating ads that sit in front of the site and scroll with you.
    I put those in adblock right away!

    --
    .
  43. The real theft is not that by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

    The real theft is the advertisers who take ***MY*** bandwidth, i.e. the one I pay for myself with my ***OWN*** money to deliver advertisements I do not watch in any case.

  44. Freeloading TiVo users? by mveloso · · Score: 3, Insightful



    You know, before TiVo people used to skip ads by (1) going to the bathroom, (2) getting a snack, (3) changing the channel, or (4) talking. Does that make OTA tv-watchers freeloaders too?

    This attitude is irritating. Over the air content is provided for free. There is nothing that says "to watch this TV show you must watch the commercials." Same with radio. Radio content is provided for free. There is no implied contract that I must listen to advertisements to enjoy the content.

    It is my choice whether to watch/listen to the ads or not. This isn't a question of morality at all. It's also my choice whether I buy a product or not. Does not buying mean I'm being immoral?

    If a car dealer says "If you don't buy this car, I'll starve and you'll kill my family," would you still buy the car?

    1. Re:Freeloading TiVo users? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      If a car dealer says "If you don't buy this car, I'll starve and you'll kill my family," would you still buy the car?

      If his wife was hot and the kids healthy (read: good workers) , I'd make an offer on his family.

    2. Re:Freeloading TiVo users? by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 1

      You forgot muting the station. If my dad was watching the TV with us as soon as the commercials came on the volume went off. Also I have a Tivo now and I can't say I always fast forward past commercials. Sometimes I just let them play.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    3. Re:Freeloading TiVo users? by jskline · · Score: 1

      Ever notice that on TV especially, when the show stops and a commercial break happens, the volume is almost deafening! They do this deliberately and I've gotten to the point of just not watching ANYTHING on commercial TV anymore. That tactic has lost a viewer and potential customer of some of these businesses that advertised on TV. Sorry; you do stupid stuff like that to people, what did you think would happen? We'd all be banging on your door to buy your product and hope you'd turn the damned volume down??? I don't think so.

      --
      All content in this message is copyright (c) 2008. All rights reserved. RIAA is prohibited here.
    4. Re:Freeloading TiVo users? by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      Broadcasting video over the air or even thru cable has a constant expense regardless of how many people actually watch the video. But the cost of internet bandwidth is directly proportional to the number of visitors to the site. Each visitor to a site increases the bandwidth cost, and if that visitor blocks the ads, then the visitor is "freeloading". If a TV viewer doesn't watch TV ads, it matters not because the TV viewer didn't add to the broadcast cost the way a web surfer adds to bandwidth cost.

      I don't care if people block ads or not, but it's not the same as TV broadcasts.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    5. Re:Freeloading TiVo users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a TV viewer doesn't watch TV ads, it matters not because the TV viewer didn't add to the broadcast cost the way a web surfer adds to bandwidth cost.

      Were broadcast cost the only factor, you might have a point. Unfortunately, while the broadcast cost of TV may not depend directly on the number of viewers, the profitability of that broadcast sure as hell does. One must also consider the amortized installation and maintenance costs. If the advertisers perceive a drop in viewership, they pull their dollars (regardless of whether or not the perception is valid), which puts the whammy on the station. This is the same for TV and web.

      Moreover, that isn't even what the GP was discussing. The point was that owning a DVR in no way impacts the proclivity of the viewer to watch commercials. If a person doesn't want to watch them, they won't--DVR or not. In fact, TiVo actually encourages paying attention to the commercials by allowing one to fast-forward through them: the viewer still sees the commercial, and pays attention to know when to resume normal play. Contrast this to the old method of leaving the room for five minutes. Where's the exposure there?

      This "TiVo equals freeloading" attitude, such as perpetuated by the OP, is misleading, misinformed, sensationalistic, and generally idiotic. Unfortunately, the network execs are mislead, misinformed, hystrionic idiots, so this idea has taken firm hold.

  45. Then don't go to the godammned site by tjstork · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

    Don't go to the site then, and for sure, don't use their content!

    What are you, like little mommy's boy waiting for the world to dance for you, for free, every time you simper and lose your blanky! Hey, people eat and want to send their kids to college.

    Honestly, what they should do is make it so that a web browser / html protocol that is digitally signed so that ads -cannot be blocked-.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      But I am entitled to absolutely free content whenever I want it, and I deserve to have it exactly the way I want it! How dare the websites seek profit or reimbursement!

    2. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you, like little mommy's boy waiting for the world to dance for you, for free, every time you simper and lose your blanky! Hey, people eat and want to send their kids to college.

      Then I have a suggestion for you and it's really a simple one that applies to many different fields:

      If you want to make money on your toll road, you probably ought to build toll booths in order to collect it.

      Don't come to us crying about "mommy's boy" when nobody wants to punch your fucking monkey.

    3. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by athdemo · · Score: 0

      So you're fine with allowing harmful content onto your computer for the sake of the site owner? Wow, very altruistic of you. ...I really wouldn't like to see how long it takes your computer to boot, though.

    4. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      What are you, like little mommy's boy waiting for the world to dance for you,


      If someone is actively implementing ad blocking, clearly they are not "waiting" for anything. They're taking control of their browser back. Nothing wrong with that.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    5. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      What you are entitled to is control over your browsing experience and freedom to view the web however you damn well please. Websites are also free to seek profit. They just shouldn't expect users to just passively accept whatever crap they want to throw at users.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    6. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Trigun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Oh fuck off with that. Take your capitalistic, and simplistic view of the world as seen through your ass, and jam it right beside your head. Not once have I ever been asked before going to a website if I was okay with a shitload of ads strewn about a website, let alone prompted that they would appear. Advertisers are small petulant children; they yell and scream, and when that ceases to work, they scream louder, or steal your car. They do whatever they can to get attention, and when they get it, they want more.

      Should the few be punished for the sins of the many? If I were in charge, yes.

    7. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShaggyIan · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is never click on links in anything, and never visit new pages?

      I don't run an ad-blocker, and I don't frequent any sites that engage in such activities, but I get very tired of cleaning up after a Google search lands me on one of those bastards.

      I will grant you that many folks use an ad-blocker when just ignoring the damn things would suffice.

      --

      This sig was generated randomly by one million monkeys with Speak 'n Spells. . .
    8. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Right, and web sites are free to redirect freeloading firefox users to a different site if they please, so they're not donating their content and bandwidth for free.

    9. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      You forget one thing, troll. Once those bits hit the computer (that is - MY COMPUTER) I'll do with them what I please.

      If the ad people were so worried about their kids, maybe they'd create ads that DON'T annoy, deceive, track, cover up the page you're trying to view, contain annoying animations you can't shut off, or cause seizures (you know the ads...stupid flashing monstrosities)

      Unblockable ads? Yeah, good luck with that. Any site stupid enough to sign up for such a thing will find itself blocked. Still, if someone created them, they'd make a bit of money off the stupid and gullible before the public lashback sent a website or two into bankruptcy.

    10. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by anagama · · Score: 1

      If a website wants you to view ads, they should make viewing their website contingent on not blocking ads. They should display this notice prominently, perhaps at an intermediary page before the content and make it part of their terms of use.

      In this situation, I would know that I have no interest in visiting the site. However, until the terms of use expressly state I cannot block ads, it is quite a piece of "political speak" to say that viewing the site with an adblocker is "stealing". It's only stealing if the site says I can't block. Barring any statement to the contrary, I've done nothing wrong. BTW, hiding a no-blocking clause in a 20 page document of boilerplate terms of use isn't notice. Prominent display please so I can know to go away and never return. That way we are both happy.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    11. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see them try.

      What difference does it make whether I block ads or ignore them? Don't most sites these days require that you CLICK on the ads to make money? Am a "freeloading" if I ignore the ads?

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    12. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Your comment was ridiculous and also nonsensical. Not sure if you were trying to troll or not, but I just thought I'd point that out. Your digitally signed web browser/HTML protocol idea was especially laughable. Why don't we start prosecuting everyone who's fast-forwarded through the ads on VHS while we're at it. No wait, let's make it a topic of discussion and expect it to be taken seriously AND then prosecute.

      So yeah, people can push ads. And yeah, people can block those ads client side. Short of hacking into the ad servers and destroying them from the inside out, there is nothing illegal about blocking ads on your computer. Finally, the web was never designed to serve ads, it was designed to serve web sites and content, and ads were a byproduct of that. Increase in web usage and browser technology has simply given more users power over what they see and don't see on the web without directly affecting anyone else. If the whole web advertising model goes to hell because of people blocking the ads on websites, then so be it, that's simply how it turned out. It's called capitalism. Firefox and Adblock are a free way to block content that the enduser does not wish to see, but the content provider wishes to push in order to provide revenue. If the revenue stops flowing, then the model is defunct. Find a new way to make money. The web isn't supposed to cater to advertisers, or anyone.

      Anyway, I seriously doubt this will happen any time soon as long as people still use IE to click on "You just won a free vacation!" flashing banner ads and trust me, they do. Just because /. forgets how many people are still internet newbies, it doesn't mean that this majority of the web browsing population doesn't exist. Look at how many people still use IE over Firefox. Look at all the spam that still gets sent out advertising free products or money or stock tips. Just because it's 2007 it doesn't make it any different than 1997 for a lot of people who go online, fuck their computers up, blame Dell or HP or their children and then get someone to reinstall Microsoft ME for them so they can redownload they're stupid screensaver of kitten photographs. That's what most internet users are like. I used to volunteer at a computer refurbishment warehouse where we took donated computers, refurbished them and re-sold or donated them in a small computer thrift store. We would take repairs only from our own customers and they would always have some sort of problem. Usually, they had installed AOL or weren't sure what they did except that suddenly "one day the computer stopped working." This doesn't generally happen, as we all know, to computers. I also once volunteered with elderly people, teaching them the basics of going online and checking mail and things like that a few years ago. A lot of them were excited about the banner ads that kept popping up because they really thought they won something. And a lot of these people were only 50 or 60 or so.

    13. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      Right, and web sites are free to redirect freeloading .. users to a different site
      Yes, they're free to. Alas, they lack the capability. There's no practical way to detect whether or not a user blocks ads.
      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    14. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by idontgno · · Score: 1

      I have no problem with this (as long as it's not done maliciously, such as redirecting to kiddy pr0n or malware drive-by downloads or something.) You operate a website, you decide you don't want FF users (cuz they can adblock), you escort them off the virtual premises. All very fair. It preserves my right as a web consumer to basic control of the content I want to see, it preserves the website operator's right to be stupid*. An eminently reasonable solution. Your hypothetical web publisher's position demonstrates to me that he has nothing useful to say to me anyway, so I won't miss it.

      So, where's the downside?

      *Stupid. Yeah, I said it. Stupidity is blocking FF because it can adblock, and neglecting to block every other browser in the universe in spite of the fact that they can all block ads. Solving the wrong problem ("firefox users are ripping me off!") is, per definitionem, stupid. In this case, the real problem is a non-viable business model.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    15. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Your digitally signed web browser/HTML protocol idea was especially laughable

      Really? Let's try this architecture. The gist is, I carve out my own little space on the Internet with guaranteed ad showing, protection from download copying, and digital rights management. To do this, I must:

      Make a web browser, all of my own. I probably want to simplify / change HTML to move, as you say, from a generic content, to a content model that is more useable, and also, to cheaply sweeten the pie for the retailers I'm trying to entice:

      a) add support for ALL the Windows Common controls to the page - like, the tree, the listview, all of them.
      b) embrace the table!
      c) add support to the web browser so that images can't be downloaded from the platform
      d) everything always https. Basically, I want to lock out people sniffing in midstream.
      e) add html tags to support the notion of a shopping item and a basket, and build the basket into the browser.

      Also, instead of binding web sites to my own DNS, a web site host would have to buy the name from my platform. But if I made the process cheap enough, that could work. Then, there would be an approval process for not letting every web site get in, and, as a side effect, I could offer my own search services from within the browser.

      Then, with my offering, I turn around to various online e-tailers and say hey, if you support this browser, we won't block your ads, and we won't screw up your site, and we won't allow price comparison scrapers and all the other shit you have to put up with. I get a few retailers in each consumer segment, a car company or two, and then I'm off to the races with an IPO for a few billion dollars.

      From there, I advertise my browser on TV, and then I sell out my whole thing to Google or Microsoft and retire building spaceships and maybe buying the Phillies a fricking pitcher!

      --
      This is my sig.
    16. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by insertwackynamehere · · Score: 1

      I'll also add on that if your view of ethics and morality involves supporting "ads" that trick Grandma's into believing they've won a free iPod or Caribbean vacation, then you should probably just stop talking. That's one point I failed to mention, ads on websites vary from ads on TV and in the paper greatly for the single reason that they are blatantly full of shit. Advertising, on principle, is based on making a product's image better but tricking people into clicking on some stupid flash animation with the promise of a free mp3 player is absolute, 100% bullshit. It's not even advertising, it's tricking and lying to people in order to get them to hit some page which translates such hits into pennies and then ??? and then profit. I'm surprised that with all the stupid lawsuits flying around resulting from people being too idiotic to understand the concept of coffee being hot (and the like) that more people aren't suing over misleading banner "ads".

    17. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      As a web surfer, it is my obligation to make sure I take reasonable precautions protecting my computer from malicious sites, popups, etc.

      obviously it is somewhat of a prisoners dilemma.

      IE were all better off if websites were "reasonable" in advertisement usage, appropriate sizes, etc, and users view the adds. But websites make more money, for less effort selling a corner of their page to a advertising company. That company makes the most money (apparently) letting some flashy big adds flow through.

      So I start blocking just those adds, but I loose my nice list on a dead PC, and I see adblock plus now updates my list for me. I started off hunting adblocking because of dialup, and large adds, on text based sites. Now with broadband, it's so nice not being annoyed I am addicted to adblock, and the ease of a complete list.

      many Innocent sites now lose also. however, nothing prevents sites from hosting their own images, and text adds, I will see them. However it is still more profitable to sell out to the adware companys (even for techie, high firefox usage sites like slashdot)

    18. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      So, if ESPN.com put it in their terms of use that adblocking is prohibited, would you quit visiting the site? It seems that almost all sites with free content (even *gasp* Slashdot!) have advertisements... If all of these sites expressely prohibit ad-blocking, would you no longer have any interest? I doubt it. This is all just "I want everything exactly my way" posturing.

      And regardless of what you define as "stealing", I think it's hard to argue that viewing content while eliminating the means of intending compensation is not morally reprehensible.

    19. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Da+Fokka · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that's true. Just have a flash ad 'ring home' to a script embedded on the site after it started displaying. Have the script fetch the actual content only if the ad has rung home. I'm not saying that it's not horrid, but it is certainly possible.

    20. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Morgon · · Score: 1

      Nope - CPM isn't dead yet. Not all ads are Google ads (which is where you hear a lot about Cost-per-click or -per-Action)... some people still pay to simply have their message displayed.

      --
      [DISCLAIMER: This post is a work of satire and should not be misconstrued as a holy text upon which to base a religion.]
    21. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by perlchild · · Score: 1

      Just because the website owner wants me to enter into a contract with them(advertisements, of unknown but probably negative value to me in exchange for content, of potentially positive but still unknown value to me) doesn't mean they can force me to.

      If they really want me to enter into a contract with them, they need to move to a subscription based model. That way at least, I get to see the contract, first.

    22. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by anagama · · Score: 1

      So, if ESPN.com put it in their terms of use that adblocking is prohibited, would you quit visiting the site?

      Yes. With one caveat. The notice must be prominent. Do not make me go search out a tiny hidden TOU link, and then bury the provision in a stack of text. Make it noticeable to me and I will avoid the page. Fair is fair. If a site really doesn't want me to visit if I block ads, then I won't visit. I completely understand that content is time consuming to make and the owner has a right to share or not as he wishes.

      This is sort of interesting though, because a website's worth is related to the amount of traffic it gets. Thus, by virtue of my visit, I have contributed to the value of the site whether I block ads or not. I can understand why a site would not want to encourage me to discontinue my patronage, but if they are not going to make my visit contingent on ad viewing, they have no right to complain when I take them up on their implicit offer to view the site without ads. After all, the site does actually benefit from my visit.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    23. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      First of all, this is from the ESPN.com terms of use:

      3.

      • RESTRICTIONS ON USE OF MATERIALS


      All information, content and materials contained on WDIG Sites are our copyrighted property or the copyrighted property of our licensors or licensees. All trademarks, service marks, trade names, and trade dress are proprietary to us and/or our licensors or licensees. No information, content or material from any WDIG Site or any Internet site owned, operated, licensed, or controlled by us may be copied, reproduced, republished, uploaded, posted, transmitted or distributed in any way, except that you may download one copy of the information, content or materials on any single computer for your personal, noncommercial home use only, provided that (a) you keep intact all copyright and other proprietary notices, (b) you make no modifications to the information, content or materials, (c) you do not use the information, content or materials in a manner that suggests an association with any of our products, services or brands, and (d) you do not download information, content or materials so as to avoid future downloads from any WDIG Site. The use of any information, content or materials on a WDIG Site on any other Web site or computer environment is prohibited.

      Now, as far as "adding value" by visiting the site... Maybe in a convoluted way, if the advertisers see a higher number they might think it's better to advertise, but I think you could easily argue that any benefit in the increased hit count is offset by the bandwidth wasted on the data transfer. I think they'd be financially better off if all the people with ad blocking didn't visit the site.

    24. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      Ok, then the question stands with modification: Am I stealing/freeloading by ignoring non-Google ads? I say, "no." That would be ridiculous. There is no contract either explicit or implied that obligates me to click *or* view ads on the web. Blocking ads is nothing more than an automated system for ignoring ads. There is absolutely nothing wrong with it.

      That said, websites are free to block users of adblocking software. In fact, I'd like to see them try. I'm up for a good arms race now that I have the spammers mostly kept at bay. Bring on the pissed off advertisers.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    25. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      So you're fine with allowing harmful content onto your computer for the sake of the site owner? Wow, very altruistic of you. ...I really wouldn't like to see how long it takes your computer to boot, though. Altruistic perhaps, but it pisses ME off with what he and lemmings like him do with their computers. They are the soldiers of the BotNet.
      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    26. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      That only detects if you are running/allowing flash. Not to mention that it is an expensive test. You'd have to do it for each and every HTTP request or keep some database IPs (not very reliable). That would totally degrade the site and cause much more traffic than necessary... all to stop the 1% of users who block ads from viewing your site. You're better off just letting everyone in.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    27. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, "pwned."

    28. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      And regardless of what you define as "stealing", I think it's hard to argue that viewing content while eliminating the means of intending compensation is not morally reprehensible.

      What you think regardless of what you might or might not think is dependent upon what we think with the elimination of considerations financially expected which you might hum and haw and piddle out this sentence longer.

      Why don't you just come out and say it?

      You think it's dishonorable to block ads. To you, it's stealing resources.

      No need for your convoluted sentences with 4 negating clauses.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    29. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      The gist is, I carve out my own little space on the Internet with guaranteed ad showing, protection from download copying, and digital rights management. To do this, I must:

      Make a web browser, all of my own. I probably want to simplify / change HTML to move, as you say, from a generic content, to a content model that is more useable, and also, to cheaply sweeten the pie for the retailers I'm trying to entice Go for it. Let us all know how Tjstork Online turns out.
      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    30. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by anagama · · Score: 1
      As I mentioned before, hiding the restriction in a vague TOU document is not notice. But aside from that, the provision you cite is exceptionally vague. If I block ads, I am arguably not modifying information, content, or materials. I am making no changes to the pictures or videos which comprise the ads, I am not changing the article text, nor am altering the material in any way.

      Your counterargument is that the webpage as a whole, with all its discrete parts, is modified when I block ads. But if that is the case, so too is it true that page as a whole is modified when I change the size of my browser window -- the text breaks at different points and the prominence of ads changes based on the width of the document. This provision you site is overly broad and so vague it does not really put a person on notice that blocking ads without modification of them violates the TOU.

      As I said before, a simple clear statement prominently displayed is all it will take to keep me away. If you don't want me to view the site without ads, let me suggest this language with a prominently displayed warning:

      By visiting ______.com, you hereby expressly agree that it is a violation these terms of use to employ adblocking software which in any way obscures, hides, or fails to display ads which accompany any content served by _____.com, and that such use of adblocking software subjects you to the following liability: a: ____, b: ____, c: ____.

      Nice simple plain language. Even in "real" contracts BTW, there are times when prominence is important. For example, when disclaiming liability, it is wise to make sure there is a notice that the contract disclaims certain liabilities right above the signature line. There are times when courts will be loathe to enforce liability disclaimers in situations where the parties were in unequal bargaining positions and the disclaimers are buried. I would think a website could face similar issues with its terms of use if the information is so difficult to find, that people would unknowingly violate the provisions. Like a sign in the back of the store pasted up inside a rarely traveled hallway that said "by merely entering this store, you agree to pay to the owner $100" -- something like that simply would never get enforced.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    31. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by WNight · · Score: 1

      I don't get you. You sound like you're some sort of "just work, you bitches" uber-capitalist. Yet you want us to obey some unwritten law and just hand a valuable resource to companies because they want us to, not because they actually do a good enough job and convince us?

      I don't see a contract with these web authors that says I must view every part of their sites. Free newspapers exist (presumably often ad supported) and yet they don't come with a contract requiring me to read all the ads. So why should one industry get welfare and not the others?

      Works in paper form don't come with these protections. I'm free to cut out the dirty words from Harry Potter and resell it. (I couldn't misrepresent it as unaltered, but otherwise...) There's no reason to believe that the web enjoys more protection, especially as skipping ads usually means not viewing a whole new site, something analogous to a flier folded in the newspaper.

      Google and Slashdot are both ad-supported companies who welcome everyone, blocking or not, because they recognize that the network effect of a larger community helps everyone, themselves included. Besides, the only way to guarantee zero false positives in your anti-ad-blocker campaign of blocking users is to not have any such policy. Anything else could and will go wrong, ala Microsoft's Genuine "Advantage" and id Software's Quake master servers. All of which have disable legitimate users and hardly touched piracy.

      So anyways, I think advocating a no-blocking policy hurts companies like Google and Slashdot who manage to do it right by giving an unfair boost to their less-capable competition.

    32. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Da+Fokka · · Score: 1

      You only need to detect if flash is being run, because in this way you intercept all kinds of ad blocking. And hey, I know it's not an optimum solution, but GGP claimed that it was impossible to detect if the ad was actually viewed, which was simply untrue.

    33. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      It would be an unfair and inaccurate test.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    34. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Morgon · · Score: 1

      Stealing? Doubtful
      Freeloading? Absolutely.

      There are a lot of generalizations in this entire discussion...
      - Not all ads are "Punch the Monkey"
      - Not all ads using Flash are bad - Not all of them invoke seizures. What if they're relevant to content? I run a gaming website, many game publishers have animated ads. Why is this block-worthy?
      - Not all websites do or want to display "Punch The Monkey" - With the exception of Google ads, which can vary widely since most of my content isn't blog-like or other editorial features, the ads I run on my site are rather appropriate for the demographic and interests of visitors.
      - Not all advertising is pay-per-click/-action. May I please have 16K of your bandwidth to create an ad impression in exchange for being able to keep my website running for you? I assure you my bandwidth costs are higher than yours; but your help in reaching that next 1,000 impression milestone (the 'M' in CPM) will help tremendously.
      - Not all websites are based on $5 hosting accounts - creating, maintaining, and most importantly *growing* a web presence is time-consuming and costly. It's not just about bandwidth. There's hardware, too. Sometimes you need people smarter than you to tackle problems, here comes some labor costs.

      Why is it wrong to want to be able to cover costs, and god forbid, be able to pay for other things in life with it? Not everyone is trying to wade in a pool of money they can't even begin to spend; some of us just want to live a slightly better life by being rewarded for our efforts at entertaining others. My website's not my first job, but I wouldn't be in my current position without it, and I wouldn't have gotten that far without ad revenue paying the bills for the time when it was.

      I think what scares me so much is the sheer generalization that people spout around. "ALL ads are bad" .. "It's not my problem!" - It WILL be your problem when half your paycheck goes to viewing the number of sites you probably do now. Not to mention the impression you're leaving over people who don't normally think for themselves (quite a large set of the population - you're on Slashdot, you know what I mean).

      Maybe things aren't quite that bleak, and I hope they aren't either .. but instead of instinctively fighting 'the man' (without even knowing who that may be), why not adopt an actual ad blocking strategy that others have suggested (i.e. allow ads until they pop up, play sound, overlay, etc)?
      Perhaps there's a way to open dialogue between content provider and end-user to communicate where their expectations are in terms of what ads they feel are appropriate and how they can make the experience better without having to resort to this 'arms race' you speak of.
      I'd much rather spend my development time on new content and features for my website than deal with that sort of thing. I should hope that most visitors would, too.

      --
      [DISCLAIMER: This post is a work of satire and should not be misconstrued as a holy text upon which to base a religion.]
    35. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      I think it's pretty clear what that line is referring to. Changing the way something renders when you resize your windows is not the same as intentionally preventing something from rendering. And lawyers be damned, I don't buy the "prominence" thing. It took me only about 30 seconds to find that. Click the terms of use link, and it was near the top of the page. It wasn't hidden by any means.

    36. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by funaho · · Score: 1

      I run a gaming website, many game publishers have animated ads. Why is this block-worthy?

      Because animation is distracting and because it tends to slow down page scrolling. If it animates only when you click on it that's fine, but until then an ad should try remain as unobtrusive as possible.

      Having read a great deal of the posts on this topic today I don't see all THAT many people claiming "all ads are bad." The majority seem to feel ads are OK if they are static, quiet and stay within their defined borders until clicked upon. Sure there are zealots who think all ads are a pact with Satan, but they're just a small though somewhat vocal minority.

    37. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by misleb · · Score: 1

      Freeloading? Absolutely.


      Just so we're clear. You are saying that I am freeloading simply by ignoring ads? Wouldn't that make a good portion of users freeloaders? Is that really how you want to characterize your users?

      If not, I challenge you to draw a real distinction between manually ignoring ads and automating the process with software.

      What if they're relevant to content? I run a gaming website, many game publishers have animated ads. Why is this block-worthy?


      I don't know about your gaming site in particular, but most gaming sites I've been to tend to be rather "busy." Like magazines (particularly gaming magazines) it can be difficult to find the real content amongst the ads. Or worse, I'll confuse an ad for content. Anything that can clean up the page and distill the content and make things easier to read is worth using. This makes AdBlock Plus a particularly important tool for me. I block all ads. And it makes a HUGE difference in my web experience. If for some reason I have to use a computer without Adblock, I really notice it.

      If I could apply such a tool to analog media, I would. I'd blot out all billboards. Distill magazines down to the 3 or 4 pages of actual content. It really isn't anything personal against you or your site. I just dislike advertising in general and find that it gets in the way. Even Google text ads.

      Why is it wrong to want to be able to cover costs, and god forbid, be able to pay for other things in life with it?


      It isn't wrong. You're free to try to cover costs with ads just as I am free to ignore them.

      Not everyone is trying to wade in a pool of money they can't even begin to spend; some of us just want to live a slightly better life by being rewarded for our efforts at entertaining others. My website's not my first job, but I wouldn't be in my current position without it, and I wouldn't have gotten that far without ad revenue paying the bills for the time when it was.


      Again, it is nothing personal.

      I think what scares me so much is the sheer generalization that people spout around. "ALL ads are bad"


      I wouldn't go so far as to say they are "bad." But I can definitely live without them... and prefer to live without them.

      "It's not my problem!" It WILL be your problem when half your paycheck goes to viewing the number of sites you probably do now


      I hardly think that my two eyeballs are worth that much to you and your advertisers. Maybe a few cents per month?

      Maybe things aren't quite that bleak, and I hope they aren't either .. but instead of instinctively fighting 'the man' (without even knowing who that may be), why not adopt an actual ad blocking strategy that others have suggested (i.e. allow ads until they pop up, play sound, overlay, etc)?


      It isn't about "fighting the man." It is about optimizing my browser experience. And block all ads is most optimal (not to mention easier). Sorry.

      Perhaps there's a way to open dialogue between content provider and end-user to communicate where their expectations are in terms of what ads they feel are appropriate and how they can make the experience better without having to resort to this 'arms race' you speak of.


      I'm sure there are people that would like to engage in that discussion. It just isn't me.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    38. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by anagama · · Score: 1

      And lawyers be damned, I don't buy the "prominence" thing.

      Lawyers love your type.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    39. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      I don't think the comparison to newspapers is valid at all. Even if you ignore all the ads, they're still there. You can't order a copy of the newspaper with ads removed, for obvious reasons. Actually, I'd say the newspaper comparison only serves to help the case of website publishers. Websites do put in their terms of use that the content is not to be altered; they just don't have the advantage of an immutable medium that newspapers have. I'd have to disagree, then, with your argument about works of paper not having the protection--if you remove stuff from your books and newspapers, you've still had to look at it, or at the very least you'd see all the words crossed out or the clipping missing. And ignoring something is not the same as that thing never having existed to begin with.

      Google and Slashdot don't block people because they can't do it without blocking a huge amount of people who don't block the ads. If they had a way to determine who was blocking ads, you'd be those people would be out in a millisecond.

      Now, I don't want to be construed by any means as someone who actually likes ads. I hate them with a passion, and it pisses me off when the websites I go to have horribly programmed flash ads that cover the content and don't give up the real estate like they're supposed to, or they open a pseudo-popup window right on top of the content. But it's their right to have it there, and all it means is that my interest thresshold has to go up a bit.

    40. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by WNight · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that it would not be legal for me to buy a newspaper, dissect it in any fashion I wish, and resell some of the parts?

      That seems unlikely. Marking up textbooks and reselling them is fairly common...

    41. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      Again, the newspaper analogy doesn't hold up well. I guess the biggest factor here is that you actually paid for the newspaper to begin with. They don't send everybody newspapers for free. You pay for text books to begin with as well. In addition, advertisers can know how many copies of the newspaper were sold, and pay based on that.

    42. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by WNight · · Score: 1

      I was thinking of the free ad-supported newspapers. Go grab one from the box.

      They expect that you'll want to read it, but it's legal to take one and use it as a bird-cage liner.

      I'm still seeing a very strong similarity here. They give something away hoping you'll look at ads, but don't have a way to make skipping ads illegal. They can try to distribute the paper/page only to those who will read it (not to people with ad blockers) but unless they make you promise up front to read the whole thing (a valid and enforceable contract), you're free to skip any pieces you wish.

      In general, you can't force someone to do something just because just because you want them to. If I sell you a sled and you decide to burn it for warmth instead of sledding on my hill ($$) I've made a bad investment, but you've done nothing illegal.

    43. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      The analogy is still lacking. If you go to the box with the free newspapers and you start clipping out the ads before anyone even gets the chance to see them (or somebody else clips them out before you read it), I think there's a problem. There's a difference between ignoring the ads and blocking the ads from even displaying in the first place. I suspect there's no legal problem with adblocking, but this topic is about the morality of ad blocking.

    44. Re:Then don't go to the godammned site by Morgon · · Score: 1

      If not, I challenge you to draw a real distinction between manually ignoring ads and automating the process with software.

      Depends on how you're defining 'ignoring'. If it downloads and your eyes are simply trained to not see it? *shrugs* Fine with me. CPM is on my side.
      "Ignoring" by using automated software usually means you're actively blocking and preventing the advertisers from having a chance to get their message out, which is what they're paying me for. That's the freeloading part.

      Unfortunately, I'm not going to bother rebutting any of your other responses, because reading through the other discussions here, there's really no argument against blind self-entitlement. I'll simply go as far as to say I disagree with you, as I'm sure at least 95% of other non-blog site developers/publishers would. Please stay off my site -- nothing personal. :)

      --
      [DISCLAIMER: This post is a work of satire and should not be misconstrued as a holy text upon which to base a religion.]
  46. What about my bandwidth? by Erioll · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What about my bandwidth? They're trying to say I'm OBLIGATED to take everything on their page, not just the parts I'm requesting. I can assure you that I'm requesting their content, not the ads. They're forcing unnecessary bandwidth requirements (and slow load times) upon me by their advertising.

    With a pipe, there ARE two ends to it you know.

    1. Re:What about my bandwidth? by rootofevil · · Score: 1

      interesting argument.

      ive used adblock with firefox for a while now, and ive made sure to only hide the ads rather than not download them. that way i dont have to see them (i dont want to see them anyway), and the webmaster still gets credit for the 'view'.

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    2. Re:What about my bandwidth? by nate+nice · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "With a pipe, there ARE two ends to it you know."

      Actually, the Internet is a series of tubes, not pipes.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    3. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Ankh · · Score: 1

      the webmaster still gets credit for the 'view'
      For many ads these days, the web publisher gets paid only for clicks.

      With Google, the ratio of page views ("impressions" as they call them) to clicks determines the amount paid.

      So if you download the ads from my Web site and don't ever click on them, you are actually lowering my revenue very slightly. It's better not to download ads if you aren't going to click on them.

      I've worked hard (e.g. on http://www.fromoldbooks.org/ ) to try and have ads that are not too obtrusive, but when you're running an image Web site the bandwidth costs can be fairly high, and very few people will click on donate buttons.

      Maybe it just means that some classes of Web site will go away, or will have to reinvent themselves, e.g. as "member-only pay to download images".

      Liam

      --
      Live barefoot!
      free engravings/woodcuts
    4. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Erioll · · Score: 1

      Actually, the Internet is a series of tubes, not pipes. You know, I ALMOST put that in brackets. ;)
    5. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. I got into Adblock because I'm on a dialup connection, and core site content was not being displayed until after an endless stream of "downloading from ads.adserver" messages hung the browser for several minutes.

    6. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Xtravar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Indeed, I'd like to point out that while surfing the web at work I try to use as little bandwidth as possible. Hence, adblock... let the employees using IE top my bandwidth usage in case the hammer ever starts falling. :)

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    7. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the advertiser is paying the website for... not showing you ads? The product/service advertised is not worth anything to the seller in your case. How is that different to just blocking them?

    8. Re:What about my bandwidth? by gfxguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Good point. I remember the bad old days, on dialup, waiting for pages of text to load because it was stuck waiting on advertising images. When I added the early versions of ad-blocking (including bogus host entries), it worked wonders.

      So here's the thing; you want to, for example, read an article on CNN. The article will be several thousand characters of data. The images for advertising are typically several times that or more. So when we watch TV, we get like 11 minutes of actual content for 4 minutes of ads. Even that's intrusive, if you ask me, but let's say we accept that. Your bandwidth basically gives you about 3 parts content to 1 part advertising.

      On a website, your bandwidth often gives you 1 part content to 5 or 6 parts adverstising.

      Too bad. The thing is, people used to accept TV ads for the content they got, then Reagan (rightfully, IMO, even though it ended up ruining things) deregulated TV. So now we have MythTV boxes and Tivos and avoid the ads altogether. The day they start sending signals to make it so I can't bypass the commercials is the day I cancel my Tivo subscription. If Myth somehow couldn't do it, I'd be better off not watching anything anyway.

      So if websites keep getting more and more intrusive, and if they somehow manage to force these horrible, overbearing ads on me, I'd be better off not surfing at all. As far as I'm concerned, they have every right... but will be surprised to learn the only thing it earns them is disdain. The things that are REALLY important; the intranet at work, banking and investing, shopping... these are the only things I really want anyway, everything else (like slashdot) is just time wasting fluff.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    9. Re:What about my bandwidth? by J.P.+Yoshi · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the solution on the other end of the pipe is to make a plugin that complements Adblock.

      Ladies (yeah, I know, this IS /.) and gents, I present to you: Adblock Plus+ Adhoe Edition, which loads all those pesky ads in the background and performs a click automatically for you (maybe someone should patent this, preferably an ad firm).
      Just imagine: "Dear, I swear, I was just visiting our daughters new website, I don't know what pr0n pictures/spyware you found on my computer!"

      At least then all website owners would be happy with their revenue.

    10. Re:What about my bandwidth? by obarel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In other words, the advertisers are stealing from me: time, bandwidth (=money) and attention.

    11. Re:What about my bandwidth? by rootofevil · · Score: 1

      wow i didnt know that, and here i thought i was just being a decent fellow.

      also, i dont block google ads, as they are not intrusive. but since i know im not going to click on them, i might just add them to my list as well.

      thanks for the info.

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    12. Re:What about my bandwidth? by mikiN · · Score: 1

      How about 'image torrents'?

      Put the album thumbnails in the .torrent file, and put the images in all their sparkling hi-res glory in the files that make up the download proper. The only thing your site needs is a permanent 'master' seed for each album to make sure that less popular images remain available. Here I assume that people will use a modified client that can show the thumbnails (not implemented yet) and download individual files within a torrent (many slightly less bare-bones clients can do this nowadays).

      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
    13. Re:What about my bandwidth? by zidohl · · Score: 1

      I must say I'm impressed with trying to play the victim here. They're not forcing anything on you. There are plenty of websites out there that serve ads, but have never forced anything on me, because I chose not to visit them. Visiting a website is your choice, and unless there are ads on a website that you're for some reason required to visit then you're not the victim.

      If Slashdot didn't have ads, I'd probably have to subscribe to be able to see it at all. Now, if I'd have to pay a subscription fee to every website that I use regularly, I wouldn't be able to use the internet as a information source the way I do now.

    14. Re:What about my bandwidth? by brundlefly · · Score: 1

      > With a pipe, there ARE two ends to it you know.

      Aye, and one end is very hot! I avoid touching it with my mouth, and I recommend you do too.

    15. Re:What about my bandwidth? by Ankh · · Score: 1

      Well, I suppose I could host some 10,000 torrents, or generate them on the fly. Hard to test since my ISP uses packet shaping & filtering & NAT to stop bittorrent.

      And I still have to pay for bandwidth, just less of it (no, I can't host a server at home that gets a few million hits per month).

      But it's an interesting suggestion, thanks!

      Liam

      --
      Live barefoot!
      free engravings/woodcuts
    16. Re:What about my bandwidth? by dcam · · Score: 1

      With a pipe, there ARE two ends to it you know.


      Don't you mean tube?
      --
      meh
  47. I do not read newspaper's announcements by pfortuny · · Score: 0

    Even though they are there.

    Is this really scarily THE WRONG THING?

    Pedro.

  48. because obnoxious ads sure work well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    people that block ads are less likely to but things because of an ad- in effect even if they did see the ads it would be a waste of money to show the ads in the first place.

  49. pop-ups and annoying flash by mikesum · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With pop-ups and annoying flash ads that talk at you or play sound when I'm listening to music, I don't see a giant problem with blocking these. I also hate the stupid ads that use javascript to float over the content I'm trying to read. Lastly the hyperlink-every-other-word has to go too. I don't mind banner ads, text ads, ads between "the jump," or ads along the sides a la fark.

  50. online banks by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    We're told the old line "we use ads to pay for this web site", but what about online banks. We pay for that service, yet their web pages are still riddled with ads for their own services. How is that fair?

  51. that's not fair by hjf · · Score: 1

    With TV, at least I know when there's an ad, and I can switch channels. Many web pages open too many ads. Pop-ups, pop-unders, ads with sound, animations, video, ads that jump to your face and you can't close nor read the website. I read this news site, www.infobae.com, and I strongly advise you not to visit it without adblock.

    I'm fine with a banner here and there, but things have gotten nasty in the past few years. And not only that: one thing I really hate is websites that show you so many ads, they won't fit in one page, so they chop the article in tiny pages with more ads than text. Even the menu sidebar has more content than the article.

    Whatever, I'll just keep using adblock. I promise not to use adblock when you promise not to bother me with your ads. Sounds fair, right?

  52. Oh no! by xgr3gx · · Score: 1

    Does that mean uninstalling spyware/adware is theft?
    Quick, how do I reinstall my adware?
    Because I do love the convenince of getting pop-ups without even having to visit a web site. What a time saver.

    --
    Shameless plug alert: Game server control panel
  53. Don't really care by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    Spin all you want about how it is theft or immoral, but the advertising industry can collectively kiss my shiny white ass.

    So consider my ad blocking and commercial skipping as civil disobedience if that helps.

  54. Speakers off = theft? by echo465 · · Score: 1

    I normally use my computer with my speakers shut off, in no small part due to websites with advertising that makes annoying sound. I suppose that I'm guilty of 'theft of services' also? Aisle seat please.

  55. It is not my responsibility... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...to make someone's advertising effective. I'm not under any contract to view or respond to anything.

    What if I change the radio station during a commercial break? Did I just STEAL some music? Can I expect the RIAA or ASCAP to kick my ass?

  56. Printer friendly versions? by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 1

    Is it also immoral to link directly to a printer-friendly version of a c|net article that spans 20 pages consisting mostly of erratic ad insanity?

    Maybe that's why they've made the "printer friendly" link impossible to find.

  57. Message to arrogant spammers: by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

    You owe *ME* money, for all the bandwidth-reduction service I'm providing to you.

  58. No Pleasing people by psychicsword · · Score: 1

    First they complain about the ads and then there are people block firefox users because some people remove ads. Yes they are different groups of people but there is no pleasing everyone. The only thing that you can do is please the most amount of people without losing money. I personally use Adblock plus with the Filterset.G add-on but if I believe in supporting a website(such as slashdot) I will whitelist the site and voluntarily view the ads.

  59. ipcop using urlfilter add-on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i am a very happy ipcop firewall user and have over 10 ipcop's with the urlfilter add-on along with the shalla secure services. all ads are presented as blanks.

    since it takes time for our employee's to read the ads (if i hadn't blocked them), then i should bill the sponsors for our time.

    they are the ones that are stealing--stealing our time.

  60. hmm by Ryzzen · · Score: 1

    What if web sites started using one-time ads, or timed ads? Then once you've seen the ad, it will go away and not reappear again (at least until you delete your cookies). Then you could browse the rest of the site without annoyance, and the site owners would still get their revenue. Also, instead of tracking your browsing history, why not just display ads that have something to do with the site? If you're on the site, you're obviously interested in what's on it, otherwise you wouldn't be there. I think the targeted ads are just silly, especially since they're so off most of the time. It'd be much simpler and more effective if all sites just displayed ads relative to their content without having a script do it for them.

  61. Many analogies by J-1000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A casino has a cheap buffet because they *hope* you are going to gamble before/after you eat. You, being a clever person, attend the buffet and leave without spending a dime on the slot machines.

    Arby's has a "five for five" deal where you buy five items for five bucks because they *hope* you will spend five dollars instead of, say, two dollars. You, being a clever person, realize you only want two of the five items, so you spend $2.50 on two items and leave.

    Circuit City sells printers for only $30 because they *hope* you are going to pay $20 for a high-margin Monster Cable. You, being a clever person, buy the cheap printer and purchase a generic cable for $2 from Fry's.

    CNN.com offers their content for free because they *hope* you will click on their ads (or at least glance at them) while you visit. You, being a clever person, ignore the ads or disable them outright.

    The point is, any free or below-cost business model is a risk that the provider has accepted, and they are inherently providing these extra "benefits" at *no obligation* to the consumer. If the provider isn't willing to run the risk of people not following their suggestions, then it is time to turn that suggestion into an obligation (pay websites, or otherwise restricted-access websites). This is not a morality issue for the consumer, it is a business issue for the provider.

    1. Re:Many analogies by shoolz · · Score: 1

      I don't have mod points today but if I did, ++ for you good sir.

    2. Re:Many analogies by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Arby's has a "five for five" deal where you buy five items for five bucks because they *hope* you will spend five dollars instead of, say, two dollars. You, being a clever person, realize you only want two of the five items, so you spend $2.50 on two items and leave.

      Actually, they do it just because of what you say - they will make more money selling 2 items to people who only want that and 5 items to people who want 5 but won't pay $6.25 for them - by offering bundles they are able to get a greater combined revenue - if they sold them at $1 they'd still get the % sale but only $2 from you - this way they get 50 cents more.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    3. Re:Many analogies by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      Actually, they do it just because of what you say - they will make more money selling 2 items to people who only want that and 5 items to people who want 5 but won't pay $6.25 for them - by offering bundles they are able to get a greater combined revenue - if they sold them at $1 they'd still get the % sale but only $2 from you - this way they get 50 cents more.
      You're right, that one was a bad example. Let's replace it with Baskin Robbins having a "free cone" day.
    4. Re:Many analogies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A casino has a cheap buffet because they *hope* you are going to gamble before/after you eat. You, being a clever person, attend the buffet and leave without spending a dime on the slot machines.

      Arby's has a "five for five" deal where you buy five items for five bucks because they *hope* you will spend five dollars instead of, say, two dollars. You, being a clever person, realize you only want two of the five items, so you spend $2.50 on two items and leave.


      Your argument is false. To be "clever" implies intelligence, and no one with intelligence would eat at a casino buffet or Arby's.

    5. Re:Many analogies by ampathee · · Score: 1

      Me too!
      Very well put, and sums up my own view probably better than I could.

  62. Those people would not click anyway by dindi · · Score: 1

    OK, this is really over-hyped IMO too.

    If your site is getting revenue from expressions, maybe you have a point, but then again, if you can make money on just expressions, then you run something big anyway.

    If your site gets revenue after clicks or "per action" (signup, purchase) then you are not losing anything on these guys anyway:

    Why ? Because they block your ad not to see it. If they block it, they would not click on it in the first place, thus you would not make a revenue wether the ad is displayed or not.

    + you save bandwidth for yourself and the ad network serving the usually large and annoying flash ads.

    Just for the record : i do not use ad blocking, but some ads on sites my wife visits drive me crazy. Her unattended browser would constantly pull large images from sites even when the browser is idle ..... just plain stupid ..... honestly i am not sure if the ads or the site content does that all the time, but I saw ads do that. Also the constant pinging of browsers with timed ajax req-s can have the same effect when you have 10+ sitting in tabs....

    just my 2c

  63. I rarely adblock by Reapman · · Score: 1

    I generally leave ad's on, I don't care if there's a banner at the top of the page or somet stuff on the side, it doesn't make a difference to me and yes, hosting websites are never free, someone has to pay for the bandwidth and salaries of someone keeping the site up. If someone provides me a free service, and makes their revenue by showing a banner, so be it.

    Only in cases where it is extremely annoying or in your face, stuff like popups, sound, or where the adserver is so slow it make an impact on serving (i refuse to sit and wait literaly a minute for each page load just so I can ignore an Ad.. let's see "open page" wait a minute "click search" wait a minute "search" wait a minute "find out it's not what i wanted, click search again" wait a minute yadda yadda) The morality of that may be questionable, but that's what I do.

  64. hey advertisers, adapt! by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

    Maybe banner ads aren't the best thing. Maybe adds that move, flash, blink, block my mouse, interrupt my article, play videos, and use up my bandwidth are not appealing.

    Maybe, just maybe, you can mention your product without annoying people. You might have to think on this one, and I know your ideas are usually bad based off the quality of advertising I see, but it might be a better use of those grey cells than calling people thieves.

    Here's a simple idea. Put 'brought to you by Acme' in the Title of the page. That wouldn't annoy me. What's wrong with Slashdot: news for nerds, stuff that matters. (sponsored today by Pepsi).

    A nice simple text line that doesn't make people want to destroy you, but gets their subconscious thinking about a delicious sugary drink.

    The future of TV may be product placement and quick 'brought to you by' messages. Don't fight tivo and other improvements, It makes the medium you are advertising on more attractive

    just my 2 cents.

    --
    "I only speak the truth"
    Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
  65. Who will be the first... by Forthan+Red · · Score: 3, Funny

    Who will be the first to write a Firefox extension to block the Firefox blocking? Gentlemen, start your coding!

    1. Re:Who will be the first... by wm_brant · · Score: 1
      Instead of just an ad blocker, how about creating a modified 'ad blocker' that still *does not* display the ads, but also feeds ad 'clicks' (user adjustable from 1 - 1000) for every ad on the page back to the advertiser. If necessary, it can also fill out subsequent forms with user-configurable garbage data.

      This way, everybody wins!

      The website gets lots of ad revenue.

      The person who actually wants to view the content can do so without any intrusive/annoying/distracting ads

      The company sponsoring the ad will be pleased by how 'effective' their ad campaign is.

      -- Bill

    2. Re:Who will be the first... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      // ==UserScript==
      // @name           Danny Buster
      // @namespace      danny_buster
      // @description    Busts the redirection to wnyfirefoxisblocked.com
      // @include        *
      // ==/UserScript==

      if (document.createRange) {
          var d = "<script>document.all = \"Hello, Danny Carlton\";</script>";
          var r = document.createRange();
          r.setStart(document.getElementsByTagName("html")[0], 0);
          document.body.appendChild(r.createContextualFragment(d));
      }

  66. It doesn't matter by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

    Webmasters will simply start being forced to do the full content in a flash application, so that ad and content cannot reliably be separated. ... and it will become completely unreadeable for blind or otherwise disabled people. But hey, as long as YOU don't get disturbed, right ?

    1. Re:It doesn't matter by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      If they do that they'll find that their content is actually worth quite a bit less than they deceived themselves into thinking.

      Actually, that might be a good thing. It would sure help to weed out the useless sites. We wouldn't even have to ask Google to exclude the all flash sites for us -- they'd exclude themselves!

  67. webmasters sniffle sniffle by dkarma · · Score: 1

    Even if i do see the ads the webmaster doesn't get paid unless i click and i'm not stupid enough to click ads EVER.
    NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO MAKE MONEY OFF ADS it is completely optional
    What about the tons of sites that are 100% ad free.
    Seems to me that if you run a site for the purpose of making money off of ads you're a scumsucking assbag.

  68. low bandwidth... by cli_rules! · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Currently, I'm forced use a low bandwidth connection (not dialup, but close). Not having to download all those adverts makes it *much* easier to get things accomplished. Firefox has been a godsend for me.

    I hope they don't forget about bona-fide modem users, when banning Firefox and similar technology just to suit the marketers.

  69. No moral obligation to view ads. by Butisol · · Score: 0

    This has to be one of the stupidest discussions ever opened on Slashdot.

  70. Ads are only worth as much as the market allows by CaptainPatent · · Score: 1

    It's not theft to prevent download of ads, it's a market response.

    Lets say a company wants to advertise and pays x amount for an ad run that's annoying and intrusive. As a result, it gets fewer hits and results in an ad revenue of y where y is much less than x. the gap between x and y are both a fault of the company for:
    A. poorly executing an ad causing a market reaction and
    B. overpaying for an ad-slot that may not have been worth that much in the first place.

    The market always and always should have a right to react.

    --
    Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
  71. Bean^H^H^H^H Bit counting by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    But if I block all the ads, won't the web site have to serve me far less bits?

    On so many sites now the ads are the *bulk* of the served content in terms of raw bits.

    So by blocking ads, I save the web site time and money. Q.E.D.

    See, I can make hand waving arguments, too!

  72. Oh the humanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I run a website and I really couldnt care less about people blocking ads, perhaps thats because my site doesnt have any....

    Well how do I make any money ?

    I make money because the information on the site if of great use to academics and as a result they pay a subscription fee to access the information on my site.

    Simple principle which is ignored by the vast majority of sites which have built their tiny empires by selling virtual advertising, more fool them really, it's time they developed a real business model....

  73. Money for nothing? by trancemission · · Score: 0

    How is using ad-blocking software different from immediately placing paper adverts straight in the [recycling] bin? Or skipping the adverts in the newspaper? Or ignoring all billboards etc..?

    Why should people profit just because I clicked on a link? Because capitalism rocks? Because we all want to make money as easliy and quickly as possible?

    Bandwidth costs have been always been around - a website is very rarely a beast which simply makes money by having a website - you need to provide something people are willing to pay - not something people are willing to read and click on a link - a website is really just another form of advertising in itself [even if you have an online shop and no brick/mortar] - advertising always costs money [whether that bandwidth costs or printing costs]. If you are selling something people must be willing to pay for it for you to make a profit- otherwise find something else to offer. Don't write a 'blog' and add some ad-words.

    Oh and stealing resources? Pot calling kettle black? How much is a CPU cycle worth and a kb of memory? The amount of cycles and kb I have had stolen from me in my time by flash adverts...................

  74. How the web works by isomeme · · Score: 1

    This entire issue seems absurd to me. There is nothing that requires me (technically or ethically) to download or view any part of any website. If I browse using Lynx, I won't see any graphical ads -- does that make Lynx, or the use of it, unethical? If I'm visually impaired and using accessibility tools to access the web, odds are I'll miss the graphical ads. Is that unethical?

    Anyone can write a web client, and make it do whatever they want to render or otherwise process web content. If I want to write a client that replaces every occurrence of the word "the" with "ocelot", there's no technical or legal obstacle in my way. Similarly, if I want to strip anything that looks like an ad, that is between me and my tools.

    If a website needs revenue, let it make its case to me, and I'll pay for it -- through a formal subscription, or donations -- if I agree. I've paid for web content using both subscriptions and donations. What shouldn't be done is to attempt to warp the entire technical and ethical basis of the web to help people enforce a particular rendering model just because they wrote a bad business plan.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a skull.
  75. Blame the advertisers by gone.fishing · · Score: 1

    If the ads weren't so obnoxious and if the ads did not contain the threat of information theft, spyware, and other issues then I and many others would not see the need to find ways to block the ads. If I did not want webmasters to earn their keep by selling ads, then I would not visit sites like Slashdot.org!

    As a consumer on the web, I feel like I am entitled to a certain degree of annonimity and privacy. This is why I abhor spyware, trojans, and other malware which are occasionally delivered by pop-ups and even banner ads. Until there is some way to guarantee that I am being given the privacy I desire and the security I demand, then I am entitled to use tools to help me assure that my privacy and security remain intact. Sadly, my Windows machines have entire suites of software installed to help assure me that I am safe. Sadly, some of these tools actually detract from my surfing experience. Web-bugged pictures show up as red X's and sometimes, I would really like to see these pictures.

    When the web is less like the wild wild west and is more civilized, then maybe I will not need so much protection but then, it will be so plain and uninspiring that I will probably not feel the need to visit it so much.

  76. Do the Math by Andy_R · · Score: 1

    If

      Websites are paid per click
      I never click adverts
      Bandwidth costs money

    Then surely I'm saving site owners money when I opt-out of ads?

    --
    A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
  77. Then Myspace is out. . . by n2art2 · · Score: 1

    "1. Have sound. If it does your so forever block from my browser and wallet its not even funny"

    Can you tell that to all the stupid silly people on myspace that think everyone wants to hear the same crappy song that they like, just because you view their page?

    What ever happened to opt in.

    --
    Self proclaimed wannabe geek. You know how it is. Most of us who read this stuff probably fit in that category.
  78. Clearly, the only solution ... by foobsr · · Score: 1

    ... to the problem is mandatory use of software prescribed by those whith ethics beyond any shade of doubt.

    From the top of my mind: government, MS, RIAA&Co, SONY, Verizon, ...

    CC.

    --
    TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
  79. the morality doesn't matter by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i don't know about morality. i just know how things will play out if more people ad block: ads will get more annoying

    how?

    well, it's an arms race: if ad blocking tech impacts enough site views to impact the bottom line significantly, then the ads will simply impregnate themselves into the page in a way that the ad blocker can't block them. and then ad blocker tech will seek to sniff out that, and ads will get even more insidious: an arms race, ad nauseum

    but that bring us to a horrible conclusion: those who use ad blocking software, in the end, only serve to make ads even more insidious and annoying, for everyone, not just themselves

    those who serve us webpages have the right to serve us whatever they like. and if we don't like what we see, if the ads are too intrusive, we won't visit. we have the right to go to whatever page we like. the problem is, serving us completely ad free content is not possible, as it costs money to serve pages. therefore, there will be ads, there will always be ads, and you should simply make peace with that. but no, some people will use ad blocking software

    well then, it is beholden upon sites to fight back if the ad blocking presence is large enough. any site that doesn't fight the ad blockers, loses revenue to sites they are competing with who successfully fight ad blockers. therefore, the sites with less intrusive ads lose out to sites with more intrusive ads DRIVEN BY THE AD BLOCKING VIEWERSHIP. eventually, those who don't successfully fight ad blocking become a smaller and smaller part of the websurfing pool

    ergo, those who use ad blocking software only make the websurfing experience less enjoyable for all of us, by making ads even more intrusive. a perverse truth

    if there were NO ad blockers of any substantial quantity, then the sites could relax on how intrusive their ads were. in fact, websurfing trends would reinforce that: if the ads are too intrusive, the sites will lose viewing public, thereby driving sites to employ less and less intrusive ads

    less ad blocking software=less intrusive ads

    so again, i don't know about morality, i just know about playing out scenarios. and ad blocking software is bad, for purely strategic reasons, not moral reasons

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the morality doesn't matter by kie · · Score: 1

      Here is an alternative line of reasoning...

      It may be that if adverts are not being viewed by those browsing the site,
      that the person or company running the site may decide that it is not worth
      putting adverts up on the site.

      If more people view adverts rather than block them, isn't that going to
      encourage more sites to fill their pages with adverts?

      As an aside, I would wager that the majority of sites online are not dependent
      on this type of advertising revenue.

      --
      living the dream
    2. Re:the morality doesn't matter by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      So if you just shut up and and ignore it, it's not so bad when someone steals your wallet or their dog pees in your shoes at the beach?

    3. Re:the morality doesn't matter by EEBaum · · Score: 1

      HA! The ads became intrusive many years ago, when the first monkey begged to be punched, when the first flash ad danced across my screen thereby obscuring text, when the first ad made a sound upon page loading, when the first popups for porn and X10 cameras littered my screen.

      More obnoxiously still, a considerable percentage of ads cause significant delay in my getting to the page I want to get to, due to the sheer ridiculous slothery of the servers hosting the ads, so I end up WAITING a good long time for the ad itself to load.
      Ad-blocking is my response to those, which crossed the intrusiveness barrier YEARS before I used ad-blocking software. Heck, animated gifs are at the borders of taste/intrusiveness.

      If it was all fast-loading static (or non-nasty) graphics and text, I probably wouldn't have been driven to use ad-blockers. Heck, I clicked on and bought things through lots of the non-irritating ads on the sides and tops and bottoms of screens. I found them helpful. However, the intrusive ones put me over the edge and ruined it for everyone.

      They started it.

      --
      -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
  80. More cheese with that whine?? by anagama · · Score: 1
    It seems to me that websites can be broken down into several large categories, such as:
    • Stores: online shops -- earn money via retail model.
    • Vanity: random people posting random stuff, the owner covers hosting charges (my site for example). Sometimes the info is entertaining or informative but YMMV. Often covers niche material.
    • "Newspaper/Magazine" model: people trying to shoehorn the dead tree newspaper/magazine advertising model into a digital era.
    The profit avenue for stores is obvious -- sell stuff at a profit. For the vanity sites, it's a non-issue. As for the "advertising" sites trying to be digital newspapers/magazines or whatever, I feel absolutely no sympathy whatsoever. Think about it, when you buy a magazine, or pick up the paper left by the previous customer at your favorite lunch counter, do you actually read the ads? If yes, don't install blocking software. If you have trained yourself to be blind to the ads, then so be it -- nobody would accuse you of "stealing" when you automatically bypass the chaff.

    Personally, I think the "ad blocking" has always gone on in people's minds. The difference in the internet world is that it is more obvious that people are blocking out ads. Just like when people surf the internet at work, it is easy to see that the worker is wasting time. Pre-internet, that worker was just daydreaming while staring at something on his desk. The time was just as wasted back then, but tracking was hard. Ads in papers/magazines are similarly blocked in the mind, but tracking that data is impossible. Tracking it on the net though, that gives companies stats and something to whine about.

    They can bite my flash blocking ad blocking popup blocking script blocking fat hiney.
    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  81. Thank you for blocking me. Really! by Ambiguous+Coward · · Score: 1

    If only viewing selected portions of a web page is theft, mightn't the web page using up my valuable bandwidth with un-wanted ads also be considered theft?

    If sites are blocking users for using Firefox because of ad-blocking capabilities, big deal. Go ahead and do it. Here's why: if your site is so dependent on ad-based revenue to stay afloat, it probably isn't offering any service I'm terribly interested in. That is to say, the value of your website must be less than the value of the ads you are serving. Therefore, your site exists primarily to serve ads. This is not a service I have an interest in, and I thank you for recognizing that and redirecting me elsewhere. On the other hand, if the value of your website is inherently greater than the ads you serve, there is no need to get upset about me not viewing your ads.

    What about free websites that don't generate revenue on their own, such as Joe-Blow's blog? (I guess there probably is a Joe-Blow's blog somewhere...oh well.) There are ways to generate support-funds besides banner ads. I know this may seem insane, but it's possible. People have done it before (there was a time before the internet, you know.) If the content on your website is actually valuable, *someone* is willing to pay for it, or at the very least, sponsor it, so that you can provide it for free. What's that, you say? Nobody finds your content worthwhile enough? Then perhaps it's not, and you should consider finding a new hobby besides posting pictures of your friend's cat to your blog, or posting videos of you (*so* uncomfortably) hamming it up for the camera in your new MacBook.

    Long story short: if your content is so bad that it's not worth the ads that support it, I don't want to see it, and you can go ahead and block me. Else, if your content is so worthwhile that the ads are not necessary to keep it available, suck it up and accept the overhead.

    -G

    P.S. Almost forgot: I usually use Safari. :P
    P.P.S. I may get flamed from each side on this one. No, I did not make a complete and logical argument up there. I'm at work, so you can only expect so much. :)

    --
    Their may be a grammatical error, misspeling, or evn a typo in this post.
  82. Immoral in some cases... by ral315 · · Score: 1

    As far as I'm concerned, it's not immoral to block the insidious ads that divert attention from the main content. As such, I use the hosts file to block particular ad domains that I'm bothered by. As far as I'm concerned, that's helping the website - by blocking the ads, I'm more likely to read the content in full, and possibly go there more often, perhaps even tell other people about it (and those people are a lot less likely to block ads at all). But I don't block non-intrusive ads (Google ads and other textual ads, as well as some flash ads), because they don't affect my viewing at all. Morally, I believe that it's wrong to punish a website that shows me ads that I will notice, but not be hypnotized by (spank the monkey, shoot Osama in the face, etc.), because the website is actively trying to find ways to make money without annoying its customers.

  83. As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by dada21 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a publisher of a variety of blogs and a hoster of dozens of forums, javascript-based advertising accounts for nearly 30% of our income. Another 30% is based on direct advertising or link-sales along with paid-for-articles (which we fully disclose), and the rest is made up by subscriptions.

    We openly advertise that our ads are blockable, and that users who are not interested in ads SHOULD block them. For us, users who are not interested in the advertisers products should block the ads so that our click-through rate is actually higher. When one of our users blocks ads they won't click, our CTR goes up. When our CTR goes up, our direct customers pay MORE for the outreach than if we forced ads on everyone, even those who don't want ads.

    We've been slowly updating our sites to actively disable ads for anyone who logs in and sets their ads to "none" (even if they aren't subscribers). Again, this is no concern to us.

    The clicks we do provide to our advertisers are generally good clicks, with users interested in the site or product. This makes our site even more valuable, as we have had more than a few dozen advertisers submit bids for our sites specifically, rather than just random appearances because of the site being "on topic" for the ads. Directly bid ads get us a LOT more CPC or CPM (sometimes in the $1-$2+ range), so again it is good that non-interested readers would disable ads, making our click-through even higher for those direct ads.

    Considering that we're making a decent 5 figures annually, more than 1/2 of that from direct advertisers rather than random AdSense ads, I think it's a win-win situation. Users who like what we write will either pay, or accept ads. Users who don't want ads don't display them, but they still give us a profit by being responsive to things written via e-mail or combox responses. I'd rather get 5 minutes of a person's time to respond than $0.15 for some random ad click.

    When you run an ad-sponsored site, you have two choices: get a lot of crappy traffic and get low CPM (barely covering your hosting cost), or get GOOD limited traffic and get a high CPM from those accepting ads (or getting a profit through a subscription or an intellectual profit from a reply or an e-mail).

    1. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Exactly. People seem to not be able to grasp the simple premise that it costs an ad network money to show ads (bandwidth and their own server infrastructure and so on). Logically if clicks and everything else are equal the more impressions you have the less they can pay you as they need to cover their own cost of showing the ads.

    2. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. People seem to not be able to grasp the simple premise that it costs an ad network money to show ads (bandwidth and their own server infrastructure and so on). Logically if clicks and everything else are equal the more impressions you have the less they can pay you as they need to cover their own cost of showing the ads.

      Plus I am aware that most advertising middle men (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, in most cases) also manually check sites with high click-through ratios (I believe over 4%). If the site is obviously spam or low quality traffic, the manual check allows the middle man to downgrade the payout for future clicks. A _lot_ of spam site hosts are frustrated because their high incomes are getting slaughtered.

      For us, we LOVE those who block ads, and we'll continue to love them, too. Geeks are MUCH more likely to respond to an article, post or opinion -- those responses increase our likelihood of maintaining repeat readers, gaining new readers, or proposing new topics of discussion based on those comments and replies. As I said in the OP, I'd rather someone spent 5 minutes replying to me than gain 15 cents from a click. That reply could make dozens or hundreds of dollars in the future from new articles written, or search engines finding that response and placing it highly in the future.

    3. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Although I do use AdBlock and NoScript I have to say that this publisher is right on in his analysis. If I were a publisher and the advertisers wanted to pay me based soley upon "impressions" then I would tell them to get lost. The other server operators and publishers should pay attention to this guy. If his content is good and there are lots of good comments then not only am I going to spend more time on his site, possibly leaving a comment or two and further enhancing his Google search rank, but I *might* actually add him to my whitelist in AdBlock and NoScript (and believe me...that is a *very* elite group of sites on my client). I say more power to him for adroit handling of his advertising contracts and smart approach to building readership and community on his web properties. He will reap the rewards of his winning strategy.

    4. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by gaspyy · · Score: 1
      Finally - a sane attitude from someone who understands ads.
      Two things to have in mind:
      1. People who block ads are less likely to click on ads anyway, so no revenue is lost;
      2. It's better to have less impressions than a lower click-through ratio, so people who have no intentions of clicking do the advertisers a favour if they block ads.

      If you have 1000 impressions and just 10 clicks, the CTR ratio is 1%. If you have 100 impressions and 10 clicks, CTR is 10% and - more importantly - you earn more for each click.
    5. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by dada21 · · Score: 1

      He will reap the rewards of his winning strategy.

      So do the customers I maintain blogs and information diaries for. When I said "we" I didn't necessarily only mean my extreme-anarchist blogs, but the information sites I maintain for my commercial clients. The biggest frustration I see with commercial clients is that they want every hit to register even if the person hitting them is blocking ads and investing an hour a month responding to their ("my") entries. Ugh.

      Of course, if every publisher mimicked my thoughts on ad-blocking, my market and income would decrease, so maybe it's a good thing that the typical publisher-sucker is ignoring the profit (financial and informational) potential of adblocking readers.

    6. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by dada21 · · Score: 1

      If you have 1000 impressions and just 10 clicks, the CTR ratio is 1%. If you have 100 impressions and 10 clicks, CTR is 10% and - more importantly - you earn more for each click.

      In the long run, with GOOD referrals, yes. If all your referrals are MySpace or from sites with low pagerank or low authority, then your CPC can fall significantly.

      The only sites I can imagine who are REALLY anti-ad blockers are those sites who truly make good money on CPM (cost per impression) rather than CPC. CPM sites can also be churn sites (hoping for millions of hits of 1 or 2 pages rather than considerably fewer hits that go deeper into their site).

      The CPC on my personal blogs has increased significantly over time, but that is due to positive traffic. The best CPC seems to be from visitors with NO referrer (ie, coming to the site via a bookmark or manually entering the URL), but this may just be a short time discrepancy rather than a truism.

      Of course, if your site is garbage, and is associated with highly-competitive key phrases (think "make money fast" or "paris hilton"), you'll earn almost nothing even with high traffic or decent referral sites.

    7. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Plus I am aware that most advertising middle men (Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, in most cases) also manually check sites with high click-through ratios (I believe over 4%). If the site is obviously spam or low quality traffic, the manual check allows the middle man to downgrade the payout for future clicks. A _lot_ of spam site hosts are frustrated because their high incomes are getting slaughtered. Well I know that Yahoo and if I remember Google as well (not sure about Microsoft) have systems in place to pay less per click for traffic from low quality sites. These are presumably (or in a large part at least) are automatic or close to automatic with quality being determined on some metrics (conversions being one).
    8. Re:As a publisher and an advertiser: so what? by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      The only sites I can imagine who are REALLY anti-ad blockers are those sites who truly make good money on CPM (cost per impression) rather than CPC. CPM sites can also be churn sites (hoping for millions of hits of 1 or 2 pages rather than considerably fewer hits that go deeper into their site). Well from an advertisers point of view there are cases where impressions are almost move important than clicks althrough I think it's not that common. In a branding campaign (not sure if that is the proper term) where a large advertiser wants people to be aware of them even if they don't act on that awareness right then and there. This is akin to the classical type of advertisement for large companies where no direct contact information is provided in the ad. For example an ad for toilet paper isn't expected to make you suddenly jump up and buy toilet paper of that brand but rather to make you more likely to buy that brand when you finally go to buy toilet paper. I think that's the gist of it, not sure as I haven't dealt much with that sort of thing.
  84. users pay for bandwidth too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. If anything the cost of bandwidth is shared (in fact skewed towards the user)

    2. I'd ignore the adverts anyway so I am saving everyone money and making the website owner look better (on a cpc basis).

    3. Web advertising is way to expensive and too intrusive for the end user - (i'd say yes to small text but when ur serving up a 500K flash video no thanks)

    4. since when did the 'hard working' content suppliers have any significant costs - bandwidth and hosting is cheap.

  85. I tell you what by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1
    I'll disable adblock plus as soon as advertisers agree to the following restrictions:
    1. No pages where the ad content makes the page take longer than 2 seconds to load
    2. No ads that make noise
    3. No popups or popunders
    4. No ads that aggravate my epilepsy
    With all of the adblockers out there, have you noticed that nobody tries to block google's ads? They'd be easy to block, yet no one blocks them. The reason is that they are
    1. relevant
    2. don't irritate the user
    Take the lesson, online advertisers. Take the lesson.
    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  86. Thanks! I didn't know about this tool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I must say, it's extremely effective. It even blocks the ads on Slashdot.

  87. Wait one hootinanny moment there ... by Stooshie · · Score: 1

    If I've got this right and understood the article properly:

    Clients who don't like ads and use firefox can install an add-on to block ads. This denies advertisers the chance to sell their wares to those users.

    So, in resoponse, advertisers are blocking all firefox users, which means denying them the chance to sell their wares to all firefox users.

    Weird logic. F(Firefox users) is a subset of A(All users). The subset of (F) called B(Blocking users) decide to block our adverts, so in response we are going to block the set of users (F) which is larger than the subset of users (B) that were missing our ads in the first place?

    --
    America, Home of the Brave. ... .and the Squaw.
  88. Question for Adblock users... by mattgreen · · Score: 1

    Just curious, do any Adblock users ever feel guilty about using it indiscriminately? Because I sure don't. And I tend to feel guilty about a lot of things that some other people don't (it sucks). I rather enjoy living a mostly commercial-free life, between DVR, DVDs, and ad-free web browsing. The world seems so much...quieter? Not quite the right word, but it is close enough. I think I probably rationalize it by saying to myself, "advertising is only becoming more and more commonplace, so I'm going to push back however much I can."

  89. Flash ads cause performance problems in Firefox. by Malkin · · Score: 1

    I strictly block Flash ads, and I block them because too much Flash turns the otherwise mild-mannered Firefox into a lumbering, resource-munching behemoth. If you want me to see your ads, don't use Flash. It's that simple.

  90. No, its not theft... by KoshClassic · · Score: 1

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    By that logic, isn't the website designer engaged in theft too? The designer is earning revenue by sending me unwanted ads that consume bandwidth (and the electricity to run my PC during that time, the CPU cycles consumed by displaying that ad, etc) that I'm paying for. Same for Radio / TV - they use electricity with their unwanted ads.

    Advertiser supported content ceased to be a all-or-nothing / take-it-or-leave-it package deal as soon as people learned to skip over ads in the newspaper, change channels during commercials on the radio, fast forward commercials on thier VCR lately come TIVO. Is that theft? all that's happening now is that the web is catching up. Content providers will have to adjust - and by the way, historically they have adjusted: Short advertisements spoken during radio shows ("And now its time for the sports update brought to you by Roto Rooter!"), and on Television, banner ads / tickers / popups during the regular show and during the credits, billboards in sports stadiums that show up on TV during the game, etc.

    --
    Understanding is a three edged sword. - Ambassador Kosh Naranek, Babylon 5
  91. Not all ads are blocked. by king-manic · · Score: 1

    It's behavior shifting. Intrusive and flashy ads are blocked. Subtle Google Adwords are not.So the ad companies can just try to be less intrusive and they get through. You do popups, java overlays, annoying flash ads then you get blocked.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  92. Subject by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    Websites have ads now? You're pulling my leg.

  93. What? by AlanS2002 · · Score: 1

    So I should sit tight every time there's an ad break on the telly, cause otherwise I stealing network resources from broadcasters? Fuck off and get a life, seriously, if you can't get me to purchase your product without boring the shit of me (e.g., by actually having a product that is worth buying) what the fuck are you doing in business? Do you expect society to subsidise your incompetence, with their precious time, just so you can try and brain wash them to your brand name?

    --
    Not all conservatives are stupid,
    but it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
    - Hume
  94. NoScript offers a compromise by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    If the website owner feels it is necessary to use ads to support the cost of being on the internet, then the least they can do is avoid the flash "Bonk the _____ and get a ______" ads. If they aren't willing to do that then whether they like it or not I'm blocking their ads.

    I feel the same way. I'm okay with non-intrusive ads, and I do (admittedly rarely) click on them. However, a site full of pop-ups, flash ads, or (worse) flash ads with audio and video will NEVER earn an ad click from me. They'll usually never get a second visit from me.

    Given that criteria for what I'll accept, I find that you don't really need AdBlock. NoScript works well enough. Every single obnoxious ad requires either JavaScript, Java, Flash, or some combination thereof. If you don't white-list ad sites, then you'll never see the kind of ads that everybody hates while still rewarding people who use less obnoxious advertising.

    Animated GIF ads and interstitial ads can still be a problem, but 95%+ of bad actors are dealt with with NoScript. As a bonus, you keep yourself safe from JS and XSS attacks.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:NoScript offers a compromise by edbob · · Score: 1

      In Firefox, type "about:config" in the address bar. In the list that appears below, find "image.animation_mode". Double click on this and enter "none" in the dialog. No more animated GIFs!

  95. A wise man once said by e2d2 · · Score: 1

    Tough shit.

    It's not about "right". It's about reality. If the user wants to block your ads then tough shit. If your business fails then tough shit. If those same users cry when your site goes away tough shit.

    Why are modern businesses crying foul every time they think their god given right to revenue is endangered? You want capitalism but you don't want truly free markets? Tough shit.

  96. 'Freeload'? by Enry · · Score: 1

    Whereas TiVo users freeload on the relatively fixed broadcasting costs paid by TV networks,...

    Hold on right there skippy. My agreement with the cable company says that I pay them $x/mo and they pay each of the channels they provide some portion of that $x to provide the content for me. This includes channels that are part of my package that I wouldn't watch if I had a true a la carte structure (I'm looking at you, ESPN*). The cable company then provides me with content. If I don't want to watch the ads and the channels think they're not getting the revenue they need to keep operating, they can renegotiate their rates with the cable company, find another revenue stream, or quit broadcasting.

  97. Irritating ads by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

    The primary reason I disable Flash and block ads was due to the extreme annoyance of ads. Every now and then I'll visit a site which I don't have a block for and see those stupid jumping around ads which look like a Windows system notification with jumping beans embedded. I'm particularly vexed by flash ads with all their damn animations.

    A good ad should catch your attention with its message or an interesting design. Motion catches your attention, or more like, distracts you from reading content, which is defeating the site as well (how can you read their content if some jumping gif or flashy flash is constantly drawing your eyes toward it?) Be reasonable in regard to accepting ads and I won't block them. Allow disruptive crap and I'll do everything in my power to disable it.

    As for those dhtml or whatever they are, which place some object over the content until I click close or wait for it to expire, well, there's old browsers out there which won't understand that junk and I continue to use one, it's that or stop visiting the site because it's such a pain to access.

    Lastly, there's the bloat of this stuff. I'm still on a dial-up and have limited patience for downloading some 500K+ flash or animated gif.

    With the bloat of webpages these days, we are getting back to where we were in perception of speed, when the first 54Kbaud modems hit the shelves. Everything was so fast, but pages were tiny and didn't contain loads of unnecessary behind the scenes content generated by IDEs. At some point Broadband will appear choked and slow.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  98. Re:Send their kids to college... Come on... by JoeMarzen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Send their kids to college... Come on... That's the most irritating justification I can think of for your position. Why not just go ahead and make it people want to pay for their dying mothers cancer treatment. If you want to live in a market free from regulations, as you apparently do, then you have to accept people blocking ads as part of that. Not allowing it would be giving one side an unfair advantage. The owners of web sites have every right to stop posting new content to spite the ad blocking consumers.

  99. Web Adverting, is it right? by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

    Advertisers are trying hard to track you and employee ever more aggressive methods to do so. Is that right? I'm not blocking any ads, I'm blocking the method of tracking me. Let me see the ad while blocking and I'm fine with that. There is also the added benefit of not having to wait. Ads really do slow pages down allot. There is more to this issues, but I don't have time. Again I don't mind the ad, but their using my bandwidth, time, and computer to try to invade my privacy. It is right? Is it moral?

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  100. server based ad insertion by Arthur+B. · · Score: 1

    If the website owner decides to provide you access to his site on the condition you do not block ads, it is immoral to do so. Of course people still will block ads. I think ads are going to be more and more server based rather than included as banners or iframes. At the time the page is dynamically created on the server, it will query the adserver to know what to include. Of course it'll still be possible to block certain parts of the DOM, but this implies detecting ad, which can be tricky, especially if they mutate. An ad could even have an evolution based strategy where ad impressions are detected and the DNA of the ad is passed along to the server, this would automatically tailor fit ads to escape counter-measures. Tricky, tricky indeed. The ultimate way for an ad to sneak in is of course through product placement.

    --
    \u262D = \u5350
  101. Tell me of this ad-blocking software you speak of by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

    I've got adblock. While it's cut down on the number of ads I see here on Slashdot, some are still making it through. Someone got a better list to dump in the hosts table?

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  102. It' s not theft by Orig_Club_Soda · · Score: 1

    But it is cutting off the tail to spite the nose. Just like with other media, someone has to pay. Either its advertisers or subscribers. If people continue to block ads even sites like Slashdot may close or charge a fee. Some blogs like Engadget publicly regularly acknowledge the sponsorship on Fridays.

  103. Webmasters can get around it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And they will eventually if they get desperate enough and want to take the time. All they need to do is download the advertisement and supporting images on the server, replace some URLs and insert it into the page as part of the main content. Of course, this won't work very well for static pages, but for dynamic pages it would work fine. Of course, they won't get any revenue from it, but hey, if they REALLY like ads they can still show them.

  104. Not steaing, but potentially self defeating by GroundBounce · · Score: 1

    Blocking ads isn't stealing anymore than not viewing them would be stealing, but if there is a loss of revenue to the website operator, by not letting the ads show, you are risking putting your favorite websites out of business.

    Websites need to find a middle ground where ads are not so annoying that people block them. Personally, I can tolerate an ad that's inline in a web page, because it's easy to ignore, but I won't tolerate an ad that pops up a window on top of everything else.

    1. Re:Not steaing, but potentially self defeating by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Bingo. Remember that when ads started on the web they were mostly inline simple ads, a gif banner at the bottom or top. It was only when they started appearing everywhere, and then hijacking the browser that people became vigilant against them.

      Google style ads are fine IMHO. I've even clicked on a few to pursue learning about a service [for rizzle].

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  105. Two Words by crossb0nez · · Score: 1

    Public Domain.

    --
    Rule of Acquisition #19: Satisfaction is Not guaranteed.
  106. Diluted value by NOT blocking ads... by chrae · · Score: 1

    Advertisers risk the cost of using bandwidth in the hopes that a certain percentage of users will click on the ads, and of those, a certain number will purchase a product or service. Savvy users (those who install adblock software) tend not to click on ads anyway, so by using bandwidth to serve ads onto the unwilling, all they're doing is diluting the percentage of willing ad clickers.

    When Firefox users use adblock software, they're making a statement that they're not interested in ads in general (they're not receptive customers) so why waste effort and resources trying to reach them? When that segment of the market has opted themselves out, those that remain are a more valuable market that advertisers can spend less resources to reach. This would allow advertisers to now pay more per click to reach a more receptive audience. These advertisers will still have a budget to pay websites, it's just that the "value per click" is increased.

    How is this immoral?

  107. Is browsing or window shopping theft? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

    I often go to physical stores to compare items like appliances and furniture. Am I stealing from them, if I spend an hour talking with a sales rep ( The store has to pay for cooling/heating plus rent) and don't buy anything from them? ( I actually had a car salesman tell me I was stealing by not purchasing a car from them after 3 or 4 test drives.) I don't really see how this is any different. I can name countless other scenarios where business expect my actions to result in their profits, but I don't commit those actions ( paying off credit card every month, trial offers, ect). The sites I willingly visit that I trust, I usually want to see the ads, as they sometimes advertise things I want in a non obtrusive manner. So no I don't feel its ever theft to block ads. Stealing personal information and tracking users, now thats a crime.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
  108. The answer is simple by Stumbles · · Score: 1

    There is no morality in advertisement. The folks in marketing are of the lowest scum on the earth. They lie. There is no law nor should there be that says I must watch some form of advertisement. A business should have no rights like an individual.

    --
    My karma is not a Chameleon.
  109. I pay for the bandwidth and time to load by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    When that equation changes and the ads take zero bandwidth and zero time to load (=opportunity cost*), we'll talk. Until then, you're advertising on my nickel.

    *yes, I TiVo everything I watch and - unless it has entertainment value - I skip the ads. Which brings up a good point - if the advertising is valuable to me, either via direct applicability or entertainment, it gets reveiwed. For the record, trying to punch the money is neither applicable nor entertainment. At least not where I surf.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  110. I am so glad... by Bonewalker · · Score: 1

    this came up because I was wondering how to get rid of that annoying advertisement at the top of every slashdot article. Installed afore mentioned blocker, and wala. Thanks Zonk!

    1. Re:I am so glad... by ampathee · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I can't help myself. It's spelt "voila".

  111. It's not a theft of resources. Here's why. by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

    Here's the business model (really simplified):
    Advertising Company says they'll pay for x% of the bandwidth depending upon how many of the users click on their ads (the higher portion of users that do so, the higher percentage of the bandwidth they'll pay).

    Web creator puts the website, available for free, on the web. They don't have ANY contract with the user that they will view their site. The user (surprise) blocks the ads. The user is breaking no rules. The user also isn't necessarily costing the web creator money (thats like assuming every pirated song is a lost sale). The content is free and there's no obligation to download the entire site.

    HOWEVER, if there is an entry web page that one must go through and agree to a user license that states it will not block ads (or, even further, could say they have to click on x amount of ads) and you click OK, then YES, you are stealing resources. You're entering a contract and not delivering on your end.

    But, I've yet to see this set up. All I've seen are people asking nicely, "Please visit our sponsors. blah blah blah."

    Blocking ads (or even just not clicking ads) is akin to not putting any money in the suggested donations box when you go to the museum. The web creator is basically making each ad a suggested donation. Until they say its NOT just a suggestion, then its not theft.

  112. URL is data reference not multimedia presentation by RichMan · · Score: 1

    A URL is a reference to a bunch of data. A client can do what it wants with that URL and the data it finds at that URL usually with the appropriate protocol.

    A URL is not a push to the client of a specific multimedia presentation.

    This is a welcome to the information age for the advertisers, this is not television, the clients can use the information supported by the protocol how they like.

    The medium is the message and the information providers need to get this message about the medium used. (if that makes any sense)

  113. P2P, Tivo, etc. arguments all over again... by Eosha · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that this is fundamentally the same argument and counterargument that's been heard a hundred times...

    A: You're circumventing our business model! You're evil!
    B: That's because your business model annoys me and I have the technology to get around it. If you don't like it, find another business model.
    A: But... this is our business model! We'll keep the business model and try to find other ways to stop you from circumventing it.
    B: Didn't you learn before? Once technology has moved past your business model, there's no point in trying to hold it back.

    Same nonsense, different day.

    --
    I have a girlfriend whose name doesn't end in .JPG
  114. Blocked by Simple-Simmian · · Score: 1

    When the Adverts quit trying to run scripts and put cookies on my machine I will allow ads. I block 99% of the stuff with my Hosts file. Ads hosted on the Website are not blocked. Pops are blocked regardless.

    --
    If you don't like what I write don't be a CS and mod it down. Refute it.
    Yea I can't spell. So what is your point?
  115. You're all vermin... by LouTheTroll · · Score: 1

    Blocking ads isn't morally reprehensible... you're only thieving sons-of-you-know-whats when you don't buy the ad-pushers' products. Of course you need to be not blocking ads so that you can click through and have your money stolen by purchasing all of the crap that exists in with world and is marketed on the Internet... Just because they make products means you have to buy them... so as soon as you all get with the program, the world will be a better place.

    What I really mean to say is that the consumer should be in control of the content they consume (and this discussion should be about content). Of course, I know that's not the way the world works.

    Crawling back under my bridge...

  116. Here's a compromise by SethJohnson · · Score: 1



    How about this: AdBlock Plus is modified to request the ads separate from the rendered HTML as a background process. Two options controllable by the user- display them at the foot of the HTML page or don't display the ads at all. The web pages would still display as quickly as if AdBlock were operating as it does now.

    Here's the kicker to help web publishers: Another option within AdBlock could have the browser make background HTTP requests following the links presented by the ads. These http responses wouldn't be displayed- the data would be piped to /dev/null. It could also look at the returned html and request one or two links in that html so the advertisers get the sense that people followed the ad links and then looked around on their website. In order that the user's bandwidth isn't affected significantly, this function could have a user-controllable throttle of only 'clicking-through' on 1 out of X ads displayed.

    If this were implemented as a default functionality in AdBlock Plus, web publishers would see a significant increase in click-through revenue. By altering user-agent, etc. it would be hard to defeat on the advertiser side of things.

    Seth

  117. Re:Theft? Immoral? by dc29A · · Score: 1

    Blocking Firefox will be a very stupid move for many reasons:

    - Only a minority of FF users use ad blocking. Blocking FF = lost revenue, FF is already at very high usage % in many parts of the world.
    - By blocking FF because of ad blocking capabilities, it will only force people who hate ads to develop these capabilities for other browsers. In fact, scratch that. That capability already exists. Opera and Konqueror has built in ad blocking and there are plugins available for IE too. Oh and there is always the good ole' host file.
    - By repeatedly bitching about ad blocking (and blocking some browsers), it will only make the problem worse. Mr. John Smith who has never heard of ad blocking, might actually read about and use one.

    This is a war website publishers can't win.

  118. I really love this trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love this trend of businesses appealing to our morality to maintain their business models, while they spend millions to change/shape/subvert the law and screw their customers. On this playing field it's hard to feel bad about anything you might do.

    Granted, it's not completely applicable here. Websites cost money and deserve to be funded. So I'll just agree with all the comments posted that throwing a monkey in my face isn't the way to do it.

  119. Double-dipping? by Geekfather · · Score: 0

    I pay AT&T for my email account... through Yahoo. Yahoo serves me up ads when I check my email on the web. Every ad gets a "right click / Adblock image". I'm already paying them (way too much) for the service. I have ZERO reason to add to their revenue with a mis-click on an ad for something I don't even want.

    --
    It is as bad as you think and they really are out to get you.
  120. When I _can't_ go to the godammned site by coats · · Score: 2, Insightful
    All too frequently, I can't see the site I want because some damned-slow ad-server can't deliver its content in a timely manner, and that has the effect of blocking the content I want to see.

    PLONK! goes that ad-server's IP!

    --
    "My opinions are my own, and I've got *lots* of them!"
  121. I bet a guaranteed ad browser would work.. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    I could go to any web site, and say,

    a) your ads won't be blocked
    b) we can slot you into space for products
    c) we hold web sites to high standards
    d) we can integrate your offers directly into our browser.

    and then to consumers I can say:

    we've created a space where there's no malware, no spyware, no popup or malicious sites, no link farms, and you can choose to surf there for free, or, you can keep surfing on the regular internet - hope your anti-virus software is up to date!

    --
    This is my sig.
  122. morality, my ass by kyshtock · · Score: 1
    I am there for the content; if they want to support their business by ads, then they should serve ads that:

    are NOT obtrusive

    are at least likely to interest me

    What I see is a band of idiots thinking that it's their God given right to display ads on my screen... any ads, obtrusive ads, ads who make noise, who shake and what not.

    It's not me they are screwing, it's the advertiser. I will NOT click on obnoxious ads, and in the worst cases I will write a message to the webmaster(s) complaining and also publicly complain on blogs.

    Oh, I don't block ads by default because... I am lazy. However, on the first offence, the ads for the entire site get blocked.

    And, to bar the t, the appoteose of irony is a site heavily depending on ads to write an article how ad blockers are imoral, illegal, and give you the cooties!

    --
    Bite my shiny metal... oops... Nevermind!
  123. Calling it "theft" is ridiculous by bugnuts · · Score: 1

    In the end, a few things are clear: Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources. In the end, this is not so clear. TFA's conclusion has no support, just a bunch of "this is how it should be" comments, then the dramatic accusation of theft. TFA fails to mention that there's no requirement to view the webpage as they expect you to view it.

    The analogy to TV is not a good one, either, if they want to show it's theft of services. For instance, if I turn down the sound on my TV during commmercials, should the TV manufacturers be sued because I'm not listening to the commercials?

    I might use different browsers or a computer without sound. Or a browser without tables, or a browser without pictures. The lack of configuration, intrusiveness, and excessive catering to advertisers is exactly why I don't use Flash, either. Should elinks be sued, too, for not having any of those? In an evil world, I could see Microsoft backing this lawsuit, too.

    When a webpage is put online, the protocol instructs browsers to make several requests for other parts of the page. Simply not making those requests is like ignoring the "call 1-800-555-5555" repeated at the end of a commercial. Is not calling that number theft? Or perhaps it's like fast forwarding your time-lapsed show. But none of these examples are considered "theft".
  124. Is This A Pro Choice Issue? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    Who pays to use the Web? I pay to use the Web, not the other way around. When I come upon a Web page that has some distracting content, I will stay at that page longer if I can effectively ignore those distractions. I do not actively enter a web page to seek advertising of non related content. If I am interested in a product, then I will go to that products web page. If I am interested in products in general, I will go to a web page that contains information on those products in general; Both new and old. Content Blocking as a Morality Issue? Maybe the Web Master should ask the question, "Can I have repeat visitors if I piss them off?" There is a softer question I can ask, "What brought me to your web site? Your content, or those who advertised on your web pages?"

    "If you have many items for sale, and a customer asks for an item that you do not have; Then you have nothing." - Ancient Chinese Proverb

  125. Ads with embedded malware. by Panther+Silverelf · · Score: 1

    When the companies that provide the random banner ads to the multitude of website owners is able to completely police every advert they receive and verify it has no embedded malware in them, then we can start considering the moral and ethical issues of blocking ads.

  126. If it ain't working by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    time to change/evolve your business model. There are sites that I like to read but the owners of the site decided to plaster google adwords all over the fucking place. Then there are those fuckheads that try to make adword links look like links to pages on their site AND there is a hell lot of these website owners.

    If your ads depend on flash well thats your own problem. I dont have flash installed and dont want to install it.

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  127. Questionable by Luke+Dawson · · Score: 1

    If I am "stealing" their revenue by not downloading their ads, are they not "stealing" my bandwidth by forcing me to download them, i.e. can I start charging these ad providers for the bandwidth they are consuming that I am leasing from my ISP? Besides which, content providers don't own my eyes. If I don't want to see something, I am perfectly within my rights to block it. Can porn sites bitch because some people have parental controls that block their sites? Of course not, that would be ludicrous. What about services/products like Websense...aren't they "stealing" thousands of websites' revenue too? Sorry, but no content provider has any right to clutter up my computer with all that bullshit. I can't count the number of times my browser has crashed or come to a screeching halt because some asshat advertisement decided it wanted to display some shitty flash movie. Sorry, no sympathy here. If your business model is so flaky that you depend entirely on advertising to support your site, well, you almost deserve to go under.

  128. evolution of web advertising by chdig · · Score: 1
    When Adblock finally takes real market share away from advertisers, advertising will evolve and adjust to deal with it.

    I have no issue at all with Adblock, and wish that advertisers and those poor bloggers would stop complaining and start taking some action to deal with blocking apps! When spammers started getting blocked out by spam filters, was there a massive outpour of angry "woe is me" letters from the spammer communitiy? No, they just dealt with the problem and tried to get around the new filters.

    Adblock is also a filter system, and isn't perfect. So what could we (developers) do to get around it?
    • host ads on the same domain as the content. Not perfect, and would take some work, but toss the ads into a nondescript directory that also contains the main images for the site... this way, the directory can't be filtered out.
    • have a javascript check that will disable the rest of the site if it can't find an ad in its proper div
    I'm sure there's many ways of getting around the filters, but enough complaining already!!! If you've got a problem with Adblock, then do something about it (other than insanely cutting off all firefox users).

    Meantime, can we finally end this crybaby attitude that a perfectly legal system that takes an annoyance out of our lives is morally improper?!
  129. Look at that more. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Every gift would come with fine print, and everytime two humans exchanged *anything*, they'd have to thumbstamp a contract.

    That's it. If you set up a website, does the viewer have a reasonable expectation that it is a business as opposed to a "gift" or some kind of "loss leader"?

    If I buy a woman a drink, we all know what my goal is. And yet if that goal is not met, no one could say that she "stole" anything from me.

    If you put up a website, we do NOT know what your goal is. Therefore, you don't even meet the standards of me buying a drink for a woman.

    Demanding that I view all ads on all sites is just plain stupid. And calling it "theft" if I refuse is 100% wrong.
  130. Users ignore ads by athloi · · Score: 1

    As the eye-tracking studies done by Jakob Nielsen indicate, Users ignore anything that looks like an ad, quite effectively.

    Advertisers do better with subtle text advertising that matches the user's interests than they do with big spammy rollovers, pop-ups and other advertising that has only succeeded at all because of the steady flow of inexperienced users to the internet.

    1. Re:Users ignore ads by 6Yankee · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Unfortunately, they don't see it that way. Instead of making the ads more subtle and bearable (and less likely to be blocked), they start committing atrocities like inserting them into the content.

      Take airliners.net. They just got bought out, and the new crowd immediately slapped those damned IntelliTXT ads into the forum content.

      All hell broke loose, in part because it was handled so spectacularly badly. Nearly 300 replies later, there are still members threatening to sue because their content's been "modified without permission".

      But the management were forced into removing the abominations for logged-in users.

      The thread's an interesting insight into how users feel about these ads - not to mention a very amusing lesson into how not to do PR.

  131. Safari (Mac) and adblock software by anup_at_mac · · Score: 1

    Here's one adblock software that works with Safari on a Mac. Its just been a few days since I've installed and started using it ..... but surfing the net after that has been like a breath of fresh air.
    http://www.culater.net/software/PithHelmet/PithHelmet.php

    Its shareware, although you can click the "I paid" button in Pithhelmet preferences even if you haven't paid. I'm going to use this for a month and if it's smooth sailing, I'll be more than willing to doante the $10 that the website asks for. Have any of you come across a better alternative for Safari on Mac (not to be confused with the Windows version) --> free or otherwise?

  132. The NYT's Ethicist tackled this in 2002 by eli867 · · Score: 1
    Randy "The Ethicist" Cohen, writing in the New York Times way back in 2002:

    You have no duty to consume advertising. There is no implied agreement between you and the sponsor whereby the sponsor finances a Web site in exchange for your perusing a sales pitch. Advertisers know that many people will flip past a magazine ad or hit ''mute'' when a TV commercial comes on. That you have automated the avoidance of ads shows not ethical laxity but technological ingenuity.

    [...]

    If no one consumed advertising, it might in theory vanish along with the TV shows and Web sites it finances. However, other means of financing could be found. Public television relies on fund-raising and sponsorship; many European countries finance TV through taxes. Another possible outcome: your embargo raises the quality of ads, if such a thing is possible, so they seize your eye or stay your finger from the mute button.

    A likelier prospect, if many follow your lead: online advertisers will develop countertechnology to thwart this blocking. Then you'll overcome their advance, and they'll return to their labs, creating a rivalry like that of early last century when designers of artillery shells vied with designers of battleship armor. Each spurred the other to greater achievements. A result was World War I. O.K., maybe that isn't a happy result, but progress of a sort was made. And without anybody singing about soda pop.

    link
  133. Client blocking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As far as morality... I guess I simply don't much care if its right or wrong. The same way I don't quibble about the morality of killing spiders that try to crawl into my bowl of cheerios. I don't want to see that crap and I've never in my life bought anything based on an advertisement - their dead to me anyway as I selectivly ignore them in my mind.

    The Internet used to be run by people who gave a flying rats ass and just didn't have making money at the front and center of every last decision. Somewhere along the lines the masses came in and ruined it... Its funny too because the price of reaching the world continues to fall in every metric yet advertising is getting more and more rediculous each day.

    My only problem with ad blocking is the evolution of war factor that eventually countermeasures may produce a result even more annoying and obstructive than the current situation.

    I would rather go back to the days of Internet who's who lists and crappy search engines than the current situation of google directly supporting thousands of assholes who just want to make money at *everyones* expense.

  134. How about radio and TV advertizements? by Jerry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For the last 100 years it never occurred to advertisers on radio stations that users who turn down the sound during commercials were "stealing" from them. They knew better. They were given a license to use a portion of the PUBLIC'S electromagnetic spectrum as long as they operated in the public good. The public still has the opportunity to visit radio stations and read their license stipulations and leave comments about the radio station's performance.

    Then, corporate greed took over when TV stations (licensed to use other portions of the PUBLIC's electromagnetic spectrum) started claiming it was THEIR medium and that if you didn't watch the commercials but only the content they were broadcasting YOU were a THIEF. Absurd. They can transmit content and commercials but no one, absolutely NO ONE, has to watch every photon they transmit during any particular time period. That's the risk they take, especially if their ad content is so trivial or dishonest or begins consuming too large a segment of the time period.

    There was a time when commercials took only about 6 to 10 minutes of every hour. Now they take 20 minutes or more, and in the case of Infomercials the full 60 minutes. It's NOT uncommon now for 6 or more commercials to run during every commercial break, with some breaks exceeding 10 minutes in length with only 2 or 3 minutes of show in between.

    Infomercials should be outlawed. The cable companies are double dipping. They charge the advertiser for channel, and they bill the cable customer for "offering" the infomercial channel as part of the cable lineup. Are we stealing if we don't watch the Infomercial?

    To make matters worse, the TV shows deliberately focus cameras on brand name advertisements and include product hype within the script of the show itself. And they not stealing time from us?

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  135. please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    advertisers in the tv world are taking steps now to create more interest in their ads. they realize people are using tivos to bypass them and they are doing the right thing and trying to innovate a way back into peoples minds. to even hint that bypassing ads could be illegal is so fucking fascist that hitlers dick is probably throbbing in your ass. i already cant slap my wife and kids in public. for the love of fucking william wallace let me block some goddamn ads.

    sincerely truly yours,
    hollis green.

  136. Well you're half right. by goldcd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's your computer and your browser and your net connection.
    On the other end there's another persons server, content and bandwidth. If they don't want to serve you pages, then they don't have to.
    Everybody's happy.

    1. Re:Well you're half right. by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's your computer and your browser and your net connection.
      On the other end there's another persons server, content and bandwidth. If they don't want to serve you pages, then they don't have to.
      Everybody's happy.


      Very true. He has every right not to serve me pages if he doesn't want to, and I won't complain if does that. What he does *not* have the right to do is to serve me pages and then bitch about how I view them.

      Chris Mattern
    2. Re:Well you're half right. by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Very true. He has every right not to serve me pages if he doesn't want to, and I won't complain if does that. What he does *not* have the right to do is to serve me pages and then bitch about how I view them.


      He's got every right to bitch about how you view his pages. He just doesn't have any right to do anything about it besides refactoring his pages so the ads are harder to block.
      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Well you're half right. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      If they don't want to serve you pages, then they don't have to.

      Well, yes. But then why have a website?

      If you want to truly be part of the World Wide Web, then your pages need to be served to the World. It's right there in the name.

      If you're going to whine about people not looking at your ads and try to block ad-blockers, set up a walled garden where people have to pay a nickel to see your stuff, fine. But then few people are going to see your site and link to it; you'll be isolated from the Web.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Well you're half right. by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He's got every right to bitch about how you view his pages. He just doesn't have any right to do anything about it besides refactoring his pages so the ads are harder to block.


      Which is how we ended up with sophisticated ad-blocking in the first place. When it was a picture here, or a link there, nobody cared. But then the ads got more desparate and we got little shaking boxes, pop ups, great big chunks of Flash (which we pay for out of our bandwidth costs as well, incidentally). The ads become a big detraction to the website that we actually want to see. So naturally ad-blockers arise and become hugely popular. I put one in ages ago to try it out and then after a re-install, I didn't bother for a long, long time. But a couple of months ago, after visiting /. a couple of times and having some irritating Flash movie start playing and overlaying the music I was listening to with its audible sound-track, I immediately went off and got Flashblock.

      If advertisers had been a little less greedy or desparate, they wouldn't be in this mess. But I have every right to not download things I don't want. And it's very, very easy to do that.
      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    5. Re:Well you're half right. by Deagol · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Indeed, you are 100% correct.

      You see, my problem isn't with a site trying to make a profit, but rather with advertising. If CmdrTaco wants to hold a bake sale in the Slashdot corporate office, fine. If /. sells t-shirts or offers paid premium accounts, that's cool. But I object to adverts on principle, as I imagine many here do. I know what I want to buy, so there's no need to convince me that Shiny New Widget is what I need today. I come for the tech news (consolidated from other sources) and the chatter amongst other users, not for ads.

      I don't pay for a /. sub, and I unabashedly filter ads while here (and everywhere else). If /. folds, well, them's the breaks I guess. I'll go back to USENET or some other site for my daily dose of tech ramblings and gossip. Seemed to work well back in the BBS days when most sites were free and most operators were glad to spend money on their labor of love. Sure, the dial-up BBS couldn't have hundreds of thousands us users online at any given time, so it was a different beast. But really, it wasn't that much different.

      This site is cool, no doubt. It's a shame that there's no real valid business model for it to keep it from running in the red. It's one thing for sites with real original content to sell subscriptions (research publications, newletters, newspapers, etc.), but trying to charge for a site where the content itself is provided by all of us? When you think about it, it's one of those cases where "Step #2: ?????" doesn't really exist.

    6. Re:Well you're half right. by dup_account · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's an easy problem to solve. Have the ad-blocker "ping" every URL that is on your blocked list. This will cause the site you are on to receive credit and get paid.

      Better explaination. I surf xyz.com which has links to ad4crap.com and urdata.com. If you send the correct url with the forward from (what is the name of the tag?) tag in the header, xyz.com will get credit for a referal. The ad blocker can just throw away any results from the URL.

    7. Re:Well you're half right. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 0

      Ok, let's look at this another way.

      Suppose someone puts up a booth on the street with Ice Cream, and little drop box with a sign that says "Please pay .25 for each ice cream bar you take". You're saying it's perfectly MORAL for you to come along and take all the ice cream (or as much as you want) and not pay him a dime because he didn't provide a means to enforce the sale?

      That's basically what you're arguing. "If they're so stupid as to use a model that allows circumvention, then i'm perfectly justified to circumvent it".

      Is the Ice Cream guy stupid to use the honor system to get paid? Probably. But is it immoral to not pay the guy? Hell yes it is.

    8. Re:Well you're half right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This should have come from Bad Analogy Guy, but hey, I thought of it first.

      Once upon a time, there was no residential Caller-ID service. You never knew who was ringing your phone. Things were awful!

      Then, Caller-ID service became available from your friendly telco. Now you knew who was ringing your phone, and could pick up important calls at your discretion.

      At the same time, your friendly telco introduced a way of blocking Caller-ID information from being displayed on a per-call basis. Now the people calling you could take away your right to know who was calling! Boo! Hiss!!

      A short while later, your friendly telco introduced a way of blocking a caller who had blocked you from receiving your Caller-ID information. If callers aren't going to let you know who they are, you don't have to have your phone ring in the first place.

      It is left to the reader as an exercise as to which party -- the caller and the call receiver -- correspond to the roles of webserver and webbrowser.

    9. Re:Well you're half right. by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      bullshit. your trying to compare offering a service, to offering GOODS. the 2 are completely different.

      The bottom line, it costs me money to browse the web, and you have no right to force me to pay for something i don't want.

      The free to air TV analogy is also flawed in that free to air tv costs me nothing.

      The way i see it web ads have 2 ways they can go. They can block users which ultimately will cost their advertiser sales and reduce the effectivness of the ads. Or they can rethink how they present their ads, make them smaller, less intrusive and more relivant to the theme of their website.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    10. Re:Well you're half right. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It is like TV.

      When they had 8 minutes of commercials per hour it was no big deal.

      For one of the recent alias special episodes they had 24 minutes of commercials for 38 minutes of programming. They actually started it a minute early and ran it a minute late to do this.

      And they wonder why we are blocking/zipping through commercials?

      An 1" x 5" ad for 1000 words of text would not be a big deal.
      Dividing the same article into 4 pages (as a recent mythbusters did), each of which had 5 to 7 ads and only about 800 words in the entire article (so 200 words per page maybe) is just asinine and begging for ad blocking.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    11. Re:Well you're half right. by glittalogik · · Score: 2, Informative

      Google Adwords is an advertising model that should have shown up years before it did. Small, non-flashy, to the point, not always 100% relevant to the surrounding content but generally pretty close. That, I can deal with.

    12. Re:Well you're half right. by Skreems · · Score: 4, Informative

      This would probably get ignored as click-fraud, and if it happened often enough might get the page banned from the advertising service altogether.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    13. Re:Well you're half right. by Skreems · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If advertisements frustrate you so much that you've sworn you will never click one in your life, a site with ads loses nothing when you block those ads. Nobody pays per view anymore. And as far as I know, there's not even an implied agreement that you'll click on ads when you're visiting a page.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    14. Re:Well you're half right. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      It has nothing to do with any kind of agreement that you'll click on ads. That's a red herring. TV advertisers don't require TV stations guarantee that viewers buy products either (though obviously, if they don't, advertisers won't advertise for long).

      It's all about advertising *OPPORTUNITY*. Advertisers want you to have the opportunity to click on an ad, even if you never will. They want you to have the opportunity to watch an ad, even if you never do. All these arguments about being 'forced' to watch or click are just hyperbole to support invalid arguments.

      Then, of course, there's the "why ruin it for everyone?" argument. Let's say someone owns a piece of property, and they don't mind if it's used for parties, or camping, or whatever... Then a bunch of people come along and litter, cut down all the trees, etc.. Then the owner says "no more" and puts up no trespassing signs, hires a guard to make sure nobody goes on the property. You just ruined it for everyone by taking advantage of the situation so now nobody can use it.

      That's what the web will become if a majority of people start blocking ads.

    15. Re:Well you're half right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a difference with the phone company though. They charged you for each and every one one of those services. They could do that because they used to have a monopoly on local phone service prior to voip.

    16. Re:Well you're half right. by Skreems · · Score: 1

      They WANT you to have the opportunity to click on it, but they won't pay for it, only for the actual clicks. Thus, if you are the type who never clicks on ads, blocking them won't reduce the number of clicks you give the website. Which means it makes literally no difference to the amount of advertising revenue they generate.

      As for your argument about the majority, well, you may be right. Except for the fact that there are much better ways to advertise than giant blinking banners at the top of the page. Advertisers will switch to less intrusive, more personal ads, and websites will find better business models that don't rely on flash-spam. And if some sites fail, well hey, there are a lot of crap sites out there right now anyway.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    17. Re:Well you're half right. by tzot · · Score: 1
      The action your metaphor describes is stealing, but the metaphor itself is not correct.

      You don't have to pay the ice-cream, as long as you withstand a guy that is shouting and flashing lights at you while you're at the ice-cream stand, and another guy that hands over leaflets to you. These guys are the ones that pay your ice-cream. Also, they might notice (or not, unless they compare their clientèle with the ice-cream seller's one) whether you wear sunglasses, earplugs and refuse to accept the leaflets.

      Now, this is closer to the issue at hand.

      Banning Firefox is not a solution, since there were (and are and will be) options to avoid advertisements; think proxies (corporate or personal, like WebWasher). I use Firefox, and used to use AdBlock, but I quit; I decided to manage my hostperm.1 file by being very strict, allowing things on a need basis. I now see the occasional advertisement. I don't mind. However, I won't stop using FlashBlock (it gives me a choice), and won't let any site run its scripts unless I trust it.

      The thing is, I find it fair to give a little (mind the world, "little") percentage of my bandwidth for advertisement purposes, even if most of the ads are aesthetically unpleasant. However, I want to spread the message to advertisers: "Keep your voice down, stop using those flashes, don't force dozens of leaflets in my throat." BTW, I like Google ads. They have been useful to me once or twice.

      --
      I speak England very best
    18. Re:Well you're half right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Purely out of interest, and nothing to do with what you just said; what was that person's website who blocked firefox?

    19. Re:Well you're half right. by Dun+Malg · · Score: 4, Informative

      Suppose someone puts up a booth on the street with Ice Cream, and little drop box with a sign that says "Please pay .25 for each ice cream bar you take". You're saying it's perfectly MORAL for you to come along and take all the ice cream (or as much as you want) and not pay him a dime because he didn't provide a means to enforce the sale? You're an idiot. You either can't construct a valid metaphor, or think we're too stupid to see through your intentionally invalid one.
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    20. Re:Well you're half right. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      An 1" x 5" ad for 1000 words of text would not be a big deal.
      Dividing the same article into 4 pages (as a recent mythbusters did), each of which had 5 to 7 ads and only about 800 words in the entire article (so 200 words per page maybe) is just asinine and begging for ad blocking. That is disappointing. I don't personally mind text ads or tasteful images, but those flash ads are completely unacceptable. They're intrusive, the tend to be very distracting, they tend to slow the page load to a crawl, often times they crash, they'll open up and cover content, then be difficult to close. Most of the time they aren't anything that is even remotely interesting to me.

      Then there's the tracking cookies from a dozen different ad agencies one each site that want to know where I've been and where I'm going. Is it really a shocker that I would choose to block ads. That doesn't even include the increasing ability to abuse images to track people.

      A well done text ad is far more likely to get me to click than a well done image ad is. And when you start talking about flash, you can pretty much forget about it.
    21. Re:Well you're half right. by mennucc1 · · Score: 1

      It's an easy problem to solve. Have the ad-blocker "ping" every URL that is on your blocked list. This will cause the site you are on to receive credit and get paid.

      Better explaination. I surf xyz.com which has links to ad4crap.com and urdata.com. If you send the correct url with the forward from (what is the name of the tag?) tag in the header, xyz.com will get credit for a referal. The ad blocker can just throw away any results from the URL. here is another idea, for people who do want to address this issue: the ad blockers may have an option , so that the browser will download the data and render it "offscreen"
    22. Re:Well you're half right. by null.account · · Score: 1

      This would probably get ignored as click-fraud, and if it happened often enough might get the page banned from the advertising service altogether. Good. For any website that should exist and wants to stay in business, that would be a step in the right direction.
    23. Re:Well you're half right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ads bug me too, but I support slashdot as a sub because I like the system, not to elminate ads. Some things in life are worth coughing up that 83 cents per month for. The ads on /. are so nonpresent, I barely notice them even when my daily "ad count" hits the limit. And lets face it, going back to USENET and BBSs would be sad. Have you looked recently? It isn't (nor will it ever be) what it was back in the golden 80s and 90s.

    24. Re:Well you're half right. by Instantlemming · · Score: 1

      Then, of course, there's the "why ruin it for everyone?" argument. Let's say someone owns a piece of property, and they don't mind if it's used for parties, or camping, or whatever... Then a bunch of people come along and litter, cut down all the trees, etc.. Then the owner says "no more" and puts up no trespassing signs, hires a guard to make sure nobody goes on the property. You just ruined it for everyone by taking advantage of the situation so now nobody can use it.
      Trashing a place and thus ruining it for everybody is completely different from IGNORING the bits you don't like.
      There are things I want to turn off, because ignoring them doesn't work. (too obnoxious to ignore, flashing/noisy/interfering ads).

      If the web turns into a quiet place where you can only find sites with relevant info, maintained by people that do it because they want to SHARE INFORMATION, instead of people that want to MAKE MONEY, then I'm all for it, the sooner the better.

      Not all ads are bad though. relevant ads, brought in a sensible fashion are something that I might have a look at. If it's half the page, blinking, moving, overlapping, or making any noise, then it's Adblock time.
      Unfortunately, Adblock (plus) probably filters out ads that I might have been be interested in... Oh well, that's the price we users have to pay...

      As (almost) everybody already said: I decide what I want to look at on my computer. If you want to make money with your site, offer subscription-only access and stop whining about us not allowing you to exercise your 'right' to force drivel down our eyeballs.
    25. Re:Well you're half right. by BoothbyTCD · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Let's see, what ads don't I block...oh yeah Google text ads. Why? because they are just text off in a corner. I have no reason to want to block static text off in a corner. Giant blinking flash ads that cover the screen on the other hand I have no regrets blocking. Those advertisers can go to hell for all I care.

      --
      snig
    26. Re:Well you're half right. by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      It's all about advertising *OPPORTUNITY*. Advertisers want you to have the opportunity to click on an ad, even if you never will. They want you to have the opportunity to watch an ad, even if you never do.

      That's fine. I have the opportunity to click and to watch the ads. I can deactivate Adblock Plus any time I like. I just never do. What more of an opportunity do they want me to have?

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    27. Re:Well you're half right. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's not true either. Advertisers pay more money for placement on high traffic sites. They determine traffic numbers by the number of impressions,that is, how many times the ads get loaded. That means by blocking ads, you reduce the price per click a web site receieves. That means that, yes, blocking ads does make a difference in the amount of advertising revenue they generate.

      If you really think the advertising industry will figure out that people want less intrusive ads, you're not from this planet. What they'll do is find even more intrusive ways to integrate ads. It'll be an escalating war.

    28. Re:Well you're half right. by slagish666 · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't do this, I use NoScript for exactly this reason -- if I'm on www.a.com, the last thing I want is to have my browser be directed to adshit.com, adsshoveddownyourthroat.com, adadfuckingad.com, tracker.com, privacybuster.com, etc., making the page slow to load and filling my hard drive with tracker cookies and graphics I don't want, reducing my privacy in the process.

      I only want stuff off of the web server I'm presently on, with only non-ad images or other general elements coming from other servers. No one can force me to view material/accept connections from servers I don't want to connect to.

      --
      "Consider the lillies of the goddamn field."
  137. It's Not Just The Site's Bandwidth by CheeseburgerBrown · · Score: 1

    It's the user's bandwidth, too. Every time I visit a site I expend their bandwidth to request the data and my bandwidth to get that content in front of me.

    By the logic of the article, if a website is sending me unrequested kilobytes unrelated to the content I came to see, shouldn't they pay me?

  138. My sound problem solved by Skapare · · Score: 1

    I don't hear any songs from MySpace when I visit (which is not very often). My solution is that my speakers are plugged into my router (a separate box running Slackware), instead. It has spare disk space (because I can't find drives smaller than 40 GB anymore), so I put my music collection over there (it isn't that big) and play it over there. Web site music just warms a few components on the mainboard sound chip. If there is ever something I do want to listen to via the browser or the desktop box, I can switch the audio connections.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  139. Re:0h boo hoo by pla · · Score: 1

    If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

    Not entirely true - They can set all the cookies they want; I have FireFox set to automatically delete them when I close the browser.

    Personally, I object to three aspects of ads:

    1) They take up part of my screen. Offhand, I see no possible fix for this, and so will always block any ads larger than my threshhold-of-annoyance (usually around a 10% top or sidebar). Google ads get a few percent pass because of their special "low annoyance" qualities (ie, text-only, nothing flashes or beeps or moves).

    2) They take longer to load. I don't mean the extra 4ms it should take to download a 17KB jpeg over a broadband connection, I mean half the ads on a given page usually come from badly overloaded servers just as likely to make me wait for it to timeout as to actually serve an ad.

    3) I simply don't buy things from ads. When I want a product, I seek it out myself. I research the field, find the best available, then try to find the inflection in the price/quality curve. Nevermind individual products, ads just don't even influence me (except possibly negatively, for especially annoying ads) toward entire brands or stores.



    If a company wants to make a positive impression on me, they need only post complete specs of their products in an easy-to-access place on their website. If I have to hunt for more than 30 seconds just to find out what type of batteries Product-X takes, I cross it off my list and move on to Product-Y.

  140. It's not your web server. by gcnaddict · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It may be your computer, but guess whose web server it is?
    With that in mind, the web page is on a private server which is open to the public. However, the owner of the machine has every right to block users who do not allow for advertisements.

    See, with big sites such as CNN, I feel that their service is an auxiliary mode of delivering information in addition to their other services. However, with smaller sites such as communities, etc., I allow their advertising to pass through because I realize that for most of them, the advertising is the only thing keeping their servers up.

    That's my logic. Feel free to disagree, but I feel it's probably more accurate than the parent post.

    --
    Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
    1. Re:It's not your web server. by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have no problem with web server blocking views. What I have a problem with is the *whining*. Block if you're going to block, don't block if you're not going to block, but for God's sake quit whining about how people view the pages you do serve up.

      Chris Mattern

    2. Re:It's not your web server. by TheCRAIGGERS · · Score: 1

      Yes, private webmasters have the right to not serve me the webpage I asked for, for any reason they can come up with. That is within their rights (assuming it's not some public service).

      Of course, exercising that right is technically difficult on the web. Still, that's not my problem.

      I'm like you. I turn off the adblock extension when I'm visiting websites that I care about. Webcomics and other sites that are providing a service to me for free that I enjoy. This was a moral judgment on my part, and it fulfills my conscience.

    3. Re:It's not your web server. by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

      that's the thing... i don't mind advertising on sites (slashdot for example). it's advertising that prevents me from seeing the content i want to see or annoys me (flashing monkeys or whatever) or pops up or under. those deserve to be blocked.

      as someone said above... if you choose to make money on ads you need to deal with the fact that no everyone wants to see them and will block them. it's not stealing just because your business model doesn't work. perhaps those who are losing money because people block their ads should be finding a different way of paying for their site.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    4. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      every right to block users who do not allow for advertisements.
      True, I suggest that you go and find the reruns of "Max Headroom."

      I bet that you are not old enough to remember when you could listen to AM/FM radio in the early mornings (1am - 6am) and not have any commercials.
      Does your car have ads on it for all the manufacturers of the parts in your car? What if you can't buy a car unless it looks like something right off the NASCAR tracks? AND YOU DON'T THE RIGHT TO PAINT OVER IT.

      When is it going to quit?
    5. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that business model only work if I click on the advertisements. if that is not my intention (I never do that), what's the problem if I block advertisements?. Also, when the content of a site is interesting I send links of these pages to my friends, maybe they find interesting their advertising and click on the adverts. Now if I can't see a website and share it, that website probably lose some money

    6. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But he can't block every browser and this addon I found lets you pretent to be internet explorer.

      https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/59

    7. Re:It's not your web server. by Buran · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ... thus contributing to the "this site designed for IE" problem because coders then claim everyone uses IE. Please don't do that. Claim Opera or another alternative browser, if you must.

    8. Re:It's not your web server. by Znork · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "However, the owner of the machine has every right to block users who do not allow for advertisements."

      Of course they do. They still dont get the revenue tho, eh?

      As a general rule, non-descript advertising isnt something I block (like google ads, etc). If and when it is annoying it will get junked, and most likely, as sites with a high annoyance factor tend to try to work around the blocking, the site will get completely shitlisted and I'll go somewhere else instead.

      Competition, in the information market, is a killer. Painful, but the publishing business needs to adjust to the fact that the industry is overpopulated by several orders of magnitude.

      Frankly tho, some sites make me want to send the EPA on them; I wonder approximately how much energy that advertizing driven automated updates, flash video ads, animated ads, etc, consumes across the world. If you cant view a site without your CPU fan spinning up, then that's a fairly noticable unecessary and undesireable waste of energy.

    9. Re:It's not your web server. by stfvon007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have adblock as well. My policy with using it is this: If the ad is annoying (lots of movement, flashing, etc) I will block it. If I see several of these kinds of ads coming from the same ad servers/domain (doubleclick.net for example) , I block all ads from those servers/company/domain. You want me to see your ads? Don't make them annoying, and don't purchase advertising from a company that displays annoying ads. Ypu want me to see ads on your site? Don't get advertising from companies that display annoying ads. I don't have Google adwords blocked. Feel free to show ads from them.

      --
      All misspellings and grammatical errors in the above post are intentional and part of my artistic expression.
    10. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a problem with your whining about them whining.

    11. Re:It's not your web server. by Deagol · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd wish there was a proxy/plugin that could randomly change my user agent string, either on a per-hit basis or a per-site basis. As I think that pandering to specific browsers is lame anyway, polluting the web server stats is always a fun hobby. :)

    12. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People have just as much of a right to whine as you do to view pages however you want.

      I guess we don't always get what we want huh?

    13. Re:It's not your web server. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't understand why advertisers have this idea that forcing people to watch their ads will do some kind of good. If I don't want to see your ads I'm definitely not going to buy something in them if I'm forced to view them!

      There are a couple of sites I go to that are sponsored. That is, specific, RELEVANT companies support the site. The site displays the advertiser's logo and provides a link to their store. Guess what? I BUY stuff from that sponsor occasionally! I've never, ever bought something from one of these random, always changing ads. Not that I see them much anymore....

    14. Re:It's not your web server. by StringBlade · · Score: 1

      I also use AdBlock Pro (and used to have Filterset.G as well) but my blocking philosophy goes something like this:

      You're putting up content in the public arena where you're hoping people will see/read it. Your reasons are your own and I did not ask for your web site. I also did not ask for your ads (however unobtrusive you may think they are). I block every ad I possibly can because I don't want to see them. If you didn't put your site up with enough funds to keep it running or a business model that doesn't rely on ads, then I'm sorry but that's your oversight, not my problem.

      If I come across a site that I really like and would like to see continue to exist (like Slashdot as a hypothetical) but does not have a viable business model other than a subscription service or ads, I will consider removing my block for your ads so you can get revenue from my visit or alternately I will subscribe to your site and keep the block in place. I have done that for a number of sites I really enjoy which are a labor of love for the creator but got too popular for his/her own good. However, in those cases the viewing community usually sticks up for the content provider via subscriptions or unblocking ads or outright donations.

      If you're not getting money voluntarily then the market is simply not that interested in your product and I'm sorry to say you will be gone soon without a contingency plan that doesn't involve annoying your viewership. Ads are not my concern and not my problem, they're yours. I'm speaking as a person who's hosted his own site in the past without advertisements because I wanted to put up the site, not because I expected to get paid for it by people stumbling across it.

      --
      ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
    15. Re:It's not your web server. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      You really don't understand advertising.

      Advertisers don't want to force you to watch their ads (well, ok,they might want to.. but that's ridiculous). They just want the OPPORTUNITY for their ads to be watched. Adblockers are typically used to block all ads, wholesale, voiding the possibility of the viewer even having the opportunity to view the adds.

    16. Re:It's not your web server. by Mi1ez · · Score: 1

      Do I get to have the car for free?

    17. Re:It's not your web server. by JoshJ · · Score: 1

      They still have the opportunity for their ads to be watched. Just because I say "no, I'm not going to watch them" doesn't mean that the opportunity is gone.

      Are you saying they should be able to force me to watch their ads? Bullshit. It's my computer, my browser, my connection, my screen, my LIFE. I'll opt out of ads every way possible, whether they like it or not.

    18. Re:It's not your web server. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      How, pray tell, does the advertiser still have the opportunity for their ads to be watched if all ads are blocked wholesale?

    19. Re:It's not your web server. by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

      I see it like this:

      Putting up a private web server on the World Wide Web with ads and bitching about people ad-blocking is like putting up a strip show on a private but fully exposed-to-the-world yard next to a freeway, and bitching when people slow down to look at the show and don't leave a tip.

      Of course, people always criticize analogies, especially mine (yes, I see the flaws here, but it helps to illustrate).

      Anyway, I fully admit I block ads on the web - and I'll use the music pirate's argument: I'm never going to click on an ad, so they aren't losing any money.

      Oh, for the record, free-to-air television ads are totally different in that they don't track where I go or what channel I'm watching.

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    20. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your reasons are your own and I did not ask for your web site.


      You didn't ask for the sites existence, but you certainly are asking for the content to be brought to your browser as the HTTP protocol has not reached the point of pushing content to all addresses on the net.

      You and all the others who are very righteous about this issue are free to block ads as you please. And advertisers and content producers are free to escalate the technologies as they please.

      If you gain some benefit from visiting a site, it would make sense for you to support the site using whatever mechanism they have determined best suits them. I.e. if they chose to place ads rather than sell subscriptions then that is how you will support the site. If you don't care enough about it then fine, no problems at all. But when all the interesting stuff disappears from the net and the only people serving content are rich bastards who can afford to pay the bandwidth costs, well that's what came from your choosing to block ads.
    21. Re:It's not your web server. by JoshJ · · Score: 1

      I'm blocking ads on my computer. I'm not stopping their server from sending out ads. People that want to see them (or don't know they can be blocked) will see them. The opportunity is there. I've opted out.

      Just because I block ads doesn't mean you don't have the opportunity to see them.

    22. Re:It's not your web server. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      No, but YOU don't have the opportunity to see them.

      Yes, you're correct that it's your computer. But then, just because you're in your card doesn't mean you can morally rip up the neighbors lawn. After all, there's no fence, so you should be able to do whatever you like in your car.

      Or maybe, i'm in my house, so I should be able to shoot the windows out of the house across the street with a pellet gun. I'm in my house, after all, i can do what I want.

      Let's face it, you're justifying behavior that is against the wishes of the website owner.

    23. Re:It's not your web server. by tzot · · Score: 1

      Hm. I believe you can choose one of these and with a few lines changed/added you will have the proxy of your wishes.

      --
      I speak England very best
    24. Re:It's not your web server. by josephpate · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd wish there was a proxy/plugin that could randomly change my user agent string, either on a per-hit basis or a per-site basis Opera can do this out-of-the-box. No plugins required.
    25. Re:It's not your web server. by Jaime2 · · Score: 1

      With that in mind, the web page is on a private server which is open to the public. However, the owner of the machine has every right to block users who do not allow for advertisements.

      That's fine. But, how much of a right does the website operator have to try to pry open my computer as much as he possibly can in order to verify that I am seeing his ads. Most of these guys think that any tactic is justified. They need to remember that they are using my hardware to do the validation.

    26. Re:It's not your web server. by FoXDie · · Score: 1

      And, I have the choice to change the channel when TV commercials are on so that I don't have to watch their ads. In a sense I'm adblocking with the TV. Are the TV networks going to try and make TV manufacturers not allow channel changes during commercial breaks?

    27. Re:It's not your web server. by wordsnyc · · Score: 1

      I have serious vision problems, and can't read pages heavily laden with flashing ads, so I run Adblock for everything but Google text ads. Block me, and people like me, if you want. But your page views will drop, and ultimately your ad revenue will suffer. As a matter of fact, it's my (our) page views that attract ads and support your site in the first place.

      In other words, set up your ice-cream stand in your basement and you won't have freeloaders.

      --
      Sent from the iPad I found in your car.
    28. Re:It's not your web server. by lkeagle · · Score: 1

      What a horrible analogy...

      Advertising is simply a form of market manipulation. The intent is to direct consumer attention to your product/service. To compare that with the willful destruction of the personal property of another is depressing. If you tear up my lawn, I will sue you for damages.

      There is no law saying that I have to watch advertisements. However, there ARE laws that protect consumers from hidden, undisclosed charges, as well as "Lemon" laws that protect the consumer against intentionally defective products. The case can be made that advertisements are an illegal hidden cost to consumers, because they have no disclosure of the bandwidth costs before loading the page.

      The opposite doesn't hold true. From the point of view of the content server, blocking users who don't read advertisements will defeat the purpose of your site -- that is, to provide your information/services to the viewer. Furthermore, filling up your page with annoying large banner-ads is similarly self-defeating, as you will again lose viewership and demand for your information.

    29. Re:It's not your web server. by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

      your analogies don't make sense. i use tivo to watch tv. i hit pause during commercials, get up, come back and click through them using the 30 second skip easter egg for tivo. i choose not to take the opportunity to watch ads, even if they're for something i might want. that's the same thing as using adblock. i choose not to have the opportunity to see the ads.

      if i really wanted the opportunity to see the ads, i'd turn off adblock.

      if the website owner really didn't want his information to be public and wanted people to pay (one way or another) to see it (because people are paying by having to see stupid flashy ads), the website owner could force paid subscriptions. don't make the information public if you really need the ad revenue to pay for your site.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    30. Re:It's not your web server. by Morlark · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Reading this, I just realised something. There's a fairly large forum that I frequent that has recently put an ad banner at the top of their pages. I didn't even think of blocking the ads. And when I say that, I don't mean that I thought to myself 'Well, I owe these guys for the great website that they provide', I mean I actually had not even conceived of the possibility of clicking on Adblock and getting rid of them, because the ads were relevant and interesting.

      I think if webmasters do a little bit of thinking and research about the ads they allow to be displayed on their website, and especially if advertisers stop being such arseholes about how intrusive their ads are, both will find that there is a viable business model in there somewhere. Provide ads that are relevant to the website, and people will not only tolerate those ads, they will come to see them as a normal and integral part of the website that they came to see.

      --
      Santa's suicide mission go!
    31. Re:It's not your web server. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Why not do what I do. Add a line to your custom CSS file like this:

      A[HREF*="example.com"]:after { content: " [AD WARNING]"!important ; color: red ; font-variant:small-caps ; vertical-align: super ; font: xx-small sans-serif }
      If a site irritates me with adverts, I add a line like this for the site. Next time there's a link to the site, I see a warning after it. This usually makes me not click on the link. There is no ethical ambiguity, since I am not enjoying their content without allowing them to profit from it, but they don't make any money. If you don't like the ads, don't go to the site.
      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    32. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Such as Privoxy or Proxomitron/Proxomido ?
      From my proxomitron config (under [HTTP headers]) :

      In = FALSE
      Out = TRUE
      Key = "User-Agent: ibrowse on Amiga"
      Match = "$CON(1, 3)"
      Replace = "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; IBrowse 3.0; AmigaOS4.0) "

      In = FALSE
      Out = TRUE
      Key = "User-Agent: Contiki on C64"
      Match = "$CON(2, 3)"
      Replace = "Contiki/1.0 (Commodore 64; http://dunkels.com/adam/contiki/)"

      In = FALSE
      Out = TRUE
      Key = "User-Agent: Lynx 2.8 (out) "
      Match = "$CON(3, 3)"
      Replace = "Lynx/2.8.3dev.8 libwww-FM/2.14FM"

      Ofcourse I also have this there, only 40 XFry/bender quotes:

      In = FALSE
      Out = TRUE
      Key = "X-Fry: list of stuff"
      Match = "$LST(XFry)"
      Replace = "\1"

      You could put something like this:

      In = FALSE
      Out = TRUE
      Key = "User-Agent: Opera 5.02 (out) "
      URL = "*.(blogspot.com|msn.com)"
      Match = "*"
      Replace = "Opera/5.02 (Windows 98; U)  [en]"

    33. Re:It's not your web server. by tommertron · · Score: 1
      I don't know if I'm the only one that does this, but I *don't* enable the deafault AdBlock Plus filters. I just start fresh and build my filters fresh. I honestly don't mind all ads, and I like supporting sites that I go to a lot. But if there's a really irritating flash ad or animated GIF, I'll block it. If it's an animated ad promoting a smiley toolbar or something saying my computer is infected, then the domain the ad comes from (or the subfolder if it's the same domain as the site) gets blacklisted.

      I'm not trying to promote this method; this is just a personal choice.

      --
      Random rants about technology: http://technorants.blogspot.com
    34. Re:It's not your web server. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      No, the point is that what you do on your computer only extends so far as the network within your home. Once you go out onto the internet, what you do on your computer now affects others, since you are costing them money by visiting their site.

    35. Re:It's not your web server. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Exactly. strobist.blogspot.com is a great example. This guy started a blog on something he was good at, it got big, and now he's taken a leave of absence from his job to run it full time. He has a family too, so it's making a decent living for him.

      There are ads on the site, but not the served-from-doubleclick/MS/Yahoo variety. They're permanent advertisements for the sponsors of the site -- all hand picked.

      The site sponsors also come up regularly in the articles. Hey, need to know how to get the equipment for this? This sponsor has arranged a special deal for readers of this site and put together a kit just for us.

      THAT'S a good advertising model.

    36. Re:It's not your web server. by StringBlade · · Score: 1

      I'm not trying to be righteous, I'm simply stating the facts. I don't view ads - it's not a valid way (to me) to support your site and if you want to block me then that's your choice, I don't need your content. If I needed it, then I'd pay you for it in a way that I deem fit (donations, subscription, merchandise, etc - not ads).

      I think life was a lot less superficial before obtrusive ads came along. A product got its reputation by word of mouth because of its quality, not because it was the most obnoxious thing in the world that everyone knows about because they despise it.

      Also, in my experience the content that is the most worthwhile also has a non-ad-based revenue stream or at the very least will accept donations. If someone decides that they only way they'll be supported is by ad revenue, then they are fooling themselves when they blame Adblock for their downfall.

      --
      ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
    37. Re:It's not your web server. by lkeagle · · Score: 1

      Wrong.

      We're talking about advertising and Spam here.

      They're MAKING money by me visiting their site. If their only source of income from the site is a flawed business model, they need help. Maybe they should try selling something other than screen space.

      It was noted above that television commercials are the exact same phenomenon. Advertisers would like nothing more than to be able to turn off the screen if you're not viewing their commercials. Hence, why 1/3 of the screen is now taken up by advertisements *during* the show. It's pure desperation, and the only reason that the business model works for the time being is that there isn't sufficient technology to disable it on the side of the viewer.

      Now there is technology for the web, and I think everyone should start using it immediately. That is the only thing that will stimulate the growth of web pages that concentrate on content and services, instead of just generic, unrelated advertising revenue. I would pay more for television and internet without ads, except that there is no direct, safe route for my pennies to go directly to the company providing the service.

    38. Re:It's not your web server. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Your argument makes no sense. First, you complain that because regular advertising wasn't effective, they've taken to even more intrusive means that cannot be easily couteracted, making it even MORE annoying to watch the programs. Then you claim that advertisers will somehow do the opposite for the web. That's highly unlikely. Blocking adverts will simply make them become more agressive and intrusive, not to mention more annoying.

      I also don't understand your argument about pages that are not worthwhile. If you don't want to go to a page, why do you care if there is advertising on it or not? Logically, only pages you WANT to see would you care about, and those are the pages you most want to stick around.

    39. Re:It's not your web server. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ceoyoyo wrote:
      >
      > I don't understand why advertisers have this idea that forcing people to
      > watch their ads will do some kind of good. If I don't want to see your ads
      > I'm definitely not going to buy something in them if I'm forced to view them!


      Opinions are like assholes, and slashdot sure has plenty of both. But it would do a lot more good to have an informed opinion on the matter rather than just spouting off without knowing what the fuck you're talking about. The geeks on here may know technology, but they obviously don't know shit about advertising (or ethics, for that matter).

      Anyway, if you'd known even the very basics of advertising, you'd know that the point isn't always to make you buy something immediately. Often, the point is to make you remember a brand name, or to have the viewer associate something pleasant (like sex, security, having a good time, etc...) with the brand or product.

      Then, when you **are** in the market to buy something like the product being advertised, and you're presented with a ton of brand names to select from, you might just remember the brand that was advertised to you most effectively. Unless the ad was really exceptional and/or you'd viewed the ad recently, you might not even consciously remember how you'd heard of that brand or product in the first place. But, if the advertisers did their job right, the ad you saw played some role in that.

      So, just because you're pissed off at some buzzing, flashing pop-up ad, and start swearing to yourself that you'd never buy the product advertised, doesn't mean that some months or years later (when you're in the market for just such a product) you won't buy it. In fact, you might just recognize that brand, and that might be enough to set it apart from the rest of the "no-name brands" or less-effectively advertised brands that you have to select from. And that recognition is often enough to complete the sale, especially for impulse buys.

      Anyway, there's a lot more to the psychology of advertising than what's in this brief post. People make whole careers out of this stuff, and it would behove Slashdotters to read a bit about it, instead of just spouting off whatever comes in to the itty bitty little part of their brains not devoted to technology.

    40. Re:It's not your web server. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Ah, ashamed to put your name on your assholish opinion hey?

      Anyway, I think we're all aware that advertisers would like us to remember their product, and they'd love us to associate it with something good. I suspect that having it intrude on a web page we're looking at is not accomplishing the second part of that equation, although it might be doing a pretty good job of the first.

      Plus, if you pay attention, you'll notice that the big name products and companies tend NOT to be the ones that are being obnoxious. When was the last time you saw an IBM, Microsoft or Proctor and Gamble pop up/under/full screen flash ad? The bad ones are almost all for things that you DON'T run into in the store.

    41. Re:It's not your web server. by JoshJ · · Score: 1

      So if I load a webpage with flash ads in lynx (which doesn't support flash ads), I'm doing something wrong?

      If a blind person loads it up in a speechreader, he's doing something wrong?

      The web protocols were intentionally designed so that the CLIENT chooses what to show.

  141. This whole thing's a successful ad campaign by Caste11an · · Score: 1

    Stop and think about it for a minute:

    1. Actively block Firefox Adblock users
    2. Crow about your 133t sk1llz on every forum you can find
    3. Get your pathetic no-content blog featured on Slashdot, Fark, Digg, etc
    4. Sit back and watch the foaming-at-the-mouth geeks visit/link to your page
    5. Watch your Google pagerank skyrocket
    6. See ad revenue skyrocket
    7. Profit!
    8. Lather, rinse, repeat because geeks love to hate you

    How many other sites -- especially online "news" sites have figured out that this whole thing is driving some serious traffic and boosting ad revenue? It doesn't matter if you're using Adblock (I do). Some ads are still going to get through (I never block Google AdSense) and you're still going to drive some revenue. Even then, some sites will be able to quote a boosted number of page visits which they can use to negotiate better payouts from advertisers. However you spin this whole mess, these folks win.

    I've chosen to stop feeding the trolls. I visited one site at the beginning of this whole circus. I'm not doing it any more.

  142. I attempt to avoid focusing my eyes on ads. by JoeMarzen · · Score: 1

    Especially ones hat block text.

  143. death to advertising by technoendo · · Score: 1

    ...and I don't care of the fallout. If things I enjoy die from being starved off, let them find a newer less objectionable way to stay afloat. I've long known about adblock and other similar filters but haven't cared much (generally I just ignore all advertisements) but haven't kept them installed long term. Upon seeing this article I realized I'm not doing as much as I could be doing -- adblock plus is now installed and it will stay installed. Maybe if advertisers had worked harder to limit the use of blink, audio, heavy formats like flash and java, or just that advertisements bog down page loads we wouldn't be so at war with them (maybe more text based like google, which is acceptably non-intrusive). I don't want to punch the monkey, eff free ipods, and I don't think supermodels lounging in swimwear is a realistic portrayal of online dating.

  144. Fashion industry manages... by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

    Instead of moaning about their pathetic adds web advertisers should have a look at the people that make it work. Take the fashion industry as an example. They have managed to get people to WANT to view their adds. I mean seriously, you have people sticking pictures of their idols onto the wall, yet these posters are essentially massive adds for the clothes or whatever series or music or whatever the model is related to. Hair dressers have used fashion magazines for ages, and you can bet that the fashion industry takes advantage of this.

    Then you have car companies. They don't just stick a pretty model next to the Prius because of the environmental benefits you know...

    Movies use trailers, games use demos, as do computer software, shampoo companies, parfumes...

    Some magazines give you "2 free issues" with an easy way to continue with a subscription. Coca cola will give you all kinds of freebess with their logo on them.

    Now have a look at on-line adds. Most of them have nothing to do with the content of the page they are at, they consume your bandwidth, slow down your browsing, they are generally just in the way, and in addition they are easy to filter. Gee, I can't possibly see why they don't work...

    So, let me see if we can teach these people a lesson. This is how the experts do it, take a hint...
    http://www.dexigner.com/detail/files/11620.jpg
    http://static.flickr.com/113/311915512_e24cc8c78f_b.jpg
    http://image24.webshots.com/24/2/29/70/101722970ctqgDn_fs.jpg
    The following one is particularily nice ; )
    http://www.shop.linplus.de/catalog/images/gentoo_girl.jpg

    1. Re:Fashion industry manages... by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

      ...and when I post that two of the links break...

      Well , just goes to show. Web adverts suck...

  145. Of course it's not theft. by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

    I think of it as taking a magazine and ripping out the ads, then reading it.

    Of course the response is, magazine advertising is based on circulation. Presuming you purchased the magazine, your eye balls count even if you rip out the ads.

    Web advertising is generally based on ad views or even click through, so if you don't download the ad, you don't count.

    Of course the response to the response is, holes in your business model are not my problem. If you can't build a business on providing free content on the web, then don't build a business on providing free content on the web.

    This is really a big cirle jerk for all the geeks to go on about flash ads and evil marketing drones and whatever. The interesting conversation is, so what's next?

    For example with news, when all the newspapers and old media networks realize there's no money to be made giving away news for free on a web site, what fills that void? Do news sites become subscriber based? Do they just close shop? What happens to aggregators like Google news? Would Google subscribe to wire services to keep news a live as a driver of traffic for other products?

    What happens to online communities and sites like /.? When I go to cnn.com I don't care what the other traffic looks like, I just want some news. However, the utility of /. depends on there being a community to provide at least some of the content. Some people pay for /. now. How many would continue to pay for the reduced content on a subscriber-only /.?

  146. a better mantra by sdedeo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Your business model is not my problem".

    --
    Protect your liberties. Donate to the ACLU
    1. Re:a better mantra by SCHecklerX · · Score: 4, Funny

      Somebody should make a t-shirt with that. I like it. We can advertise it with web advertisements!

    2. Re:a better mantra by mcmonkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Your business model is not my problem".

      Forget the t-shirts, it should be stamped on every MBA diploma and integrated into every word processor. Finally Clippy has found his purpose!

      "It looks you are making a business plan. You do realize no one is obligated to behave in the manner required to make your business profitable, right?"

    3. Re:a better mantra by LuSiDe · · Score: 1

      "Agreed, but them blocking your ad-blocking browser is't their problem."

      ('cept government websites/services)

      --
      WE DON'T NEED NO BLOG CONTROL.
    4. Re:a better mantra by Kimos · · Score: 3, Informative

      Somebody should make a t-shirt with that.
      Disregarding your sarcasm...
      http://www.paulbeard.org/wordpress/index.php/archives/2005/04/11/your-wish-is-my-command/
    5. Re:a better mantra by Deagol · · Score: 1

      Very well said. As stated by others, this would make a great t-shirt or bumper sticker. :)

    6. Re:a better mantra by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 1

      If you copyright your Mantra, it could be your business model. Figuring out how to profit could be problem, but it wouldn't be my problem :-)

      --
      Think global, act loco
    7. Re:a better mantra by rjonesx2 · · Score: 1

      I have a better idea ---

      How about you just don't patronize sites that show ads?

      "What? But then I don't get to read the free content???"

      Tough. Stop whining. Either look at the ads and read, or dont look at the ads and dont read.

      --
      Fight Link Spam with LinkSleeve.org
    8. Re:a better mantra by SmokeyTheBalrog · · Score: 1

      Except it is. It ALWAYS is, if you like the service / product and all the alternatives use the same/similar model. Then, they will all go out of business. Every dollar that you or advertisers spend is what pays for bandwidth / salaries / the doors to stay open.

      Just look at the big to-do when people thought they where no longer going to get channel information for their PVR PCs. All of a sudden people began crying "We'll pay! We'll pay!" This time they where lucky. Look at PC gaming, mainly full of ports from consoles, it's dieing.

      Blocking annoying adds is perfectly understandable, but blocking adds in general? It hurts the web economy, at least the get information for free part of it.

    9. Re:a better mantra by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

      The only sarcasm was the advertising. I think that'd kick ass as a t-shirt. I'd like it white on black, minus the logo though.

    10. Re:a better mantra by sdedeo · · Score: 1

      "Your awesome t-shirt is now my laundry."

      (Although I agree that the background should be solid red.)

      --
      Protect your liberties. Donate to the ACLU
    11. Re:a better mantra by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      We'll see if you still say that when a site you likes goes out of business because it wasn't making enough money to cover its expenses.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    12. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Viewing ads you never intend to act on is like stealing from the advertiser. By not viewing the ads, you're saving them some money.

      "What? But then advertisers won't give me free money!"

      Well, that's too bad. You'd better either serve advertisements your visitors *want* to see and might actually use, or else find another way to scam advertisers.

    13. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I have a better idea ---

      How about you just don't patronize sites that show ads?

      "What? But then I don't get to read the free content???"

      Tough. Stop whining. Either look at the ads and read, or dont look at the ads and dont read.


      Why would I do that? I have my browser configured the way I like it. I use it to browse the web. Anyone who doesn't like my browser settings is free to block me from their server. EVERYONE GETS TO DO WHAT THEY WANT. EVERYONE IS HAPPY!

      p.s. I also go to the bathroom during commercials. I suppose you want to "fix" that behavior too.

    14. Re:a better mantra by sdedeo · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm in the minority, but I try not to stress too much about getting consumable goods. If I don't like a hoop I have to jump through -- whether it's watching some horrible flash ad or popup -- I won't jump. I believe that business -- and "the economy" in general -- exists to serve me and the rest of the public; they are not charities even in part. I love Apple Computer's products, for example, but I'm not going to throw out various opinions I have on how I want to live my life just to continue buying their products.

      You are suggesting (I think) that the only way to support online content is to watch ads I find irritating. You are incorrect! The various places I do go include many that are subscriber-supported (e.g., the New York Review of Books, the London Review of Books), that make sufficient money off of amazon affiliation (many full-time bloggers), that sell merchendise (many webcomics), that are run as a "loss leader" for a larger corporation (The New Republic, many literary sites) or that are supported by a non-profit (The Nation, all of my scientific journals.)

      To put it another way: I have the legal right to use my computer as I please, and to prevent display of things I do not want to see. When has a company ever done something for me they don't want to do without being legally obligated? Calling me "immoral" for not doing them a favor is offensive.

      A good rule of dealing with businesses is as follows. If they ask you for something as a favor, flip the situation around and see what would happen. If I walked into an average store and asked to borrow busfare because my wallet was stolen, what do you think they'd say? Keeping this in mind keeps things clear -- I very rarely get upset when some random store goes broke and complains that people weren't subsidizing it and going on the internet instead. (On occasion, however, the "busfare" experiment comes out nicely -- there are a number of independent bookstores around the country that I "favor" by paying a premium to because they do, in fact, do plenty of favors for me.)

      --
      Protect your liberties. Donate to the ACLU
    15. Re:a better mantra by noamsml · · Score: 1

      Or you could just block ads. I love it when you are trying to convince us not to do something, and when we disagree you claim that we are "whining". Pot. Kettle. Black.

    16. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha brilliant

    17. Re:a better mantra by rjonesx2 · · Score: 1

      Let's get things, this is not a chicken before egg issue. The complaints began with readers being upset with the ads they had to get through (pop-ups, banners, whatever) in order to read content and responded with tools and methods to circumvent the intentions and, ultimately, the remuneration, of the authors themselves.

      It is not "whining" to defend yourself and your work from individuals who use it against your terms of service.

      --
      Fight Link Spam with LinkSleeve.org
    18. Re:a better mantra by FeepingCreature · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt that an implicit contract between the website and the viewer is legal anyhow, since you can't decline it without reading it, and to do that, you have to view the page. Catch-22 at its finest.

    19. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's called a subscription service. If it's out there for free don't expect to get paid.

    20. Re:a better mantra by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      not my problem. my tools are better than your tools so go ahead and deploy all the countermeasures you want.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    21. Re:a better mantra by digitrev · · Score: 1

      You seem like an intelligent individual, my good sir. I would like to subscribe to your newsletter. I shall take your busfare experiment in mind, as it seems like a good way of deciding if a particular store is worthy of shopping there.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    22. Re:a better mantra by the+JoshMeister · · Score: 1

      "Your business model is not my problem". Somebody should make a t-shirt with that. I like it. We can advertise it with web advertisements!

      *NEW!* T-shirts and bumper stickers with the slogan "Your Business Model is NOT My Problem"! Get yours today!!!

      Done and done. ;o)

      (And yes, I am aware that the parent was being ironic about advertising the shirts with Web advertisements. My use of a Web advertisement builds upon that irony.)

    23. Re:a better mantra by Ptraci · · Score: 1

      I donate to support the sites I like, or subscribe, or buy books or T-shirts. I don't feel bad about not looking at ads that are annoying, anymore than I would feel bad about muting commercials on TV, if I ever watched that anymore.

    24. Re:a better mantra by rjonesx2 · · Score: 1

      You are right, your tools ultimately will be better. And, subsequently, the content that you read will, eventually, be worse because you were unwilling to pay someone (by leaving up those ads) to do a good job. Good work! I truly hope that your tools in whatever business you have are better than the tools of those trying to steal from you!

      --
      Fight Link Spam with LinkSleeve.org
    25. Re:a better mantra by rjonesx2 · · Score: 1

      Oh, it is certainly not legally binding. But it doesn't mean you aren't an asshole for circumventing it.

      --
      Fight Link Spam with LinkSleeve.org
    26. Re:a better mantra by rjonesx2 · · Score: 1

      WTF? Of course other business models exist, but if a business owner wants to be nice, he/she can actually create a profitable system without the end user having to pay a dime! It is really a beautiful system. People who don't like the advertisements just don't click on them, and read the content. People who find the advertisements too obtrusive, go elsewhere to get their content. It is really a simple arrangment that requires little to no formal education to understand. It also requires little to no education to understand how that blocking the ads (pay-per-impression) prevents the site owner from earning revenue, but allows you to still access the cotent, thereby dissolving this once comfortable and profitable arrangement.

      --
      Fight Link Spam with LinkSleeve.org
    27. Re:a better mantra by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      there is no theft going on. i request a document be sent to me for free and the publisher sends it. their assumption that i will load all the embedded objects in the page is their problem not mine.

      tasteful static images and text ads will be left alone, i don't mind seeing some relevant ads. any free ipod pyramid scams will get the ad server added to my block list

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    28. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is only a 'beautiful system" if the end user agrees, otherwise you're just making a profit while they either go somewhere else, or are steeled against your taking advantage of them and read your site while blocking ads.

    29. Re:a better mantra by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't agreed to any terms of service. Hence I'm not circumventing anything. Consequently, you don't have a point. You are the asshole here.

  147. Only violation is by the advertisers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please understand several things.

    First, the ads tend to be annoying to some degree or another. The ads want your attention, while we want to enjoy the content.

    Imagine if you were talking to an acquaintance about something and every half minute he stated a Viagra ad. You'd probably ask him to stop. If he didn't, how long would you keep talking to him? And what if you had a gadget in your pocket that would make him stop that annoying activity? Would you use it?

    Second, the web site publisher has an agreement with the advertisers to allow them to show the ad. However, there is NO agreement for the viewer to see such ads. It isn't even implied. Some people may claim that it's no different from TV, Newspapers, or Magazine ads. However, dead-tree format ads don't use video, glaring colors, animation, or sounds to grab your force you to look at them. As to television, when the ads come on is when people turn off the sound or channel surf. Besides, how annoyed do you get when the idiots pop an ad on screen when the show is still running? It kind of ticks you off when they do it, doesn't it...

    Let's face it, advertisers try to go to extraordinary lengths in web adverts that they don't do in any other media, even though they know we don't like it. Additionally, the website owners don't have any sort of agreement (implied or otherwise) with the users to look at the ads. Any claims of theft are outrageous and either libelous or slanderous.

    IANAL

  148. The morality of not buying everything advertised by iter8 · · Score: 1

    -- If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    Why not extend that argument to the products too? After all, it costs money to advertise and the amount the advertiser pays is related to the page hits. Are you stealing from the company placing the ads if you don't but the product after you view the ad? I thought ads were supposed to entice me to pay attention and to buy things or at least recognize the product. I thought it was supposed to be a temptation not a commandment to shop. I guess I'm not moral enough to be a good consumer.

  149. Advertisement abuse by Aram+Fingal · · Score: 1

    Several other readers have pointed out various ways that advertisers are abusing advertisements to the point that they aren't just advertisements. Let me add one other point. When do a web search and then start going through the results, you often don't know exactly what kind of content you're going to find until you click each link and actually look at the page. If you don't protect yourself with ad-blocking software, you will hit all kinds of obnoxious stuff from sites you really weren't interested in viewing in the first place.

  150. If only the ads worked properly... by DCheesi · · Score: 1

    I resisted using adblock for a long time. But finally I got tired of waiting endlessly for a page to finish loading because the banner ad server wasn't keeping up. There were many sites where it was clear that everything else on the page had loaded almost immediately, yet I couldn't interact with the content because it was waiting on that one ad. Sometimes it would even time out and leave the page in a useless state. Using adblock solved these problems for me.

  151. Non-issue by ZwJGR · · Score: 1

    Even if every single technically-aware firefox user blocked all ads forever more, the revenue decrease by ad corporations/websites would not be catastrophic.
    Who clicks ads the most anyway: clueless, naïve or foolish IE users. As about 80% (69% of statistics are made up on the spot) of the internet falls into this category and will keep on clicking on ads regardless of common sense, and these are the vast majority ad revenue source anyway, where is the problem.
    The IE folks can view and click the ads, the FF/tech crowd can block them, and the ads/websites get the (not especially reduced) revenue from the clicks of the former group...

    Everybody wins (especially us :) )...

    --
    There is no psychiatrist in the world like a puppy licking your face - Ben Williams
  152. Use of publicly available resources is NOT theft! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    TFA is a badly written, self-contradictory piece that appears to be solely designed to increase readership. For example, it says

    Thus, every time someone uses advertisement-blocking software to avoid the graphical ads embedded within a Web site, they are denying the Web site operator revenue that would otherwise have gone to pay for the bandwidth that is consumed during that browsing session. While it could be said that TiVo users are freeloading from the broadcast networks, users of Web advertising skipping technology are far closer to theft than they are to freeloading. This is not a clearly defined issue, but there are a significant number of moral issues at play.....

    In the end, a few things are clear: Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources.


    Web users, like TV users, aren't bound by any obligation (legal, moral, or otherwise) to view the material made publicly available to them by those service providers. TV providers have whined about people using VCRs to skip ads for decades! Just because they have the media on their side doesn't make their argument more correct. Web providers are likewise whining about people blocking portions of content and, in an attempt to make themselves look like victims, call it "theft." It's NOT THEFT! If the information they provide isn't supposed to be publicly accessible, then it shouldn't be made publicly available via an open web server! It'd be a completely different scenario if someone were using .htaccess or similar mechanisms to protect content from non-paying users, but that's not the case here.

    To summarize this non-issue: Some web operators are upset because they've chosen a badly designed business model which the public isn't willing to support. A subset of those web operators have decided to try to coerce the public into supporting the model anyway, applying a technological fix to what is clearly a sociological or human relations problem. Use of the words "immoral," "theft," and "legality" are being thrown about in order to make this non-issue seem important.

    Possible fix: These web operators could supply ads to which users don't object, e.g., the ads could be entertaining instead of annoying, informative instead of insulting, tasteful instead of garish pieces of trash, and safe instead of being vectors of attack.

    "Adapt or die," anyone?
  153. This is so stupid. by John+Pfeiffer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sure I'm not the only person who uses an ad blocker ONLY to block ads on sites with annoying ads. Like those stupid bits of flashtastrophe that ask for user interaction to do something dumb, or the banners with SOUND. Because, yeah. Everyone wants to occasionally blast some moron saying "congratulations, you've won an X" from their speakers.

    Any site that runs shit like that, is not allowed to complain. Plain and simple. I don't think it's really necessary or called for to block ads everywhere. If there was some sort of advertising standard saying what is okay and what isn't, this wouldn't be a problem. (Of course, there'd have to be some way to enforce such a thing with fines or whatever) Popup ads? Gone. Browser-jacking bullshittery? Gone. Ads that look like dialog boxes or tell the user they've won something? Gone.

    --

    Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
  154. Wow by TheLink · · Score: 1

    Next it's going to be illegal to take toilet breaks during TV ads?

    And we're all going to have our eyelids forced open and forced to stare at ads when browsing the internet, otherwise it's stealing?

    If the ads are really good I might actually tell others about it. e.g. the "will it blend" videos - they're ads, but many of them are fun to watch.

    I also wonder how many extra Diet Cokes and mentos were sold because of people watching Fritz Grobe and Stephen Voltz's video and then going off to try a few experiments themselves.

    --
    1. Re:Wow by Buran · · Score: 1

      "Next it's going to be illegal to take toilet breaks during TV ads?"

      Apparently, yes.

      Skipping Commercials Is Stealing According To Turner Ceo - Neowin ...

  155. I AM paying for this content by sgauss · · Score: 1

    I get DSl via AT&T who subcontracts email to Yahoo...who plasters my browser page with ads. I use the web email to check my email at work, and don't want my browser page plastered with ads that don't reflect the professionalism my workplace environment expects. Since I'm paying for this content anyway, Yahoo can bite me if they think I'm going to view their ads, too.

  156. From a former ad profiteer... by Shoeler · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I ran two websited that used contextual ads (from the likes of vibrant media and kontera) as well as banner-based stuff (google, yahoo, etc) and I can tell you that the worst person to piss off is the one that doesn't want to see the ad. They were never going to click on it anyway, so why should you care? Most of our deals were cost-per-click revenue anyway so I didn't care to serve an ad to a person who wasn't going to click it and have to deal with pissing them off. A few months before I sold both sites (and am glad to be out of that business, though I miss the revenue), I made it so that folks could disable contextual ads through a profile setting, and added the ability for them to pay a paltry sum ($10 per year) to remove all ads site-wide. Folks were thrilled to pay a cheap price, I made some good cash, and everyone was happy.

    I knew of folks using ad blocking software (hell, I use adblock plus myself!) and would never have done anything to that group for the sole reason that I wasn't going to make money on them anyway and might as well make em happy instead of mad.

    Oh - and I determined that most of my ad-clicks were unregistered folks who visited my site for the first time - one of those dirty little industry secrets.

    1. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by ben+there... · · Score: 1

      I made it so that folks could disable contextual ads through a profile setting, and added the ability for them to pay a paltry sum ($10 per year) to remove all ads site-wide. Folks were thrilled to pay a cheap price, I made some good cash, and everyone was happy. It sounds like your regular visitors were the ones most likely to want to remove the ads they see all the time. They wanted to bad enough, and liked the site enough, to pay for the removal of ads. This group of regulars would also be the most likely to spread-the-word and promote your site, increasing page-rank and the number of the second type of visitor:

      Oh - and I determined that most of my ad-clicks were unregistered folks who visited my site for the first time - one of those dirty little industry secrets. Those that may have found your site through a search engine, visiting for the first time, were the most likely to actually click on an ad. These people found the site because of the popularity of it that was promoted by your regular members.

      It sounds to me like your regular members, who aren't as willing to put up with ads but are willing to pay for a subscription, were actually a huge benefit in bringing in new members, who did view and click on the ads. The regular membership base of a website is the exact wrong people to attack for not wanting to view ads. Without a regular membership base, you don't have a popular website.
    2. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by sanctimonius+hypocrt · · Score: 1

      "I wasn't going to make money on them anyway and might as well make em happy instead of mad."

      Another man might say, 'I wasn't going to make money on them anyway, so to hell with them.' There's something really important in that difference.

    3. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      I really only got one thing out of this. You ran a porn site right?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    4. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by Shoeler · · Score: 1

      I really only got one thing out of this. You ran a porn site right?

      Ha! I wish. No - ran two automotive car forum sites. :)
    5. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by Shoeler · · Score: 1

      Ugh. Automotive car forum. That must be like ATM Machines. Stupid me!

    6. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by ZendarPC · · Score: 0

      I too am a webmaster and agree entirely with this perspective. What's going on here is the evolution of a marketplace. The old business model, in which obtrusive ads went unopposed, is quickly coming to an end. The crossroads facing webmasters is simple: adapt or die. Those who do business on the Internet, better than anyone, should know that the world of business changes rapidly, leaving those who refuse to change with it behind. It's not a matter of if, but when, ads will no longer be delivered in such a way. It's inevitable.

    7. Re:From a former ad profiteer... by dinofile · · Score: 1
      I think you had the right idea by having an ad-free option, but I really think its not done in a way that works for all parties.

      Its true what some other comment said, its your loyal visitors that really bring you the revenue, cause they spread the word. They gave you free advertising, cause you must have had something to offer in the first place. So if you *know* it pissed off most of your loyal regular customers, why insult them further with a fee.

      What I came to learn, rather recently in fact, is that many people actually like (or at least don't mind) ads. Who knew ! :) Some just love the lucky dip of ads. But on the flip side, sites seem to think that is a good excuse to neglect the wishes of many other regular visitors.

      Things have changed since the output only medium of free-to-air TV and radio, where they had no choice but to blindly push ads equally to all content viewers. Along came talk-back radio, allowing the interaction with their listeners/customers to actually be the content and to reach a wider audience and better target their ads.

      Now with the internet, we have reasonably high interactivity. At least the ability of real time choice of content. But nearly all sites are still hanging on to the old mentality of forcing all customers to view ads. To be blunt, IMO its mainly out of fear and greed. Fear of not sustaining business in another manner and greed for thinking they can milk it without concern for others.

      Google leads the way in non-obtrusive, targeted ads that shows that a better ad harmony is a popular option.

      Conversely, Flash is being touted by advertisers and some web-devs as some kind of savour for site owners cause they will be able to totally control their content. Content really meaning "forced ads". I am not a Flash expert, but I see more and more full flash websites. Its an impressive platform in many ways. The flash binary client engine won't allow end users to filter anything (at a browser level AFAIK).

      Unfortunately, the bottom line is that the majority of sites can not be trusted to keep the ad levels at a happy level, or we wouldn't be talking about this already :) Yeah its easy to say, just don't visit that site, but lets not bury our heads in the sand about this and be a bit more symbiotic about this.

      If sites can't keep their advertising to Google'esk levels, then this is my simple suggestion:

      By default ALL/MOST advertising is OFF. Yes OFF ! The page header can have a SWITCH button that simply toggles ads on/off. Turning ads on could be promoted by saying "Please support our site by allowing free ads" or "Lots of great products with ads on" or whatever. Something that respects the visitors choice and plays on their curiosity or loyalty. Ads can be loaded into sidebar (best), interlaced in content, whatever.

      Your average user would have cookies turned on. Its a safe bet that the ones that have issues with cookies are mostly likely the ones not interested in your ads anyway, so you'd keep them happy with no ads (don't forget they are the content lovers who prob spread the word about your site).

      Forced-Ad haters and first time visitors get to your content quick. Sites don't waste bandwidth on Ad haters, and visa versa. Most importantly, visitors respect your site's attitude towards their wishes/needs. If ads interest them in any way, and its simple to do, more than likely they'll turn em on. Curiosity and allegiance are as strong traits as frustration and defiance, which is building in end users.

      and thats all I have to say about that :)

  157. Ah, remember the beginnings of the Internet? by Ynsats · · Score: 1

    I feel old.

    I can remember a time when I could actually load a page that was nothing but actual content that was relevant to what I was looking for. No one was trying to sell me anything or profit from my experience. Nor was there any kind of extortion being propagated on the pages I was viewing just because someone thought it was "ethical" for them to gain profit from information that they willingly published on a website and I needed and asked for and was provided.

    See, the Internet was conceived as the most powerful tool in the world. It is a medium for a FREE exchange of information. How this bastardized commercialization of a tool so powerful it can harness the entirety of human knowledge and make it so readily available you don't even have to get out of bed to use it has demonized and raped the collective knowledge of the human race for profit is where the real crime is.

    It's not the fact that some slobbering idiot of a spammer wants to flood my Inbox with emails that never even get opened. It's not the fact that some moron Russian scripter in Europe constantly registers bogus accounts on my Internet based forums that I pay for and are not supported by one red cent of ad revenue just so he/she can profit from my use of my private sites paid for by my private, hard earned money. It's not the constant barrage of ads on sites where the whole goal was to gain insane levels of readership and now they cannot support the financial demand that those insane levels require to support so they had to turn to ad revenue.

    No, it's none of that that is the issue. The issue is that while TV and Radio are consumer products intended that way from the start, they cannot be compared to the Internet. The only resources my TV and radio use are my actual, physical TV and radio and the electricity I use to power them. I give no resources to the companies broadcasting on the airwaves. If I want to partake in those activities, I need the hardware to listen in. The advertisers have to pay for usage of the broadcaster's equipment to get their message to me so I will listen to it and buy whatever half-assed crap they are peddling. Why do the brroadcasters get to profit from others using their equipment to get their ads out to me? Why is it ok for the ad people to not be able to exploit the broadcasters but it's just fine and dandy for them to exploit me and my personal hardware for their gains? When do I see a profit for their financial gains from using my hardware to broadcast their content? I mean, you wouldn't think of going to work for free so your boss can make millions off of your knowledge and abilities while you struggle to eat in abject poverty, right? You work for a piece of that pie 'cause you have an advantage they need. Well, I have an advantage in my computer systems that they need and if they are going to profit from it I sure as hell want a cut of the pie too. If you don't pay your electric bill, what happens? If you don't pay your phone bill, what happens? If you don't pay your rent, what happens? If you don't pay your service provider bill, what happens? You lose access to those goods or services until reasonable financial arrangements can be made, then access is restored. Well I have goods and services that they want access to and until I see a check for my rendered goods and services, they will not be allowed access to those goods and services until reasonable financial arrangements can be made. Preferably in the form of a blank check.

    The Internet though? No, not the same deal. I need to be much more committed to use it. I have to buy my own computer and the associated resources that go with it including my operating system, my storage space, my memory and even my CPU cycles. I own them and bought them for my use as I see fit and where my needs arise. Now I have to deal with some weaselly little scourge of an ad company telling me I'm stealing from them? Who the hell are you!? I PAID for my system! I USE my system for what I want. I DON'T want your ads! So I install software that shuts yo

  158. Is there a list? by Caerdwyn · · Score: 1

    Is there a list of websites implementing this FireFox boycott somewhere? I'd like to see there is anyone that anybody cares about on the list. If thing else... holiday season is coming up, and I want to know what activism my money may or may not be supporting, and do my own little boycott.

    --
    Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
  159. I think this is quite true by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Especially when you combine it with the 3rd big problem of irrelevance. Web ads are very, very often for things you just don't give a shit about. TV ads are actually quite targeted, they get demographic information on shows and pick what ads to run based off of who is likely to be watching. However many web advertisers simply smear their banners over and and every site. Not to mention that many are borderline fraudulent.

    I've found that when you have ads that don't have this problem, not only do I not mind, I can even be happy with them. Google ads are an example. They hold the record as the only online ads I've ever bought something from. More, I've done it several times. I don't mind them at all. The servers seem to be fully capable of handling the load, so they aren't slow, the ads are very unobtrusive and on Google itself blend right in, and they are very relevant to what I'm doing.

    For example I'll search for something I'm interested in purchasing and rather than looking at the normal search results, I look at the ads. Here is a list of people willing to sell me what I want. The ad usually takes me right to the relevant page. Now that's useful.

    However that's not how most advertisers want to do it. For some reason everything they know about advertising seems to fall out of their brain when it comes ot the web, and they believe that the answer is invariably make it more obtrusive and it'll work.

    1. Re:I think this is quite true by greed · · Score: 1

      The other kind of Web ad is for something that you are interested in, but the company only does business in the U.S. So why send ads to non-U.S. IPs?

    2. Re:I think this is quite true by innerweb · · Score: 1

      I have made it a habit to block only certain advertising companies content. I have a few rules I use to decide who to block.

      • Are they serving up any ads with dangerous content?
        • Malware
        • Code that crashes browsers.
        • Adult, gambling, or other subject matter that my children have no business seeing.
        • Ads from companies that are known to be fraudulent
      • Are they serving up ads that are meaningless gibberish (punch the monkey for instance).
        • Can you punch/shoot the monkey.
        • You are a winner ***.
        • Congratulations, you are the millionth ***
        • Any other blatant lie or deception.
      • Are they tracking me or gathering information on me without my permission?
      • Are they slow to respond when the page is requested?
      • Do they have a less than stellar history with legal and moral practices?

      I have made it a habit to block these providers at the firewall and redirect there requests to an html snippet that gives a link to an explanation as to why the site is not reachable. I have friends who use my services as well (the firewall settings and filtering). It works well. We keep fraudulent advertisers off of our systems, away from our children and we still browse. Firefox is my browser of choice, and it blocks a few more things that I may not have set up, and allows me to view the ads I want to, but I still have to use IE and some of the group prefer IE. I do view ads that are interesting to me, and have even purchased some after running across an ad (and then doing some homework).

      Advertisers should take a hint, provide useful concise and decent content without malware, tracking cookies or other sneaky/illegal devices and you might find us browsing your ad for the information it contains. For the moment, there are few advertisers who publish information I would read anyway. It comes across as nothing but lies and euphemisms. As long as they publish that kind of drivel, I am much more likely to not purchase from them. I figure if they are going to lie or deceive in an ad, how can I trust the product I am buying?

      And to those of you hosting content and relying on advertisements to generate revenue, choose the companies you let modify your web pages carefully. I block your sites as well if you keep allowing them to provide these problematic ads. Choose a reputable company that has a history of NOT serving poor advertising. You may have to work harder to make a site that they are interested in, but that is your job if you chose it. For instance, all those squatters who sit on a host name and serve up ads called a *search* list, you are all blocked on my systems. What you do is an abuse of the intention of the internet, and I will not support it. Don't like it, tough. Give me a valid reason to open up that site, a reason that meets my needs and wants. That is called customer service. Learn it.

      I have several sites that I make advertising revenue off of. They are not going to make me rich on there own, but together, they add up. I only use a few advertising providers and I make sure the content is what the users want. Some even pay to not have ads. I am creating more every year. Don't ask which sites, they won't survive a slashdotting 8-). but, I know from my experience that with a little due diligence, and some effort into providing good original content, you don't need to rely on the bad advertising services to get a decent revenue.

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    3. Re:I think this is quite true by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      all those squatters who sit on a host name and serve up ads called a *search* list, you are all blocked on my systems. What you do is an abuse of the intention of the internet, and I will not support it. Don't like it, tough. Give me a valid reason to open up that site, a reason that meets my needs and wants So you block Googles ads then?

      http://www.google.com/domainpark/
      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    4. Re:I think this is quite true by innerweb · · Score: 1

      I checked our blocked list, and yes in fact some of the domains I am blocking look like they are. How about that! I never really gave it any thought. They just fit our profile and into the block list they go. lol

      And, no, we are not unblocking them.

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
  160. No, its is not theft, realize what ad-supported is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it is nothing more then the old "free gift" deal, provided you sit through a sales talk. They are pretty common, BUT there is absolutly nothing that forces you to BUY anything from that sales talk, or even listen.

    An ad supported website is in fact giving you a freebie (the content) in the hope you will take the real product they are trying to sell you (the ad). Understand this and understand this clearly, ALL businesses who get their revenue through ads are NOT in the business of selling content, they are in the business of selling ads. Google is NO longer a search engine company, they are an ad company, that sells ads. They just happen to have a search engine as their major freebie.

    TV stations do NOT sell say Soaps, they sells the ad blocks in between and basically try to make a living by getting eyeballs to watch their commercial breaks.

    But there is no law that suggests that you HAVE to watch those ads.

    As for ethics. You read this post of mine, that cost me money to produce, you are morally bound to pay me. PAY ME!

    Nope, sorry. Doesn't work that way, and if I included an ad in this post you shouldn't feel anymore pressured to click on it to re-imburse my costs.

    Ad-blocking is nothing more then using tech to filter out ads that you would have ignored anyway. There really is no difference between reading a magazine and skipping the ads, watching a tv show and leaving the room during commericials, and just plain not loading the ads. Is it immoral to not read magazine ads, to zap channels? No. Sure the media companies would love to make you believe that, but it isn't.

    After all, if somebody plays music in the street, are you morally obliged to pay them? Street performes would love this, but sorry, no, you are not. If they want payment to be ensured they need to go in a private room and charge an entrence fee.

    Same on the web, want people to pay for your content, demand payment in advance. Ads are strictly voluntary.

  161. Generally, I let the ads in... by Trillan · · Score: 1

    Generally, I let the ads in for exactly this reason. Most of them don't bother me anyway. It isn't like I'm EVER going to click on one of them, but if it makes the web site owner happy somehow, that's cool with me.

    However, it's gotten to the point where I've blocked Facebook's flyers, which border on soft porn in the Vancouver, BC area. The truth is that I'm an adult. I don't hide in the bushes leafing through porn I found in someone's trash can. I don't oggle the lingerie section on the Sears catalog. I don't search the web for free porn videos. I've grown up. One day, my children are going to be watching what's on my screen and asking questions, and the right time for me to start making sure my screen is clear of soft porn is today. If web sites aren't going to realize that, they're going to have to have their ads blocked, and I'm not going to feel guilty about it. Not one smidgeon.

  162. Possible "ethical" mod to AdBlock by adrianbaugh · · Score: 1

    I don't give a monkey's about downloading the adverts because I have a (reasonably) unlimited broadband connection. What I care about is having to view them. I have a certain (limited) degree of sympathy for the websites that rely on advertising revenue, largely because I hate the pay-per-view model more than the advertising-funded model. I'm sure there are other people in the same situation. Surely it would be pretty easy for someone to add an option to the Adblock extension so that it would download the advertising content, possibly at a throttled rate, and then just send it to /dev/null instead of displaying it. Then everyone's happy: the user doesn't get to see adverts, the websites he enjoys get their revenue and the advertisers get no more and no fewer sales than they would have done had I seen their adverts, as I have a moral reluctance to buy stuff based on flashy but largely irrelevant advertising productions.

    --
    "'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
    - JRR Tolkien.
  163. No loss of income -- ads downloaded anyway by alexburke · · Score: 1

    If I'm not mistaken, Adblock Plus has an option -- enabled by default, IIRC -- that downloads blocked page elements anyway, then just suppresses their rendering. This way, a website operator won't even know if l've blocked any of their ads, and nor will the advertiser. The website owner will still get the same CPM out of me, because I'm causing him to be paid anyway, even though I'm not seeing at the ad in question.

    So this is not a problem for website owners, but rather a problem for advertising companies. But that doesn't seem to be what all the screaming is about...

  164. bandwidth, RAM and cputime! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Ever break off for five minutes to browse the web while your computer is performing a demanding task? FTFA:

    Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources

    By the standards of that ridiculous argument it's advertisers that are the thieves with their resource- stealing javascript and flash animations. Are the advertisers now saying it can't be stealing because the user can turn these adverts off? Those who don't understand the the web should transition to broadcast TV, the author of that article included.
  165. Not Insightful. (not even a little) by mcmonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If things weren't so horribly intrusive and capable of tracking a user's entire internet experience, for the sole purpose of selling you stuff, people wouldn't bitch.

    I'm sure there's some fancy latin term for this fallacy, but I'll just call it the War Games defense. (The only winning move is not to play.)

    The parent poster is saying if an ad is static text or image--no flash--and doesn't track you past the single page displaying the ad, then it is immoral to block the ad. Interesting.

    I say, my stand on blocking ads has nothing to do with the ads. My argument doesn't depend on ads being obtrusive or anything else. I simply say, I control what I download. I choose not to download from certain sources.

    You see, I don't get into a debate on types of ads. I don't even really address the issue of ads at all. I just say, I download what I want to download. If I think I'll never have any reason to request data from a domain, I might use a HOSTS file to direct requests for that domain to 0.0.0.0 just to protect myself from any inadvertent requests I may make.

    Someone who wants to take the position that there is something wrong with not viewing ads on a web page has to play on my field and explain why the ISP connection and the computer I pay for are obligated to accept someone else's data without my request.

    1. Re:Not Insightful. (not even a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The parent poster is saying if an ad is static text or image--no flash--and doesn't track you past the single page displaying the ad, then it is immoral to block the ad. Interesting. No, (s)he isn't. If ads would "play nice" most people wouldn't bother blocking them. The GP says nothing about what's immoral.

      I agree with your main point though.
    2. Re:Not Insightful. (not even a little) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I might use a HOSTS file to direct requests for that domain to 0.0.0.0 just to protect myself from any inadvertent requests I may make." - by mcmonkey (96054) on Tuesday September 11, @01:34PM (#20557241)

      Agreed, 110% - & there are many benefits to doing it for the end-user, in both speed AND security no less... read on:

      DOWNLOAD LINK for a good custom HOSTS file that blocks over 27,000 known adbanner servers:

      http://forums.techpowerup.com/attachment.php?s=7cbf6b5496c42c57137f9a1383375223&attachmentid=6540&d=1172567412

      (PURPOSE DESCRIPTIONS, INSTALLATION DIRECTIONS & EDITING DIRECTIONS BELOW)

      1st of all, it's my (and YOUR) monthly bandwidth I/you/we all pay for, so I demand all of it be MINE, & not for downloading adbanner content I do not want (or, do not want to be infected by (& THIS HAS HAPPENED, via malicious script in some of them the past few years now in fact)):

      Why use an ADBANNER BLOCKING HOSTS file? Here is why!

      CHECK THIS, DATED TODAY 02/21/2007:

      Microsoft apologises for serving malware


      http://apcmag.com/5382/microsoft_apologises_for_serving_malware_to_customers

      This is by no means, a first either... it's happened QUITE A FEW TIMES the past few years!

      The attached custom HOSTS file here in the first URL above IS A DOWNLOADABLE WORKAROUND attached as a zipfile (hosts.zip), w/ install directions a few posts beneath that (easy) THAT SECURES YOU AGAINST THIS & ALSO SPEEDS YOU UP AS A BONUS

      It also secures you against times your routers are under attack, or IF YOUR ISP/BSP's DNS SERVERS GO DOWN (per this URL from another thread here & from SLASHDOT DATA AS WELL)

      Computer Routers face Hijack Risk:

      http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?t=25734

      SLASHDOT - DNS Root Server under attack:

      http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/02/06/2238225

      Keep reading...

      AND, sorry webmasters: Yes, I know many of you do NOT like this file of mine & others like it, but this is a BIG part of why I use one!

      (Mine blocks nearly 27,000 known adbanner servers & allows users to speed up access to their fav. sites - THIS latter part though, speed up of access to fav. sites, the user has to setup, himself, but, not loading the banners does as well AND secures you against this very type of threat!)

      I comment out an example of it in the file so the users have a template how to do it... & it's FULLY documented internally in my 'custom HOSTS file', on how to get around when a site changes its URL/IP equation too - very easy, ping & notepad.exe!

      It is also FULLY alphabetized in addition to being organized into diff. sections, so hunting down servers that may already exist in it for blocking adbanners is easier!

      (this was done via a program I wrote up for myself that is noted near the top, which automates checks for me of existing vs. non-existing servers for adbanner blocks in its content - you don't have that, but the program sorted them all this way - this is so you can add new ones easily IN alphabetical order, or find them so you do NOT have 'double entries' (no big deal, because once it is loaded by your local dns cache, it removes those, but the shorter it is, the faster it is loaded!))

      * HOWEVER, THIS is an example of part of why I use this file!

      That, & the fact I pay for my linetime, & want ALL the speed possible out of it... meaning no calls to DNS servers w/ fav. sites you add to it, & YOU add them, not I (takes more time than using this file by FAR) & no calling out to adbanner

  166. adblock subscription by SethJohnson · · Score: 3, Informative



    I don't sift through every page and Adblock everything.

    Check into AdBlock Plus subscriptions. You won't have to sift through any pages. The ads will be blocked automagically. That's what this discussion is mostly about.

    Seth

    1. Re:adblock subscription by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but those subscriptions typically block everything, which is not what I want. I am like the parent, I block ads that make noise, ads that bypass my popup blocker to force a popup. I haven't started blocking the flash overlays yet, but probably will since they seem to be buggy and leave a white box in their wake, making me reload the page to read the article. I don't mind text ads, banner ads, even if they flash and animate as long as they don't make noise. The site owners should be able to make a living after all.

    2. Re:adblock subscription by certain+death · · Score: 0

      Or, you could just let your firewall/router do it, and never have to worry about the crap! http://www.untangle.com/

      --
      "My immediate reaction is "WTF? What kind of moron doesn't make things 64-bit safe to begin with?" Linus
    3. Re:adblock subscription by the_womble · · Score: 1
      So you block ALL ads, reducing the incentive for publishers to prefer less annoying ads.

      It is far better to block just annoying ads (animations etc), thereby making less annoying ads (e.g. text ads) comparatively more profitable.

      I find the best thing is to use Flashblock: almost all the really annoying ads use Flash.

  167. The entire argument is irrelevant by Churla · · Score: 1

    AdBlock all you want.

    When sites stop getting the money they need to keep running and go subscription, or worse yet shut down all together, don't complain.

    The whole model of ad sponsored websites is a social contract of sorts. They agree to provide you content, you agree to look at the ads which pay for the content to be provided. Break one side of the arrangement and the other falls apart soon enough.

    You are not owed a "free internet experience". Free content is not a right, it's a privilege you get some some providers, but not your right.

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
  168. Ehhh, not quite. by Gazzonyx · · Score: 0

    Somebody should make a t-shirt with that. I like it. We can advertise it with web advertisements! I think you've entirely missed the point of this exercise, grasshopper. Go back to waxing on and off for a bit.
    --

    If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    1. Re:Ehhh, not quite. by thrash242 · · Score: 1

      And you've entirely missed the rather obvious joke.

    2. Re:Ehhh, not quite. by Gazzonyx · · Score: 1

      And you, in turn, have missed mine. It seems we're all even now.

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

  169. Sound by wandazulu · · Score: 1

    I block ads for simply one reason: ads that play music, or have an announcer, or whatever. I can ignore or not a general purpose banner ad, but when I'm browsing because I'm the only one in my family that can't sleep at 3 am and suddenly my speakers start booming for an ad, waking up everybody, the word enraged does not do my feelings justice.

  170. I don't block all adverts... by ditoa · · Score: 1

    I only block adverts which piss me off. Such as flashing banners or flying "layers" which pretend to look like windows. I hate it. It makes mad as I remember when the web was decent, without all this crap. I am only 23 and I sound like an old man but I refuse to accept all these horrible adverts. A simple text advert or a well designed STATIC graphic is all that is needed.

    Google did it right with their text adverts. I don't mind text adverts providing they do not get in the way of the content.

    However as most sites go over the top (read: get greedy) with adverts I just simply block them (as well as Flash, JavaScript and Java). Much the same as with popups back in the late 90s when they were starting to become a big problem.

  171. Right or Wrong is irrelevent. by nobodyman · · Score: 1
    Sorry for the relativist subject line, but with respect to adblocking it's pretty much true.

    Without weighing in on the "morality" issue of blocking ads, the simple truth is that if enough people start blocking ad-supported content, ad-supported content will go away. I'm not even saying that this is a bad or good thing, just that it will happen. It'll probably play out in one or more of the following ways:

    Content owners will revert to subscription-based models

    Advertisers will revert to even more insideous tactics.

    Ad-supported content will go belly-up.

    I think that some people are under the illusion that you can rip ads out of the internet and that it will keep chugging along just as was before.

  172. The Ad Technology Will Upgrade by MutualDisdain · · Score: 1

    I can imagine that sites will simply upgrade the technology that displays advertisements to insure they are viewed before the actual content is shown. It could be as simply as giving the user a token when they view the advertisements which is required to view the content. The battle will continue back and forth for many decades, long after HTML and Javascript have died.

    There's always a way.

    --
    - Yes, I am posting at a -1, and no I will not use a proxy to bypass my circumstances.
  173. They don't care, why should I? by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

    I never agreed to listen to each radio ad, watch every commercial on TV, gaze at every billboard, listen to each sales pitch on the phone, or look at their ads. They've never even asked me nicely to do so. Since, they don't care, why should I? I never read ads, and never click them. And if net neutrality is at an end, they'll need to pay to use my line. :)

    Seriously, give me a reason to look at the ad and I will. Right now it's stuff I don't want, don't care about, and never will, presented in a manor that is beyond unattractive, time consuming, and detracts from the content. You'd think that if you made your money from ads you'd want to give a person a good reason to look at them.

    PLUS! Not all ads are honest. I don't know anything about the person who put the ad up, and if it's anything like my inbox they only want to improve my sex life, or sell me drugs from Canada. So I'm immoral for not viewing crap from scammers and ads which I have never clicked on and never will?

    This guys needs to rent Fight Club, then lose the loser job, get rid of all his stuff. His homework tomorrow is to pick a fight with a complete stranger.

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  174. The only reasons we CUSTOMERS adblock ... by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    is the insistence of people who are trying ... and failing ... to sell us by using:

    1. Sound - if I want sound I'll click on your ad.

    2. Movies that autoplay - if I want the shared T1 to flood out, I'll click on your ad.

    3. Moving images - if I want the image to move I'll click on your ad.

    4. Stuff that gets in the way - popups, mouseovers, large giant banners that take up half the screen ...

    When I got my degree in Business Management (Sales and Marketing), you learned that certain techniques turn off customers.

    Solution: Stop turning off customers and we won't adblock you. I don't adblock static images or ads that only play sounds or move or play videos when I click on them.

    If you don't get this, go back to school and learn how to sell.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  175. How about Links? by Valiss · · Score: 1

    I use Links to surf every single day at work for various reasons. Does that mean that I am stealing from them because I see zero images? Are they implying that I must have a certian browser to use their content? Well that is certianly their perogative, but in the same way that many people are with flash, you might need to make sure your design strategy is received well by most of your customer base.

    Or if you are to be upset becuase I can't view images, just put a lock on the home page and charge people to see the content.

    --

    -Valiss
  176. You can't ban Firefox because you're an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    User Agent Switcher:
    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/59
    Makes your user agent string look like Internet Explorer. I think there's a way to do this in Firefox without the plugin, but that's how I do it.

    Web developers have known that scanning for a certain user-agent string has been a stupid idea for about 7 years. Notice that the people who are trying to crap up the Internet and complain about lost ad revenue are idiots and scan for browsers.

    Internet ads are annoying and I will block them. I'm not obligated to read the ads. Websites really do look very nice without the ads.

    1. Re:You can't ban Firefox because you're an idiot by simaul · · Score: 1

      Some sites, like NY times etc., "time out" after a week or so... you can view recent stories,
      but older ones are unavailable (for free).

      I have noticed that if you use User Agent Switcher to pose as the googlebot, you can see these
      older stories anyway.

      So... how unethical is it to masquerade as another agent?

  177. Well no. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    See, if the ads were hosted on the page you were viewing, then you'd have a point...But they're not. AdBlock and similar wouldn't work if it wasn't that the advertisers served their own ads for the most part, making them super easy to block. I mean, if I was browsing with Lynx which doesn't even offer images, or hell, browsing with wget or something, would it still be the same?

    HTML isn't like television. Television is 25 still images a second; there is nothing to filter out except the entire stream. HTML is discrete chunks, and I can very easily tell my browser that I only want to view certain chunks...It's part of the design. I can change the fonts on the pages, I can reset the background color. I can turn off flash or javascript. Don't tell me I HAVE to view it like they "intented"...Hell, using Firefox it's often enough that you can't do that anyway because of some IE only horseshit.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Well no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I didn't say you have to, I said you should. The topic is morality, not ability. You have the right to act immoral in tons of ways. I have the right to be a total and complete dickhead to everybody I meet, that doesn't mean I should. Do you see the difference between rights and morals? And your whole arguement was "its easy to block ads on the web". How does that address morality at all? It doesn't. If the easiest way was always the moral way, everybody would be saints.

      I can concede that because it is so easy to block those ads, that revenue stream isn't exactly a good business model. Similar to how you shouldn't leave your store unattended and just assume everybody will pay what they owe for what they're taking out of your store.

      Using a browser that doesn't support images is a gray area. I guess this whole discussion is about what I feel ok with doing versus what you feel ok with doing. I wouldn't feel ok blocking ads, but I would feel ok with using a browser that doesn't support images because I prefer the browser on its merits independent of advertising concerns. You clearly would feel ok to block every ad becuase its an ad and not what you wanted to see. I can consider that to be "immoral", and suggest that my opinion of where it falls on the morality scale is "correct", but because that is not provable its just a suggestion. I would never try to force you to view ads.

    2. Re:Well no. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      Did you ever begin zapping when a TV show went into a commercial break?

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    3. Re:Well no. by fatal+wound · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Wow. First, let's clear the air. Morality has absolutely *nothing* to do with this. NOTHING. Please get that correct first. Business models are designed to make money by offering something that someone wants. It is that simple. Going by your post, it would be immoral to leave the room when the adverts arrive for television programs; or even scan the radio channels during commercial breaks.

      We filter *everything*. If the business model doesn't work, it doesn't work. Whining that it is "immoral" to not view adverts because a freely offered web page has the ads clipped from it is plainly stupid. Take the corners of Las Vegas in the evening as an example. People stand there and offer various cards for "evening companionship" to all passersby. Would they whine if someone took a card (freely offered by any of these vendors), and clipped the ads from them to only keep the picture?

      Even viewed from other angles, the argument is fallacious. If that form of advertising is not working for you, choose another. If your sole goal is to present free information to all passersby, then do so. If your goal is to make money, and the offering of free web pages have their ads blocked... move on. Examples of this on the web are rampant. You log in to purchase items from many web vendors. If you do not read their adverts, so what? They don't care. Newegg never complains to me that while purchasing my new hard drive that I blocked the other adverts along with my purchase. If they did, I just wouldn't buy anything there and move on to a vendor who was not confused about their ultimate goal.

      So tell me again why a browser that blocks images is a "gray area"? Since no morality is involved (see above paragraph) it just means that the user wishes to use a perfectly valid browser to enjoy what internet content interests them. Ad content does not interest me, and I block almost all of it. I watch television (what little I do watch) via Tivo. The adverts are annoying (usually oppressively loud after a quiet portion of a program), and I am uninterested in their content. I pay a cable provider, who in turn pays the originator of the program.

      The same applies to the internet. I pay a provider to get information I wish. If I need to support sites that I enjoy special content from, I do so. If their only manner of gaining revenue is from the adverts, *and* they are giving the pages away in hopes of you paying attention; tough. Poor business decisions are not my problem. It is the responsibility of a good business to decide their ultimate goal, and format their decisions to accomplish that. A local store gives free samples on the weekends to anyone who visits. They don't complain when you don't buy the product, nor when you do not even inquire as to the company that provides the sample.

      Why should the internet be different?

    4. Re:Well no. by abirdman · · Score: 1

      Thank you sir, for your clear explanation. I could not agree more. This is not about morality! If it's possible to define ad blocking as immoral behavior, the next step will be to define not buying the product as immoral! This whining, frustrated web site owner is welcome to block my browser all he wants. He's already called me "immoral" and won't get into my bookmarks, or even my attention span. It's not unlike the sites that are so ad-riddled that it takes a minute or more to load the page in the first place-- I will click elsewhere. He's welcome to disappear... he can cross his arms and stomp his feet and hold his breath too, if he wants to.

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
  178. Where's an Electric Monk when you need one?! by sponglish · · Score: 1

    The ideal solution is to use an ad blocker so you don't have to see the ads, then have an Electric Monk on-hand to watch the ads for you later....

    --
    "I improvise. It's my greatest talent. I prefer situations to plans..." --Wintermute, William Gibson's "Neuromancer"
  179. Is it right? Yes! by DougofTheAbaci · · Score: 1

    Before I got too far into why I think what I do, I'd just like to point out for all that I'm a web designer. I have my own website. I pay my own hosting fees, and if I used FireFox for more than just development work (God I love FireBug and the Web Dev Plugin!) I'd install a plugin to block adverts.

    Now to why.

    First to start with why advert blocking, to me, is OK. First, the ads I'd block are those annoying Flash ones that pop-up and take up a large section of the screen. They force you to interact with them, if only to close them, and you can't ignore them. I despise that. I dent to avoid websites with those sorts of ads completely because I think it's sloppy for a designer to allow an ad to do that over their content and I think it's even more disrespectful to a site's users who came for the content, not the ads. Forcing your viewers to look at your ads just so you can avoid paying your hosting fees is wrong.

    That being said, I have nothing against Google text adverts, or other simple adverts that don't take up large amounts of space or, in the best case, are actually related to the content of the site and somewhat match the site's design. Some designers say this can't be done. They're lying. If you control your own advertisements you simply say, "It matches the site or it doesn't go up." just such a line in your agreement with an advertiser will save you the issue. You can get extra bonus points for it if you offer to design the advert yourself at a discount to your regular fee. With this you get a little more than if you paid for a per-click ad service and your ads look nice with the rest of your site.

    Now to those who block FireFox...

    I don't care who you are. I don't care what you do. I don't care what your product is, you don't block FireFox. To do so is irresponsible in the extreme. As a web designer or developer you should be dying for your users to use FireFox! Remember, your loyalties aren't to the advertisers, it's to the users! They came to your site to see your stuff! Show it to them! And FireFox is the only other browser on the PC that's being used even marginally as much as IE. Ever built a site? IE makes you want to kill. I build my sites once, then usually again just for IE. It's that bad.

    Secondly, and infinitely more important, regardless of legal issues, you're denying your users the use of their favourite browser. I'm going to let people in on a little secret, there is no website in the known universe, none, nada, that is so important to ANYONE that it should define their choice of browser. So you can't go to that stupid little blog now? Big deal. So you can't look at this new video site? Fine. The stuff is probably on YouTube as well, anyway, and you can use FireFox on that. So to all of you out there who are trying to ban FireFox, remember, you're not going to chance the way your users use the net. You're just going to make them stop coming to your site.

    I swear, some of these people need to sit and think for a moment. What about those who use FireFox but don't block the adverts? Punish the innocent along with the guilty, I like that idea. Hey, it worked for Hitler and Stalin, why not these guys? I know that's a major exaggeration but hey, who cares? As long as some pseudo-Viagra company gets some woman to see their adverts then it's OK.

  180. They're stealing from their users by ebunga · · Score: 1

    What about my bandwidth and my time? Neither are free. Either switch to unobtrusive ads, or go to a subscription model. Project Wonderful and Google AdWords have been working quite well. How did they do it? They went back to old-school models of web advertising.

  181. Costs me money too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Adverts on a web page are sent to my browser as links, which my browser must in turn request from the appropriate server.

    This means that each advert on a page causes my computer to actively send and then receive additional data.

    This results in real additional bandwidth usage on my part.

    If I am using any kind of metered access, or even if I am using unmetered access but with one of the major ISP's who arbitrarily enforce unofficial bandwith caps, then I incur a real cost for viewing that advert.

    So, me configuring my computer to not waste resources in that way is no more immoral than the web site configuring their page such that viewing the advertisements makes use of my resources.

    1. Re:Costs me money too by IcyNeko · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If websites would follow through on their promise of sending me a free DSLR for subscribing to Ebay and Video Professor, I might not block their ads.

    2. Re:Costs me money too by mobydobius · · Score: 1

      no kidding! where is my free ipod and ps3?

      --

      "I like to wear big boy pants."
    3. Re:Costs me money too by cibyr · · Score: 1

      This is part of the reason why video ads especially annoy me. Not only are they annoying, never relevant to anything I care about, and start talking at me from another tab but they're COSTING ME BANDWIDTH. If you think I'm going to pay for you to try and sell me something you're mad.

      --
      It's not exactly rocket surgery.
    4. Re:Costs me money too by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      So, me configuring my computer to not waste resources in that way is no more immoral than the web site configuring their page such that viewing the advertisements makes use of my resources.

      they're not making you go their site, so they're not forcing you to use extra bandwidth to retrieve their ads unless you elect to go to their site. anyone objecting to them blocking browsers that block ads seems to be insisting that the site owner be forced to use his bandwidth to serve customers that are determined not to give anything back, so i'm not sure you're putting the hypocritical label on the right party
    5. Re:Costs me money too by kylehase · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't forget the cost of the electricity to write the data to RAM, spin the HDD and write to the temp Internet cache, light up those LEDs on your NIC card and cable/DSL modem, push the electrons on your TV cable/Telephone line...

      --
      You want fun, go home and buy a monkey!
    6. Re:Costs me money too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This argument is flawed - "they're not making you go to their site".

      No, they're not - they have opened it as a public venue where *anyone may visit*, there is no EULA as in software installation that says I must accept X terms to proceed.

      To fall back on a recent Circuit City issue as a comparison - the man entered the store, got what he wanted, and then wanted to leave. He received grief for not submitting to a search of his goods prior to departure. Unlawful search is prohibited in the USA. They tried to force him to submit to something he /did not agree to/ prior to entry.

      When I go to a website, I'm not signing up/volunteering for anything. I've come to see what is being freely offered to the public. If the site requires subscription to see something, I leave, I'm not that interested. If it's a generic open website, you cannot place any undue expectations on the visitor. They are under no obligation to view 3rd party advertisements.

      Let's say, for sake of argument, I hate google. By extensions, I freakin' hate GoogleAds. When I visit Penny-Arcade, if they have ads being sourced by Google, there is not one solid valid argument you can provide for me having to view these ads - especially when its streamed from a Google server.

      It is not my responsibility to waste time (viewing ads) so that the site owners may generate any extra revenue from something that *I* have to pay for (that being the bandwidth to get data from the servers, since it is not hosted on the site I chose to visit).

      My local Holiday gas station has a deal with Cub Foods for some of their services. Just because I roll up to fill my car with fuel doesn't mean I'm obligated to stare at the stupid LCD TV they have posted over the pump advertising some new product/feature. I can block it out freely - I didn't sign up for the ads.

      Arguing that I should have to have banner ads loaded by my browser is akin to saying there should be a mobster at the pump to force me to look at the advertising screen. It's wrong, it's stupid, and it's the kind of mentality that we've evolved well past.

    7. Re:Costs me money too by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      This argument is flawed - "they're not making you go to their site".

      No, they're not - they have opened it as a public venue where *anyone may visit*, there is no EULA as in software installation that says I must accept X terms to proceed. your use of the word "public" here is confusing, do you actually believe that they're obligated to serve pages to all customers? they're within their rights to not serve you pages because of X just as you're within your rights to not go to their site and use your bandwidth on them. if i go up the street to mcdonalds and decide that i want to eat my food while standing on their service counter, they'd throw me out. why are web businesses more obligated to serve a customer than a real-world business?

      When I go to a website, I'm not signing up/volunteering for anything. I've come to see what is being freely offered to the public. If the site requires subscription to see something, I leave, I'm not that interested. If it's a generic open website, you cannot place any undue expectations on the visitor. They are under no obligation to view 3rd party advertisements. while it's difficult technically to place obligations on the user due to these extensions, sites do place some obligations on users all the time (e.g. the subscriptions you mentioned, or some sites build in so much Flash that it's essentially an obligation to load it to use the site) and if you don't like them you're free to go elsewhere

      Let's say, for sake of argument, I hate google. By extensions, I freakin' hate GoogleAds. When I visit Penny-Arcade, if they have ads being sourced by Google, there is not one solid valid argument you can provide for me having to view these ads - especially when its streamed from a Google server.

      It is not my responsibility to waste time (viewing ads) so that the site owners may generate any extra revenue from something that *I* have to pay for (that being the bandwidth to get data from the servers, since it is not hosted on the site I chose to visit).
      what do you mean "extra revenue"? that's often their only revenue, if everyone blocked the ads and the advertisers knew it then there quite likely would not be a website at all.

      i'd love it if the adblock crowd put their money where their mouth is and loaded an adblock extension that mentions in the user-agent string that you're blocking ads, so that site owners can make their own decision as to whether or not they want you as a customer
  182. Latches anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sick to death of ad companies and their customers claims that they have a "right" to take from me. Give me a break!

  183. The Bandwidth Debate by Midnight+Warrior · · Score: 1

    Let's put the burden on the content provider, not the advertiser. In radio, their bandwidth is measures in seconds. Their signal to noise ratio is very bad during commute and popular talk shows. As such, I'm driven away because of advertising. If they moved down to one 30 second ad every 10 minutes or so, I couldn't help but keep listening.

    Now let's move to web sites. I'm expected to spend bandwidth (bytes) when no such burden has been placed on the content provider. At least in radio, time given to an advertiser is taken away from the program. On the Internet, the content provider gets to outsource ad serving. If sites want out of AdBlock, then they're going to have to inline their ads on their own servers (or at least proxy the content) and interlace advertisements with their regular content. The advertisers would pay more (the cost of the bandwidth they originally spent) to the site to pay for the bandwidth increase. Then, and only then, will the content provider feel a balance of advertisements to content ratio. They might even get a little picky about the trash advertisers push.

    See in today's television market, if someone puts up controversial ads, then the broadcaster is held responsible, if not liable, since they are obliged to screen the ads. A similar accountability for web sites might also clean things up.

  184. TV Analogy by maz2331 · · Score: 1

    How is blocking ads really any different from going to the bathroom during commercial breaks when watching a TV program? It seems to me as if it's exactly the same thing.

  185. Re:Item 6 by Technician · · Score: 1

    6 Put hoops in the way of the shopper. I'm here to look at what you are offering, not fill out a subscription card for your hot lead database.

    I won't even link them, but Lower My bills dot com got nailed for that. I went to look up the information for the advertised loan for the 300,000 fixed rate loan for under $1000 a month payments. In a classic bait and switch, I didn't find the information but was hit with a data miner instead. That's a quick trip to the hosts filter.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  186. Bad Assumption by Baavgai · · Score: 1

    There is an implicit assumption here, similar to the wonky RIAA lost revenue math. The assumption is that a missed advertisement is missed income. This is absurd. I don't like advertisements and never follow them. Indeed, advertising will never motivate me to buy a product, but it can prejudice me against it. In a way, I'm given the product a better chance of getting my money by me not seeing their sales drek.

  187. That is why I only block irritating ads. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never block static ads, text or pictures. Web sites to need ad revenue, after all, or the site may not even exist for me to look at. But I do go out of my way to block moving ads. Actually, I have found myself blocking a lot less since I installed flashblock - I heartily recommend that. But even animated gifs get blocked on sites I visit regularly (for infrequent sites I just hit the Escape key to put them to sleep). I feel this is a reasonable balance between allowing web sites to earn ad revenue and allowing ads to interfere with my browsing.

    I hope this will encourage all advertizers to stick to unobtrusive ads. They need to realize that even non-moving ads will attract users attention if the subject matter is of interest to them, you don't even need to contiously read the ads - your eyes just get drawn to interesting subjects. Animated ads just distract and irritate the reader, making the site less likely to be re-visited.

  188. Not Theft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its not stealing jackass. Its because I don't want popups taking over my computer when I go to a website. If anything its preventing a website from hijacking my browser by changing the window size, toolbars, and annoying sounds. If they call it theft there should be an ad disclaimer telling the user what annoying things this website will do. I can click on no thanks and never visit their site. Internets just get better and better. I don't block google ads, because they're not intrusive text. Not some stupid thing flashing around or popping up on my screen.

    What a fucking tard.

  189. The Economics of Blocking Ads by glpierce · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The parent post ties in rather nicely with a short piece I wrote about two years ago (but never published) in defense of my work on Filterset.G. It may be a bit outdated, but I think it's finally appropriate.

    The Economics of Blocking Ads

    Preface:
    I have nothing against advertisers or advertising. I have no interest in eliminating advertisements from the internet as a whole. Filterset.G is a tool, and is not tied to an ideology; there is no ulterior motive. Many people believe that Adblock, Filterset.G, and similar projects will be "the death of the free internet", and attack people developing tools to block ads (including myself). I have no desire to "destroy" the internet or advertising.

    Reducing Costs to Suppliers and Consumers
    Advertisements are unwanted distractions to many people (i.e. those who don't buy from ads), and ad-blockers provide an easy way to remove them. Transferring advertisements to people who ignore or don't buy from them is costly to both advertiser and advertisee. Bandwidth isn't free, and the bits often travel thousands of miles through dozens of machines to reach consumers. For those who have no intention of buying advertised products in response to ads, it is a waste, and can become very expensive. The host of the ad pays to transfer it, and many ISPs charge users by the amount of data transferred, so they pay to see it. Advertisers rarely pay sites for ads based on impressions (views, not clicks/sales) anymore, due to the difficulty in gauging its success, so passive ad-viewers (who look, but don't click), needn't be considered.

    Increasing Profit Margins
    People who don't buy from ads are negative in the expense/profit ratio for advertisers. Eliminating the cost of advertising to non-purchasers increases profits given a constant userbase. The risk, of course, is that people who buy occasionally might also block ads and thereby decrease profits. For this reason, I strongly urge people not to install ad-blocking software on other people's computers unless they express a desire for it. The greatest threat from ad-blocking is from people pushing it on those who do buy from ads.

    Demand Keeps Suppliers in Business
    Let's hypothetically say that all internet advertising was eliminated overnight (which is not going to happen). That would cut a major source of funding for web sites, which would force many to close, decreasing supply. Demand, however, would still exist. As supply decreases, demand would bring capital to the "best" remaining suppliers. Subscriptions, donations, grants, and sales keep many ad-free sites alive today, and can easily continue to do so in the future. Hosting a small web site is fairly cheap, and the increasing userbase that drives up costs also increases the number of potential donors, subscribers, and purchasers. A worst-case scenario would be a drastic reduction of economically unsustainable sites, which definitionally provide too little benefit to users to warrant their covering the costs of operating it. Many people would call this a "best-case" scenario, separating the wheat from the chaff, though I take no stance.

    Making Ads Less Obtrusive
    If public perception of ads becomes increasingly negative, they will become decreasingly effective. Advertising strategies will necessarily shift to less offensive and distracting forms. Many users vocally support the replacement of banners and other obtrusive advertising methods by text ads in areas distinct from page content. Unobtrusive, low-bandwidth ads may not be as eye-catching, but they are well tolerated by all but the most aggressive anti-ad folks.

    Forcing Ads
    Many advertisers and site owners are researching methods of bypassing ad-blocking software. If ad-blocking is only done by those who do not buy from ads, the outcome will become increasingly negative as their efforts increase. Many people are becoming more and more fed-up with in-your-face ads, and are starting to boycott co

    --
    G
  190. User can read or not read what they want by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

    I don't read the classifieds in my newspaper, why should I have to look at ads on websites?

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  191. I Don't Owe You Anything by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 1

    I walk into your store. I look but don't buy. For you, that's a lost opportunity to extract some revenue from my pocket. That is something entirely different than theft. You don't have a claim on my time, my attention, or the money in my pocket.

    These guys are no different than aggressive panhandlers who shout abuse if I don't hand them a buck. Don't assume you are entitled to respect from those of us who make a living by means other than parasitism.

    The only moral issue is that there are some shitheads who think they have the right to coerce their potential customers. Yeah, and if it wasn't for date rape, you'd never get laid. The only things you deserve are bankruptcy, ignominy and ridicule.

    --
    Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
  192. Exactly! The dollars-per-megabyte model is broken by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

    Anybody remember "back in the day" when they just charged you for the pipe, and not how many bits you push through it? Soon as they started this dollars-per-megabyte bullshit payment scheme, that's when this kind of crap was born.

    And now that the business people have that set up as the payment model, the exact same business types who saw the internet as a commercial opportunity are complaining. Well guess what? You can't have things both ways. Boo freaking hoo.

    And it'll only get worse when net neutrality goes away. Suddenly, adblock and utilities like it are going to be the only way to view "non-preferred" web pages in a timely fashion. When the blocking software gets a notch better to cope with it, you can bet the same slack-jawed money grubbers are going to be absolutely stunned to find that people want to work a way around their clusterfuck of a revenue stream.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  193. What advertisements ? by SuluSulu · · Score: 1

    I don't see any. O:-)

  194. Blind. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How exactly will a webmaster find ads that users are willing to accept if the ads are blocked and nobody ever sees them?

    I'll tell you. By hosting the ads themselves. They vet the ads, they host the ads. They don't just rent the top of their page for every crap ad in the world to get thrown in.

    Those ads say something about your site. If you're so willing to whore your content that you'll bend over and take whatever the ad company feels you outta take, then don't be surprised if people start blocking your ads.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Blind. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      That only works if your website is large enough to actually attract advertisers.

      Google Adsense, on the other hand, while not paying a lot, pays you per thousand views for displaying text ads that are determined by your site's keywords (as determined by Google... go figure).

      For instance, it's not a secret that I'm a volunteer on a game music site which uses Google Adsense. The ads showing for me right now are text ads for Nintendo Ringtones and a PC game.

      As a side note, I've noticed that Adblock subscriptions tend to block Google Adsense, despite their ads not being popups, animations, or flash. This isn't relevant here, but it is to comments further up that I don't have time to reply to before I leave, thanks to /.'s enforced 1 minute wait between comments.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  195. Bullshit. by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Users don't have to earn jack shit. This is where you are completely wrong.

    As a webmaster, you bear ALL the burden. I wish webmasters would wake up and smell the fucking coffee.

    * YOU (the webmaster) signed the agreement with your hosting provider (A dollars per month)
    * YOU (the webmaster) signed the agreement with the ad network (B dollars per impression)
    * YOU (the webmaster) are responsible for bringing to bear content that attracts visitors (C hits per month)
    * YOU (the webmaster) are responsible for technical measures that ensure that users can't get content without the ads (such that attrition rate k -> 0).
    * YOU (the webmaster) are responsible to maximize your own operating profit -- such that C*B*(1-k) >= A.

    No where in this equation is the user expected to do anything. You bear all the risk. You are in control of A, B, C and k.

    Wake up and smell the coffee, you whiny assholes. If you can't deal with this, then you need to get a new job you lazy PHP hacks.

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
    1. Re:Bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make a good point, don't sully it with programming-language fanboyism. PHP is not relevant in any way here.

    2. Re:Bullshit. by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      No where in this equation is the user expected to do anything.

      This is the problem! The user is not expected to do anything! It is the user modifying the content that is causing a problem. The website developer is not in control of "C" when the very browser they are using allows users to get the content without the ads. How are you, as a web developer, supposed to fight that?

      Also, my reply was a spoof on the parent post.

  196. definitions by Tom · · Score: 2, Informative

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft? Is this right? No, it is wrong.

    Merriam-Webster:

    theft:
    1 a : the act of stealing; specifically : the felonious taking and removing of personal property with intent to deprive the rightful owner of it

    Which means in order for it to be theft, it would have to meet the following requirements:
    * It must be illegal
    * It must be taking and removing of personal property
    * It must be intended to deprive the rightful owner of said property

    Blocking ads satisfies none of these requirements even remotely. So whatever you so, however much you dislike it, it is not theft.

    And no, this is not nit-picking. Calling things by their proper terms is a requirement of a proper evaluation process.
    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  197. Flash blocking and quality of advertising by nbahi15 · · Score: 1

    As a general rule the quality of advertising on the web is terrible. There are no standards of advertising and a fairly low bar to entry as a content provider. I don't use adblock, but I use Flash blocker which largely accomplishes the same thing. I refuse to look at Flash anything. If content providers don't vet the advertising, insist upon animations and other overt distractions, it is no more immoral that I block their advertising than it is for them to subject me to it. It is poor advertising practice to drive off your customers, or make them resort to technological filters to make the web useful. If an advertiser wants me to see something, try looking to magazines in the target audience field and determine what is reasonable. Content providers need to look at the ads that they are posting on behalf of advertisers and be discriminating. And please, no Flash.

    Flash - the new animated GIF.

  198. I don't drink backwash either, not even my own. by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 1

    I am having trouble with the whole 'theft' analogy/comparison/description/accusation when its based on me not taking something.

    --
    I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
  199. Morality? Advertising?? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    Man, things are getting awfully oxymoronic around here...

    --
    That is all.
  200. I am sympathetic to this argument but by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    the problem is it gives too much credence to the advertisers' argument. You're saying, as long as their ads aren't too annoying, they have the right to demand I look at them. As far as I'm concerned, that's bogus. It's my computer, my browser, and my eyes. Whether your ad resizes my browser and cranks up the sound and plays the 1812 overture or whether it's a tiny line of 6-point text at the bottom of the page, it's my right to view what I want to and not view what I don't want to. I don't care if you have based your entire business model on me vewing your ads; I don't care if you will get deported or gang-raped if you don't get enough click-throughs... That is just not my problem. You don't want to share your content with me, then don't. But if you do share it, don't act like you have the right to tell my computer what to do with it. This entire discussion is a canard -- the premise that advertisers have a right to intrude on my browsing experience in any way whatsoever is one I reject unconditionally. If I can block your ads, I will, and if I can't and your ad annoys me, I won't visit your page. Calling me a thief is not going to guilt trip me into allowing you to control my viewing experience. If I could install adblock on my car windshield so I could ignore billboards I would do that too; when I read magazine articles I don't feel a twinge of guilt when I skip the ads and head straight for page 34 where the article I want to read is. What's that? You say magazines have already paid for advertising, whereas websites depend on ad views for their revenue? Too bad. As someone else said here, your revenue model is not my problem, and I resent your attempt to make it my problem by trying to guilt trip me.

  201. Sure, this is stealing by strike6 · · Score: 1

    Just like downloading music is stealing from the RIAA......

  202. Not only is it theft for not watching the ads by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 1

    It is also theft if you don't actually buy the products in order to support the site. At least they'd be trying to push this one through if they could convince you that not looking at their ads is theft.

  203. Re:Theft? Immoral? by tknd · · Score: 1

    can they tell if FF spoofs itself as IE?

    No because it is part of the HTTP header. There's nothing stopping me from going into telnet and writing up my own http header or using netcat to grab the http request from IE, Firefox, or Opera and duplicating it myself.

    Companies will also find new ways to deliver ads - and those that do so in a way that results in more viewer ship will make money.

    One additional point: the entire advertising scheme runs on taking your time. So when an ice cream truck drives down the road blasting the ice cream music, is it a crime if I have ear plugs in? It's my time, my ears, and my eyes. The advertisers are taking something from me, not the other way around. Consumers have zero obligation to sit around and give their time to salesmen.

  204. Morality? by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    No. I am not required to guarantee you a living. I am not a walking wallet whose sole purpose in existence is to be farmed for cash. I am not amused by advertisers' incessant, inane babble. I hate them. And if you try to make me listen to it, I'm going to end up hating you. It's not that you won't be getting revenue because I'm not viewing or clicking through on the ads. You will not be getting revenue because I will not be visiting your site.

    I generally don't block ads. I disable all animation, flash and Javascript for sites I don't trust. If you try to get around that, I will not visit your site. If I see you trying to artificially draw traffic to your site I will not visit your site. If you are even trying to compare what I'm doing in any way to immoral behavior, I will not visit your site (In fact, I didn't not visit your site.) I have no interest in you. You are beneath me.

    For the sites I do visit I will click on ads if they interest me. I've purchased a few items from thinkgeek after clicking through ads on Slashdot. I've looked at several game ads over on Penny Arcade. I've clicked on car ads for cars I'm interested in. I'm not going to click on your goat porn ad, your feminine hygene product ad or your ad for some other web site. I'm not interested. Show me something reasonably unobtrusive that I'm interested in and maybe I'll click on it. Otherwise leave me the hell alone or I just won't come back to your site. It's that simple.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  205. The best web sites have no ads by UninvitedCompany · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia.org, kernel.org, openoffice,org, microsoft.com

    Advertising on web sites is a transitional source of revenue, much like registrations for shareware was prior to the open source era. Sites like Wikipedia.org, with phenomenal traffic and a tiny budget, show that ads aren't necessary to support a top ten web site.

    I believe that most advertising on web sites is accepted in the blind hope that it will someday be a significant revenue source.

  206. Ergonomics by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

    For me adblocking is an ergonomics issue. I block all animation on web pages because it gives me a headache in no time. Unfortunately, this means no Flash so no flash-only sites. I've tried Flashblock with limited success, but some sites just don't work right with it.

    If the advertisers would eliminate the animation, I wouldn't have a compelling need to block ads. I really feal that the advertisers have brought this upon themselves because of the intrusiveness of the ads. When ads were static, I never felt the need to block.

    Their arguement is so weak to begin with. Am I "stealing" a newspaper if I don't read the ads?

    In the end, people who aren't going to click on ads are saving them bandwidth by blocking ads.

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
  207. not cleare at all adblocking is theft of resources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "a few things are clear: Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources."

    No it's not. You can't just pull statements out of your ass and hold them up as truth.

    What's clear is that the ridiculousness of the argument that using someone's fixed resources is not theft while using someone's incremental resources is theft

    By author's logic Google, every other search engine, web crawler is guilty of theft by resources.

    Also, I pay for my internet connection, my computer, the electricity to run and cool it. If you want to expend my resources to view your ads then you owe me, not to mention my time/hourly rate. Adblock is saving those sites money!

    njharman

  208. illegal vs inappropriate by psbrogna · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but I'd certainly lay odds that no law is being broken. That being said, is there an assumption by free content providers that users will view the ads? You betcha, it's probably a fundamental piece of their business model. Should there be a more up front agreement (ie. like privacy statement links typically found in the footer of a site) between the providers of free content and their audience outlining this relationship? Probably. IMO, consumers should have the right to block ANY pushed content (advertising or otherwise); we're the ones paying for the bandwidth to our browser (and in some rural parts of the country forced ad's can't make some sites unusable due to bandwidth limitations). Do I expect this right to make some online business models no longer practical (including those that provide FREE content on the web)? Yes. But I'd prefer it that way.

  209. I don't buy it. by JestersPet · · Score: 1

    Having seen both side of the fence on this one. IMHO, the Internet is a public forum. If the public wants to look at something, they are going to, no matter how well you hide it. If the public doesn't want to view something, they are not going to. The use or non-use of blocking software of any sort is up to the owner of the system (either business or personal computers). Not the entities that host the content, or the entities that provide the content. This is true for Ad Blockers, script blockers, anti-virus, and content blockers.

    The belief that visitors to your site must view your ads has been around for some time. It gave us banner ads, pop-ups, click through's, subscriptions, and "push" technology. Each of these innovations has had some sort of way to be circumvent it, and the collective thought process was that the blocker was a protection feature, and needed by the public. Now that someone who is using those same advertising technologies and has not figured out a way to circumvent them, there is some sort of problem? I don't buy it.

    The only persons that have a problem with blocking software, are those for whom the blocking software was designed to stop. the louder they complain, the more I think I need that blocking software.

  210. Easy by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft?

    For the millionth time, no. No more so than getting up from the couch during tv commercials, and no more so than turning one's head away from a billboard.

    Next question please, and this time make it a good one.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  211. Blocking Firefox and the ADA by logicnazi · · Score: 1

    I suspect sooner or later someone is going to get sued for blocking firefox under the americans with disability act. After all there has to be *some* disability out there that firefox makes it easier to work around.

    --

    If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

  212. Bad business model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're entire income for a site comes from advertising then it's a bad business model. You should get funding from providing a service to the customer. Then again if you're providing it for free in exchange for advertising, then the customer needs to realise: pay for service w/ no ads or deal with it it's free.

  213. Bad ads get blocked. by Teunis · · Score: 1

    Mostly I don't block ads. I DO block ones that annoy me though. (sounds, flashy video - all blocked)

    I will occasionally click on ads if they're the kind of thing I'm looking for - but that's intensely rare. I'll even seek out particularly imaginative ads on youtube and the like - and I do follow some advertising quality journals.
    Any advertising that demands my attention has just guaranteed they've lost my interest - and WILL be blocked if I have any means of doing so. There's no excuse for popup/popunder ads.

    Flip side - I'm fond of the "secondhand lions" approach to door-to-door salesmen and advertisers alike.... *wishful thinking*

  214. This is asinine by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    My browser requests a page from your server. Your server evaluates the request and sends the page (or not). Don't want me to see the page? Don't send it.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  215. then i guess.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    using a text-only browser makes you a theif. Whatever.

  216. Does Slashdot agree? by matt+me · · Score: 1

    Does Slashdot agree with this? I don't know if this site has adds. Or the others I frequent. I can't imagine many Slashdot readers at home view adverts.

    Anyway, keep up your hardest Slashdot, linking to add-ridden self-publicising articles of twenty paragraphs across 10 pages

  217. Already accomplished... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:Already accomplished... by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      Well it also has code which redirects you if it detects your javascript DOM doesn't support special IE add ons (one more reason we need a standard browser scripting language, not this browser dependent crap).

      What I would like would be a plugin that would just ask me before it redirects me somewhere. That would be useful in many other situations (yes, I can block redirects entirely, but I would prefer it to simply open a dialog like it does for cookies).

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  218. Charge for content and stop whining by Petronius · · Score: 1

    Maybe relying on advertisement alone was a stupid idea after all? If your site's content is so good, charge for it. Salon does it, The New Republic does it, lots of others do. So you tought you were going to get rich by creating some crappy blog and boxing it with ads everywhere? Oh well, life sucks.

    --
    there's no place like ~
  219. What about? by Karem+Lore · · Score: 1

    If this is tantamount to theft, then so is:

    1) Fast-forwarding through adverts (or even switching off my TV during adverts).
    2) Covering up parts of my screen.
    3) Not reading EVERY single piece of post that gets shoved through my letterbox.
    4) Putting my fingers in my ears and singing "lalalalalalala" during radio adverts.

    etc. etc.

    I would agree that it is theft IF I was being paid in some way to read/watch these screens. I am not. Just cause you get revenue from advertisers that allows you to lower the monthly cost to me doesn't mean that I am "required" to watch/read/listen. If I excercise that right and it hurts your profits, increase your prices. Don't expect me to remain a customer should you do this though, that choice remains mine. BUT DON'T FORCE ME TO WATCH/READ/LISTEN to stuff I DO NOT WANT. If you don't like this I will find another supplier/website etc.

    Rant over.

    Karem

    --
    When all is said and done, nothing changes...
  220. Counterpoint by Tom · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can't help but contrast that bullshit with this:

    Advertisement is Theft.

    You see, it's
    * my bandwidth
    * my computer
    * my screen
    * my eyeballs
    * my time and attention

    Ads take a part of each of those away from me for a short time.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  221. Free Market by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

    Theft? Huh?

    It's market forces in action.

    Giving something away for free does not obligate a recipient in any way.

  222. What about TV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So is it immoral for me to mute the TV and read during commercials? Those ads are there to support whatever I'm watching, after all. In not seeing them THEFT too?

  223. Faster Browsing by schweinhund · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In addition to the benefits of not having your window resized, obnoxious or undesired ads, etc. blocking ads helps pages render that much faster because you're not loading the undesirable bits in the first place.

    Now some may say ads are small and don't take much bandwidth, the servers are not as fast as my connection may be, and I hate having to wait around for some ads.xxyyuuuxxx.com to get around to sending their data in the first place.

    Incidentally, the Firefox security plugin NoScript does wonders for getting rid of Flash ads and the like.

    So what's next, banning the use of hosts files?

  224. Hmm. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wasn't really addressing the moral aspect, but merely the technical difference between one server serving ads and a bunch of cross-site crap.

    In terms of morality, that's a two way street. Other people have pointed out that, by blocking ads where you have no intention of ever clicking on an ad, you are in fact saving the ad company bandwidth. The ads aren't pay-per-view, they're pay per click. No click, no money, so, by your moral standards, even if I'm not blocking the ad, then I should click on it so that the site will get money.

    Beyond all that comes my own feelings about what I should be subjected to. I go to a website to read an article to find that the article is spread across 12 pages, each page with its own set of ads. Clearly they don't care very much about my convenience; I would go so far as to say that they're treating me quite poorly. The question then becomes, should I add this site to my own personal blacklist? It will cost me nothing to ignore it completely. Or should I view it as the "printer friendly" version, which inevitably has less advertising. Or should I wade through 12 annoying, slow loading pages, simply because that's what they want me to do? Regardless of whether I view ads or not, my presence on their page constitutes measurable traffic that they can take to other advertisers to persuade them that their site is worth advertising on.

    Frankly, I think most sites would far rather we block their ads than their whole site, and it comes down to that for me. Few articles exist in a vacuum; the internet being what it is, there is always a second source. Go to Google news, and you'll see what I mean. What linked story is linked from only one site? While content providers attach large offensive ads to their pages, spread their stories across too many pages, add annoying popups or animation, they can expect me to block their content. If they don't like that, they can block my access, and I'll go elsewhere.

    I think they'll quickly find that they need us a lot more than we need them.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Hmm. by cstdenis · · Score: 0

      he ads aren't pay-per-view, they're pay per click. No click, no money... Many ads (most graphical ones) are pay per view not pay per click. The publisher still makes money if you don't click them.
      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    2. Re:Hmm. by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 1

      An option for ad-block to load banners, but not display them, would please website owners, website users, ad companies, but not ad clients. Three out of four ain't bad. With this business model, somebody has to suffer.

      --
      Software patents delenda est.
    3. Re:Hmm. by cstdenis · · Score: 0

      Sounds good to me.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
  225. Back to Post-Its? by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

    If I quit using Ad-Block and go back sticking Post-Its on my screen to block that dancing monkey, am I still stealing?

  226. Dear Advertisers and Marketers... by FuckTheModerators · · Score: 1

    Fuck You.

    Seriously.

    Get on the B ark. Leave the rest of us alone. Shoot yourself now.*

    I'll surf with Adblock.
    I'll surf with Flashblock.
    I'll watch TV that's been downloaded or TIVOed and skip the ads.
    I'll skip the ads and previews on DVDs.
    I'll block your spam.
    I'll block your calls.
    I'll burn your snailmail.

    Welcome to the 21st Century. Change your business model.

    *(Apologies to Bill Hicks and DNA.)

  227. People, please think by popo · · Score: 1

    This is not an "us vs. them" scenario. The reality is: We love web content. We want web content to flourish. And we want more, and better web content.

    The prevailing theme on this discussion is "These are my rights, screw them".

    That's true.

    They are your rights, and you can screw whoever you like in this world if you really want to.

    But the question nobody seems to be asking is: What if everyone did this? What then?

    It's also your "right" to waste water, consume vast quantities of gasoline, etc. This attitude is missing the point. Do you, or do you not want content to improve and increase? And yes, web advertisers have certainly pushed the envelope in terms of what is acceptable in terms of privacy -- but that shouldn't change the issue that content providers need support. And while it is your "right" to not provide it -- the issue of personal responsiblity still exists if one expects to continue free consumption of a growing base of content.

    There *is* a middle ground. Stop thinking so much about what *you* have the right to do, and try thinking about what a better web would look like.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  228. Blocking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone know a way I can block ALL .com sites on Firefox? Thanks.

  229. Commercials? by dcdprofessor · · Score: 1

    Does this mean I'm stealing whenever I get up to use the bathroom during a commercial on TV? I was unaware that I was actually supposed to be forced to stay in my seat during the commercials.

  230. What about newspapers then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With newspapers, advertisement revenue pays a significant portion of the cost of producing and distributing the newspaper. By the arguments presented here, am I stealing if I only read the news articles that interest me and not all of the ads, or if I throw the enclosed flyers away without looking at them? Of course not, and it's the same if the newspaper, periodical, or whatever, is in softcopy.

  231. Personally by complexmath · · Score: 1

    1. I don't click through ads. Ever. If I visit a website it is to use the functionality of that website, not purchase a loosely related product.
    2. If ads are sufficiently annoying, I won't return to a website. There are a number of websites I actually like that I no longer visit because the advertisements became too obtrusive or annoying, and for one reason or another, blocking them didn't work terribly well.
    3. By blocking ads I am reducing my own level of annoyance and therefore increasing the chance I will return to that site to view its content. At the same time, I am not depriving the webmaster of any revenue because I wouldn't have clicked through the ads anyway.

    Also, there are a few websites I visit where the advertisements are annoying to the point where I'd normally just stop visiting the site but which don't have a suitable replacement. Google Groups is in this category. Its ad bar is so large as to make viewing news extremely difficult on lower resolution monitors (the ad bar is larger than the tree view pane and almost larger than the content pane at 1024x768). If an ad-free usenet aggregator existed I'd switch in a heartbeat. And for the record, I can't just use a standalone newsreader--port 119 has been blocked by my IT department.

  232. Theft of what? by joeyblades · · Score: 1

    People send me stuff via snail mail all the time. Businesses touting their products, banks pushing credit cards, shampoo samples, politicians, tons and tons of ads. I throw them in the trash... All those advertisers paid good money to print all those glossy color advertisements and mail their crap to me. If I just throw them in the trash, am I guilty of theft? Of course not.

    The sender is taking a calculated risk that some portion of that crap will get through to someone who cares. The same thing is true of internet advertising. The advertiser is taking a gamble that not everyone will be blocking their ads, or ignoring their ads, or avoiding the site because of their ads...

    The bottom line is this: Blocking ads is not theft any more than ignoring ads is not theft any more than not visiting the site in the first place is not theft. To the potential advertiser these are all equivalent because no matter how they try to push it, I'm not buying...

    And no, I don't feel the slightest bit of guilt because some advertiser gambled poorly!

  233. Theft, yes? by jopet · · Score: 1

    So I guess, by analogy, not looking at a billboard or just ignoring tv ads, let alone turning them down or going to the WC while they run is theft too?

  234. agressively obnoxious ads by Interested+Bystander · · Score: 1

    Are the reason people started adopting the technology. I didn't fool with the stuff till they started obstructing the content I went there for in the first place. If they want to go to subscription based format fine....maybe they can make a go of it. Otherwise quit whining!

    --
    If I was deep this is would be profound, if smart then wise, if a poet then verse. Here it is, you judge!
  235. The solution! by Skiron · · Score: 1

    We all pay for (either direct from home or indirect from work/wifi hotspots) etc. for Internet connection.

    Why should we then [sic] pay EXTRA to visit a site that relies on adverts or be expected to view these adverts to justify being there?

    We don't - we have already paid our due, and by blindly visiting a site that EXPECTS a random visitor to pay more is an obscene assumption when it isn't announced (imagine walking into a shop only to find to have to pay to get out!).

    The solution is advert driven web sites that exist from advert revenue should be made to have a place holder index page that has the question:

    "This is an advert funded site - if you agree to this, then enter and agree to view the adverts - if you disagree, please move on."

    Make this a requirement for ALL advert driven sites.

    They will soon go out of business, unless the adverts are relevant, non-intrusive, and 'nice'.

  236. Surprise Web Advertisers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The game is changing, as the VCR and much later Tivo gave people the option of watching the commercials, so do add-ons that allow you to avoid watching advertisements.

    Get use to it. Site owners and advertisers will evolve (or die) and so on and so forth.

    No use crying about it or turning it into an issue of morality when it's an issue of choice.

  237. Advertising by edrobinson · · Score: 1

    Since when are we obliged to view advertising? I pay for my connection and the advertiser has absolutely no right use it. It's like the people who bitch when I sign up for the no-call list.

  238. AdBlock increased revenue and QOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd argue that by not showing ads in my browser (ie, using adblocking software), then I'm increasing the profit margins and QOS of the site showing ads. When I block ads, the site is no longer sending me the images and javascript, which is saving bandwidth, which saves money. Because the server is no longer processing requests for extra javascript and images, then there is less load on the server, which leads to a higher QOS for other people using the site, which in turns leads to either more people being able to view the site, or happier return visitors.

  239. Who really should pay? by rtechie · · Score: 1

    Back before "the internets" became big, the was a phenomena called "local BBSs". Local computer bulletin boards that you would dial into with a modem and where you could chat, leave messages, download files, etc. Each user would require a phone line, so a BBS operator would have to have dozens of phone lines to accommodate lots of users. Early BBS networks, like Fidonet, required long distance calls to transfer messages between BBSs scattered around the country.

    Who do you think paid for all this? It was the BBS operators. Sure their were some BBSs and services that had fees (like the Well) and many solicited donations, but for the most part the BBS operators paid out of pocket. And they liked it because it was their hobby.

    It shouldn't be hard to see how this is relavent to web site operators. It on you bitches. Don't expect to make money unless you can provide content compelling enough for a significant number of people to spend cash money on. This is what the most successful websites (like /.!) have done and it's what you're going to have to do instead of whining about people blocking your ads.

    You don't have the god-given right to make money off your web site. People are doing you a favor by reading your shit. If your shit is really compelling, people might donate or subscribe. That's great! But a website is not a money tree, and you shouldn't expect it to make money or "pay for itself".

  240. If I've said it once, I've said it a 1000 times... by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter which browser I use, if I get an advertisement on screen, I add their host name to my ever-growing hosts file as 127.0.0.1.

    That ends all normal (typical html link or redirect) attempts of shoving an Ad up my browser.

    --
    Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
  241. Re:If I've said it once, I've said it a 1000 times by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

    Do a simple web search on hosts file advertisement blocking and you'll find quite a few different individual and groups attempts at blocking advertisements using this method...

    --
    Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
  242. Morality? Since when is commerce a moral value? by gelfling · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell Capitalism is neither good nor bad, nor have we given the authority to corporate CEO's to dictate what social values should look like. If I'm wrong on this, please someone let me know.

  243. Hey, great job guys! by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

    By creating the ruckus that made /. post this story, you led me to read the comments, which led me to Mike's adblocking hosts file. I'd been thinking about something like that, but didn't care enough to bother before.

    You are now officially victims of the Streisand Effect.

    1. Re:Hey, great job guys! by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1

      Well, I guess it balances off the extra publicity they gave the asshat who started this "block firefox" thing. I was curious enough to go his website, blocking advertising of course, and the guy is raging nut-ball. It's better that his stuff doesn't get to the eyes of the world.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
  244. Re:Host your own ads by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    I'll tell you. By hosting the ads themselves. They vet the ads, they host the ads. They don't just rent the top of their page for every crap ad in the world to get thrown in.
    Exactly. The only ads i've seen in *months* are the adds on hardocp.com because they host them themselves, and i don't bother to go out of my way just to block them. I've even clicked-through on a couple of interesting ads.
  245. I browse the Web with Javascript turned off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This removes a large proportion of ads. I suppose that this decision to browse with JS off, to add a tiny modicum of security, is now immoral.

  246. Overall it ahs been good by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Free market is a key reason there hasn't been a world war. People like stuff. Pretty simple really. Can people use it in a bad way? yes. Look at china. Their survivability is based on embracing capitalism, as a market not a political ideal.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  247. Do Not Call List by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am just wondering how the advertisement companies can expect to win this when the government has already set up a service to stop folks from receiving annoying advertisements?

    This is the same type of thing in my mind, I used to get calls from random folks trying to sell me something I did not want. Now I put my name on a list and do not receive those calls anymore.

    I used to have to view long, loud, ridiculous advertisements when trying to view a website. Now, I download a new browser or a program and do not have to view their advertisement.

    Where is the difference? I believe the government has already agreed to the Do Not Call List, why would this be considered theft as well.

    And for those of you who claim that since advertisements pay for websites, so you are stealing if you do not actually see them.

    TV pays for its programs with advertisement money as well, but TiVo's allow the viewer to completely avoid commercials. Or you could get up and leave the room or you could flip channels during the commercials, are you stealing?

    All I know is I watch the Super Bowl every year, hopefully to see a good football game but to see its commercials as well. But television doesn't force me to watch commercials, why should the internet force you to see an advertisement?

  248. I've been ROBBED by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    You see, I set up a chair in the park and started playing my guitar. Ignore that I've never had a guitar or voice lesson in my life, and only started playing last week after I bought the instrument from Target. But set up in the park I did, and put out a tin can so that people could pay me for adding musical beauty to their stroll in the park.

    Can you believe that most people wouldn't throw even a nickle in my can? Bastards!! Why, some people even had the temerity to put their fingers in their ears! The NERVE of some people!!

    You see, if they were going to stroll in the park, they should be willing to PAY for the content I provide. And they definitely shouldn't take steps to avoid it.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  249. Simple Solution by prxp · · Score: 2, Funny

    Simple solution:

    Just render everything (content + adds) as a single JPEG image or a flash video and stop whinnying for Christ's sake!

    1. Re:Simple solution by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      Unfair comparison - entrance pages with no useful content increase user bounce rate hugely.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    2. Re:Simple solution by fuliginous · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make it an unfair comparison mainly because I'm not making a comparison. It merely demonstrates the point in accompaniment of the fact that markup is advisory and the browser determines the viewing.

      A comparison would be to say they argue that dodging the adverts is "theft" or at least unfair. So compare to a site that requires subscription for its content. Let's see what are the most popular those that are free to view content or those that charge?

      So if they want to charge me for the content they should warn me in advance rather than just debit by credit card without telling me.

  250. lynx immoral? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article is not worth a comment.

  251. Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is truely a ridiculous argument in my opinion. You can have yourself registered for Do-Not-Call lists, you can use a DVR like mythtv, and you should be able to block whatever images or advertisments you want.

    I forsee two options for developers and advertisers:

    Option A.) Use text based advertisements - you know the kind that won't be picked up by Ad blocking software. you can use the blink tag!

    Option B.) Ban a large chunk of Internet users from viewing content

    I don't think I'm oversimplifying this, am I?

  252. this is a joke, right? by moracity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where is it dictated by law that I must allow web advertising on my computer? I was surfing the web long before any advertisers were around. I was blocking ads via my hosts file long before ad-blockers. I was recording TV on VHS long before Tivo. If anything, they should be paying me. I don't like advertising and there is nothing that can legally compel me to view it. Personally, I think any web presence that depends solely on advertising for revenue should be banned from the internet. For a while, the internet was one place you could go for information without having to sift through advertising. The entire advertising business model lacks any sort of morality, so why should I second guess my choice to block advertising. The internet is chock full of deceptive advertising links and is completely without regulation. Unless the advertising companies will allow me to sue them for being to exposed to something that violates my personal morality and freedom, they can take there ads and shove it.

  253. But do you click on the ads? by redmond_herring · · Score: 1

    When you allow advertising for these smaller sites, do you click on any of the ads? If not, doesn't that defeat the purpose of allowing the advertising through your browser?

    --
    Stephen Colbert on race: "While skin and race are often synonymous, skin cleansing is good, race cleansing is bad."
  254. ...and SAVES the site owner money, too by TFGeditor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the site serving the ads does not have to use the bandwidth to serve up the ads, then it costs less when an AdBlock user is viewing the content. Since Firefox/ad blocking are a minority of viewers, the number of ad-blocking users is therefore low. Hence, the majority of non-ad blocking (i.e., well, IE users), they are costing the site more money, while effectively subsidizing the ad-blockers.

    Seems quite reasonable and equitable to me.

    --
    Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    1. Re:...and SAVES the site owner money, too by someone1234 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Right, since people who use adblock are unlikely to click on those annoying adverts, their bandwidth usage is wasted anyway.
      If a site owner is still so dumb he wants to block me, i probably won't want to see their site anyway.
      If i want, i could always use a different agent string.
      This firefox blocking crap is just another advertising of firefox's ad blocking capabilities.

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
  255. My Code of Ethics... by Sasquatch6 · · Score: 1

    I use Firefox, and I have AdBlock installed. However, I have never made it my goal to elliminate ads from my browsing experience entirely, because I do know that I'm affecting a site-owner's revenue. Thus, I only block ads if they actively detract from my experience on a website. This includes popups (which block my view), ads from slow third-party ad servers (which delay the loading of the entire page), and ads which take up a ridiculous amount of page real-estate (don't make me have to scroll down a page to get to the content I want to see!). As long as a website owner uses advertising in accordance with these restrictions, I have no problem with their adverts on the page, as my brain is quite capable of filtering them out without technological assistance anyway.

  256. Morality? OK, let's talk morality... by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Drive-by malware installations. Floating ads that block the content until you click on them (with no indication what clicking on them will actually do). Ads that auto-play loud sounds that're highly inappropriate in an office environment. Advertising networks that try to do highly invasive user tracking above and beyond merely displaying an ad. Those are why I block ads, and why I'll continue to block ads. Those ads represent anything from merely a disruption to an outright threat to my system. I can't evaluate them after they've loaded, by then they've already done their thing. The only safe thing I can do is block them from ever loading in the first place. And no, a web site's right to put up ads doesn't trump my right and responsibility to protect my system.

    Yes, I'm grouchy. BT,DT,GTTS. The whole line of t-shirts, in fact, in every color variation. Not interested in collecting any more.

  257. Yes by Ranger · · Score: 1
    --
    "You'll get nothing, and you'll like it!"
  258. Denying them money? by CaptainTux · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most advertisers use a pay per click model to pay the sites they advertise on. So, if I'm blocking the popups, doesn't that indicate that I am not interested in them and would not have clicked on them anyway?

    --
    Anthony Papillion
    Advanced Data Concepts, Inc.
    "Quality Custom Software and IT Services"
  259. In a word: "Baloney". by Duncan+Blackthorne · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Anybody remember the movie (followed by the television series) Max Headroom? They lived in a future where it was illegal to have an "off" button on your television receiver; you were expected to have it on 24 hours a day. I'm not implying that this is the direction things are going in the real world, but it's about as rediculous as the idea that blocking ads is "stealing content". Would anyone consider it reasonable or even rational if, say, the ability to mute the sound on a television set or turn the volume down to zero, was made illegal? Or to take it to an extreme, make it illegal to turn your head or leave the room when commercials were running? Aside from such things being as unenforceable as anti-pickpocketing laws in a major metropolis, I can't see where anybody except money-grubbing businesspeople (who, subsequently, would find ways to exempt themselves) would find such things reasonable.

    As someone else here has already stated: It's my computer, it's my paid-for connection to the internet, it's my right to see or not see whatever I do or do not want, unless I choose to surrender my ability to choose (e.g., the way Netzero used to be). Personally, I'll rip the damned cable out of the wall myself the day that happens and go back to writing code for entertainment (and yes, I'm aware my rant is starting to reach "Stay off my lawn you damned kids" proportions; I'm taking a step back from the edge now).

    If they're grousing about Adblock Plus, I'm sure next they'll be whining about the Flashblock plugin. Not like the over-use of Flash animations on websites has become SPAM 2.0 or anything like that. :p

  260. Its not immoral by geohump · · Score: 1

    to want a pleasurable internet experience. I use adblock and flashblock to make sure I don't have to see irritating ads. I let all the simple, non animated ads come right through.

    The answer is simple. In order for advertisers to not get their ads blocked, "Don't be a dick!"

  261. Re:Theft? Immoral? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    Maybe someday they'll realize that by far the biggest ad company got that way by providing text ads. Oh, and useful content too.

  262. I'm not normally one to troll but... by LilGuy · · Score: 1

    seriously suck my dick. I'm not going to punch the monkey, click to win an iPod, or watch your stupid ass tv show because you want to take up 1/2 my screen for 15 seconds at a time. If ads could be just a little more civil I wouldn't mind them as MUCH. I do, however, still remember a time when the web was completely ad-free and I prefer it that way.

    --

    You're nothing; like me.
  263. This is why I block ads diligently by shankarunni · · Score: 1
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/11/yahoo_serves_12million_malware_ads/

    So when advertisers are ready to financially guarantee (with appropriate compensation at, say, $100/hour spent cleaning up each system after an infection) that they won't serve malware and virus-laden ads, we'll be ready to consider actually allowing those ads to be downloaded.

    Until then, sayonara..

  264. Make you a deal. by jesdynf · · Score: 1

    You make it so that your ad gets by NoScript -- *not* AdBlock, just NoScript -- and you can show me your crummy little ad.

    Java? Shockwave? Flash? JavaScript? Pop-ups? Pop-unders? Interstitals? Animation? Tough noogies. You don't ever get to do that on my computer. But you put a text ad or a little picture of something somewhere, and I'm not going to kill myself rushing to block it.

    --
    Yahoo! Pipes are awesome. How awesome? http://pipes.yahoo.com/jesdynf/slashdot
  265. Advertising & Marketing is about more than cli by lupine · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Advertisers count the click through rates, but they are also interested in establishing brand impressions such that you may never click on an advert, but your mind still registers & remembers that impact. So later when you are at the store you might pass by a display and think to yourself that piece of hardware looks cool(will get you laid), is being sold for a reasonable price, the company makes quality products, or whatever bullshit. This is why retailers pipe in elevator music to try to distract shoppers so they linger & make impulse purchases when all you really want to do is buy the one thing you actually need and get the fuck out of there.

    Researchers have found that slow tempo muzak can increase sales as much as 38 percent in retail stores because it encourages leisurely shopping.
    - marketing

    Pervasive commercial advertising, by constantly reinforcing a bogus association between consumption and happiness and by focusing on individual immediate needs, leads to a squandering of resources and stands in the way of a discussion of fundamental societal and long-term needs.
    - Sut Jhally

  266. The big picture by Koookiemonster · · Score: 1

    What I see here today is many people frustrated about slow load-up times, wasted bandwidth, annoying flash sounds and so on. I think people are missing the big picture.

    Every advertisment is an ill-natured invasion of the mind, an intellectual battery beating you into submission. For them I wouldn't so much use the word "ad", as I would the expression "mind fuck." I might accept your added milliseconds, handfuls of bits or bunches of pixels, but I'm rather keen to keeping my own sanity, thank you very much.

    Think ads -- or mind fucks -- don't affect you? Adjusting for scale, by the time you even understand what is going on (if you do), the effect has been made years ago. The old ivory tower -breaking test is very simple: don't think of zebras! Don't -- think -- of -- zebras! See -- you are thinking of zebras. There is simply no escape, except pre-emptive war: adblock.

    Now if you'll excuse me, I have some penis enlarging to do before I chat with these girls from my area... -->

  267. Advertisers Complaining About Morality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bite me.

  268. Look at Use by YetAnotherBob · · Score: 1

    I have an adblocker installed, but leave it turned off. I only turn it on if I am visiting a site with really intrusive advertising, or a site that lets the ads overwhelm the content. (cover it up, and not go away.) That's maybe 1 or 2 % of the sites I visit. Both indicate bad design, by the web site, or by the advertiser.

    If the web sites are worried about this, they should try to remember that they want my business.

    Site operators are walking a line here. Advertising pays the bills for them. Nobody advertises on a site with no visitors. Visitors don't come to see the ads. There has to be something else to bring them there. Ads get in the way of the things the visitors want. Some balance is required.

    Ad blockers exist because many people believe that the advertisers are way over the line. Some advertisers are. I have had a browser hijacked. I've been annoyed when sound files started that I didn't want by some advertiser. When that happened, the site lost a customer (Are you listening, IBM? Don't auto start ANYTHING, EVER!!!). That's what made me switch from IE to Firefox. now those abusive people want to force me to switch back? NO!!! Remember, you need me, I don't need you.

    So, yes there is a war here. The site owners are caught in a crossfire. They need to keep both sides happy, or reasonably so. Antics like the boycott of Firefox will only make sure I don't give that site my business. Look at what suing your customers did for RIAA and SCO. Record sales are off over 30% from the original Napster days. SCO's stock is now worth about 1% of what it was at 5 years ago. That way lies insolvency.

    I wonder how a grocery store would do if they didn't allow people to shop there?

    Radio stations advertise that they limit their commercial breaks. (3 in a row anybody?) Maybe these web sites should too. After all, why start a war you know you will lose?

    --
    Everybody knows 3 people with my name.
  269. Excuse me, but... by davmoo · · Score: 1

    Whereas TiVo users freeload

    Fuck you. I pay for satellite TV. When they give me that satellite TV for free for watching the commercials and I still skip them, then you can call it "freeloading". Until then, you can shove your opinion there up your ass...or you can start paying my monthly bill.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  270. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up. Important correction to grandparent, who doesn't appear to have used Adblock (or to understand it if s/he uses it)

  271. My take by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

    My site has ads. I don't care if people use adBlock on it. I only get revenue from clicks, not from impressions, and people who block ads are also quite likely to be people who never click ads.

    I do care about bandwidth hogs, though (stop scanning my site, inktomi slurp! it doesn't update that often! sheesh!)

  272. Simple solution by fuliginous · · Score: 1

    If they want to put adverts on maybe they should have an entry screen that says "Enter here, content has adverts splattered all over it" and see how many people just choose to go elsewhere.

    If you are giving people warning to choose before hand their argument has merit but otherwise as other posts point out, the point of tags allows the client to arrange as recipient requests.

    I just won't use sites that bug me with adverts (or requests for survey input!) any more than I have to.

  273. It's too ridiculous - I can't resist by columbus · · Score: 1

    OK, this is really an inane article and I shouldn't dignify it with a response, but I take issue with the author Chris Soghoian on so many levels that I just can't resist.

    Chris's blog post is full of sweeping generalizations and inaccuracies

    1) 'Web site designers depend upon advertising revenue to pay their bandwidth bills as well as to pay for the staff' - some do, some don't. The fact that this is stated as an absolute makes it fallacious. Some websites pay bandwidth costs themselves (rather than get kickbacks from ad agencies) because they want to promote goods or services; there are a host of 'catalog sites' that do this (funding comes from goods & services changing hands offline). Some pay their own bandwidth because they are hosting an ecommerce site and they want to sell people stuff and accept payment over the internet (again funding doesn't come from kickbacks from ad agencies). Some pay for their own bandwidth and eat the costs because they want to generously contribute content for free to the internet as a whole.

    2) 'Every time someone uses advertisement-blocking software . . . they are denying the Web site operator revenue that would otherwise have gone to pay for the bandwidth that is consumed during that browsing session'. As far as I know, this is just not true in most cases. Most webmasters are getting paid for hosting ads on their site in a way that is independent of what the end users of their website do with those ads once they are transmitted to their computers. There may be some correlation between the ad payout and the number of hits on a site, but nothing more granular than that. If a person is surfing and hits an ad based website with firefox & adblock, the webmaster is going to get paid regardless.

    3) 'Web advertising skipping technology are far closer to theft than they are to freeloading . . . (most of the article in the middle) . . . a few things are clear: Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources.' He makes a claim, he provides no substantiation afterwards as to why the reader should consider his claim to be true, he then reasserts the claim as though he as proved it - this is just bad writing.

    Chris is jumping on the moral high ground and claiming that people surfing with adblock are thieves. Then he turns around and suggests that site owners should exploit web browser security holes to punish people. I would contend that hacking people's web browsers is far more unethical. This guy's a hypocrite.

    The grey area that Chris talks about can be clarified fairly easily in the following manner. Who owns the physical media on which the 1's & 0's constituting the data reside? Whoever owns the physical media owns the data that resides on it. So yes, the website owner owns the data for his website when it is resident on his servers. He is within his rights to do anything that he wishes with that data. He can change it, delete it or (as Chris suggests) refuse to transmit it to users surfing with firefox and adblock.

    Conversely, the surfer owns all of the data on his machine. He is within his rights to copy it, erase it, flip all the 1's and 0's or not to display the ads embedded within the data. It's his hard drive, his RAM, his monitor, his pixels, his power. He can do whatever he wants with his general purpose computer. It is his property.

    The propaganda that emanates from large corporations these days reeks more and more of restrictions on freedoms after a thing is bought (or given away). Copying a song which you have purchased is theft. Editing out the commercials on a video tape that you own is freeloading. Choosing not to display an online advertisement on your computer is immoral and a theft of resources. How long will it be until we are told that it is a theft of resources to press the mute button while an advertisement is playing on TV or that we have violated an end use agreement and are stealing because we fold a newspaper so that we can read the art

    --
    friends don't let friends teleport drunk
  274. Re:Tell me of this ad-blocking software you speak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone got a better list to dump in the hosts table

    http://hostsfile.mine.nu/downloads/

  275. Adblock doesn't go far enough by ebcdic · · Score: 1

    There should be an option to not just block the images, but to "click" on them as well, so that websites you like can get the money from the advertisers.

    Morality? It's a bit late for capitalism to start whining about that.

  276. Lynx by ludw · · Score: 1

    So if my browser isn't capable of displaying your ads, is that theft?

  277. a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    right? ethics? morale? LOL

    i would not even USE the web if i saw ads... as i just watch tv channels without ads in between the shows/movies.

    but it's better for the companies, i usually boycott things i saw ads of before...

    so it's a win-win situation, right?

    *shakes head in disgust*

  278. It's my computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's my computer. You choose to send me data, if you want to be a dick you can refuse to send me data based on my browser profile (as if that wasn't easily fudged, and as if I can't hurt you just as much by refusing my custom), but you have NO RIGHT WHATSOEVER to tell me what I can do with the data you send me. Period. My computer does the processing of content, it does it however I see fit. If I come over to your place of business to use your computer to browse your products, then you can make me sit through advertisements for products I don't want (and you'll likely lose a customer, to boot). But as long as it's my box, it's my rules. Don't like it? Fuck off and die.

  279. Block or Just Not Show? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We could have an adblocker that loaded ads into the cache rather than blocking them outright.

    That way we'd never see the ads, but they'd never know!

  280. TFA is One-sided by CrazyKen · · Score: 1
    The viewpoint from TFA on this is rather one-sided and doesn't cover other aspects. He mentions that if I were to go to said web site and blocking their ads, I'm far closer to theft of bandwidth, the same bandwidth the web site operator has to pay for. What about those who have to pay for their own bandwidth and/or time that they're online? Is shoving ads down their pipe a kind thing to do? Being that the web site operator is causing them to be online longer and use more bandwidth, thus incurring additional cost to the visitor.

    Lets look at another aspect. By blocking their ads, the visitor isn't using more of the web site operators bandwidth. He's actually saving him some bandwidth. If we look at most ads on the Internet, they contain graphics, and those graphical images consume more bandwidth than text.

    Now, lets take a look at yet another aspect. Why do people block ads? They block them because they're intrusive and annoying. Not all of them are. Some are static images or text ads, and there are quite a few people who are fine with that. However, some marketers decided to not play nice and screwed it up for those who do wish to play nice.

    It's fairly obvious that the business model is flawed. Web site operators who depend on this type of business model is destined to fail and they should seek other ways to gain revenue. If they don't want people blocking ads to visit their web site, that's their choice. At the same time, it's the visitors choice to block the ads. The approach Danny Carlton took not only limits the visitors he'll get, but it can potentially bring him even less revenue. If he doesn't want that precious bandwidth he pays for to be used freely, as it should be, he should change his site to be subscription-based, thus requiring registration and an agreement that registered visitors are to disable ad blocking software.

    He's targeting Firefox because he feels they're endorsing ad blocking because AdBlock Plus is a featured add-on to the browser. He wants a method to disable the add-on when people visit his site. The people that make AdBlock Plus didn't comply, so he took it a step further by blocking all Firefox users. What he fails to realize is almost all browsers today offer this type of functionality, including IE7 with IEPro, another featured add-on to the Microsoft web browser.

    Yes, bandwidth does cost money. The server costs money. The electricity to run the server costs money. The air conditioning unit to keep the server cool costs money. However, all of this was his choice when he started the web site, and he also chose the flawed business model to support it.

  281. Adblock Detection Code by Firefalcon · · Score: 1

    AdBlock offers detection code on their site:

    http://www.adblock.org/2004/07/adblock_detection_script/

    I'm sure that sites who object to Adblock could use this code to flag to users or block them when it is active - I don't want to be blocked just because I don't use IE - I'd like to have the option to turn off Adblock if they insist, rather than having my choice of web browser completely blocked by their site...

  282. THEY crossed the line by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    I never thought about using ad-blocking techniques - not even when they started moving - I even punched the monkey once... but when freakin' flash sites started moving OVER the sites i wanted to see and the F***ING [X] Button redirected me to the advertised site, THAT WAS TOO MUCH...

    It's not immoral to block such crap - its immoral to force such crap on users!

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  283. You must BUY every advertised product or its THEFT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, you are stealing from the newspaper if you read the news and don't buy EVERY product advertised in the newspaper!!

    Please...

    Nobody feels bad for NBC if someone "sneaks out" of the Living room, to make a snack during the commercial.

    I don't feel any obligation to look at ads, to read a website. If that means some websites will not be cost effective and will have to close, so be it.

  284. Idiotic by vimh42 · · Score: 1

    "they are denying the Web site operator revenue" I call bullshit. The author made the poor assumption that a person visiting the website will click on Ads and buy something. Detecting a browser or extensions may get rid of "free loaders" and cut down on a little bandwidth, but it isn't going to pay the bills or instil any good will with potential visitors.

  285. No moral obligation by Kris_J · · Score: 1

    I have no moral obligation to conform my behaviour to someone else's business model. Trying to forcibly alter a potential customer's behaviour to fit your business model is, at best, annoying or, more likely, simply doomed to failure. This isn't just about web advertising, I could just as easily be talking about, say, retail stores built like a rat maze (I'm looking at YOU Ikea).

  286. Paybacks suck. by numbski · · Score: 1

    I hate to say this, but turnabout is fair play, morons. Remember 1999? 2000? Pop-ups? Pop-UNDERS? Pop-ups that spawn other pop-ups when closed? On-close pop-ups?

    Yeah. I think it's time you got what you all had coming to you. had you behaved and no started up with the overly-intrusive ads, we wouldn't be here right now. Take your medicine and like it, bastards. :P /end rant.

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  287. about:config work around by splatter · · Score: 1

    browser. dom. document. all. disabled

    value "false".

    --
    "(I) have this unfortunate condition that causes me not to believe a single thing any politician says when a mic's on.
  288. I'm doing them a favor by blocking ads. by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

    first morals implies that you are doing something you know to be wrong by blocking ads.

    second, I don't pay attention to banner ads or other site advertisements. Since I don't pay attention to them, I block them.
    The benefits for me outweigh any potential loss by the site.
    By blocking the advertisements, I am saving the site owner potential losses by wasting throughput of the ads on me which I won't click on to begin with.
    So, the ad blocking is a win-win for us both. I also employ ip-based blocking of known advertising servers. I also employ kaspersky ad blocking.
    This is the age of the informed consumer. Blind advertisement doesn't cut it anymore. I'd rather read about new products in a review on a website of my choosing.

    And to those site owners who disagree, you did it to yourselves! you can go ahead and punch the monkey.

    --
    They're using their grammar skills there.
  289. Ads have the opposite effect on me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a result of being constantly bombarded with ads for every waking moment of my life, i have become not just desensitized but reverse-sensitized to ads. Basically, the more you jump in my face & shout at me to buy ford trucks, the more i hate them & the less likely i am to buy them.

    Advertisements only help me determine which products i will avoid. Brands which i currently boycott based solely on exposure to their awful advertising include: Kia, Ford, Hardees, Applebees, Outback steakhouses, Ruby Tuesdays, Starbucks, Apple computers, numerous banks, energizer batteries, X10 (are they even still around?), head-on (not even sure what this stuff is), hewlett packard, etc etc etc

    My favorite products are the "no-ad" & generic brands, i seek them out specifically because THEY DO NOT ADVERTISE.

    So advertisers, when i block your ads, i am doing you a HUGE favor.

  290. These negative ABP articles are self-defeating by rick752 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    These type of negative articles written by nervous advertisers are self defeating in their nature. The bloggers (almost always working for ad-supported sites) try to spread FUD about "the doom of the internet as we currently know it" because they see ABP becoming a threat to THEIR current business model. Well, I say that "the doom of the internet as we currently know it" may be the best thing to ever happen to the web. Most of us were using the internet to escape the bombardment of advertisement in almost every aspect of our daily lives. It was very nice. Then someone, somewhere found that if he put up an ad, he could hope to make a little money when bandwidth and hosting a site was fairly expensive. Well, those things cost next to nothing now but greedy people want to use the web MAINLY to make money from their sites advertising. What started out to be a simple ad on a site turned into pure greed as many webmasters have loaded their sites with as many ads as they can find onto their sites. I find it interesting (but not surprising) is that the people who are actually writing most of the negative articles about ABP are bloggers. That is like someone walking into the middle of a public place and demanding that everyone there pay him one dollar apiece to listen to his opinions on things. This is not to say that I don't enjoy reading some blogger's opinions (I do), I just don't think that they have the right to set any terms for listening to their opinions of things. The users' "comments" to a web article are as much a part of that site's content as the guy who wrote an opinion .... what do those people get in return? They get no part of that income and have to put up with the ads even though they contribute to the site as much as the article's author has with their OWN opinions. Complaining that contributers to your site are thieves because they aren't viewing your ads is absolutely insane. Do you find a site with an article with no replies very good? It just looks like another "lost" opinion in a sea of personal opinions. Opinions are like azzholes, folks .. everyone has one. Some are entertaining, but I certainly don't think someone has the right to be paid BECAUSE of one(like mine here)! On another note, advertisers have have been ramming advertisements down users' throats for a while now ... not to mention trying to find out everything about a user possible and to track their every move along the way. People have just decided that they do NOT like advertising's business model anymore and now have the technology to do something about it. The web has actually become worse than television is some ways. As least with TV, you only have to see one ad at a time. It's not advertising that is the problem ... it's OVER-advertising, OVER-pushing it, and simply OVER-doing everything that is possible to do on the web from that point of a business perspective. "Annoy them, trick them, pound them until they click on something .. either by accident or on purpose". I also find it puzzling that these stories are afraid of a plugin that is used in about 1% of the world's computers. All of these articles, good or bad, only increases awareness of ABP and download numbers get bigger. Large companies do not even discuss ABP openly because they are only 2 conclusions that can be drawn: 1. ABP works great! 2. ABP is bad because it works great! ... and most users really hate ads (and that's a fact!). ..... rick 752 (author of the EasyList for Adblock Plus)

  291. Finally a way to at least strike back by beemishboy · · Score: 1

    At least this tells the marketers that enough is enough. When the ad - be it bop some star, win an ipod, or even a video - completely detracts from the content of the website, then I have a problem with it. I wouldn't mind non-motion ads that don't distract. However just about every single site that I have viewed without some kind of ad blocker is very obnoxious. I don't know who is at fault but if the websites who live off of this content want advertising dollars, they might consider changing their style of ads. Google leads the way with non-obtrusive ads and I don't mind their text based ads.

    In any case I don't mind "freeloading" if they don't mind putting 500 moving/distracting messages in front of me. I don't think I'm immoral for doing so - this is just the latest way to communicate back to sites and advertisers that they've gone too far. They can take this however they wish - including giving people a guilt trip, but the reality is that people obviously are starting to avoid their ads in whatever way, so change your model/ads or go out of business.

  292. Block almost all browsers by ThurstonMoore · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't this guy advocate blocking all web browsers that include a pop up blocker? A pop up blocker's purpose is to block advertising.

  293. Who's stealing whose resources? by Anonymous+Drunkard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In the end, a few things are clear: Users of advertisement-skipping technology are essentially engaged in theft of resources.



    TFA assumes the position that if a website gets a nickel for placing an ad on MY computer, and I have a mechanism in place to prevent that ad from getting to MY computer, that I am engaged in theft of resources.



    This is like saying if someone gets a nickel for every time someone else can park their car in MY driveway, and I install a gate to prevent that third party from parking their car in MY driveway, that I am engaged in theft of resources.



    Website operators have no right to bitch and moan if I block their ads from MY computer, because while they insist that I am stealing if I do not permit their ads to invade MY computer, they are not offering to pay me rent or other compensation for the use of MY CPU, MY RAM, MY bandwidth, MY desktop, MY browser, or even MY electricity for sending me unwanted and unrequested material.



    Seven or eight years ago I went through hell with IE in Win98, because there were sites that spawned pop-up ads, and those ads spawned MORE pop-up ads as the first ads were closed, and then the other ads were busy spawning even more ads, until the only thing I could do was hit the switch and turn the damn machine off cold. That's when I learned the magic art of disabling scripts. I cannot have been the only one.

  294. Re:Tell me of this ad-blocking software you speak by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

    Thanks!

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  295. Which came first? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which came first, the popup or the blocking? Who cares?

    Advertisers already know that some people block their ads in the first place. Then that's ex post facto! Why in the world are they complaining?

  296. Mod parent Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is moderately disturbing.

  297. Adblock changed how I see the web by physicsdot · · Score: 1

    I use adblock to block every ad that I can. I've done this for so long now, that when I recently ran IE, I realised my whole view of the web had changed. Under IE, the web is slow, full of sound, glittery lights and irrelevant moving pictures. Compare this the view I usually get of quick loading pages that only contain the information I was looking for.

  298. Phew... by Hammer+of+Bread · · Score: 1

    It's good to know the guys that want to enlarge my penis and hook me up with sexy singles care so much about morality.

    --
    --
  299. You have the right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have the right to shout your ads all you want to.
    I have the right to ignore you all I want to.

    I am not denying or attempting to limit your rights, please have the maturity to extend me the same courtesy.

    And don't cry to me about taking away your web based capital - if your business model on the web is not making you a profit, then it is flawed. You need to revise your on-line strategy in keeping with the changing market demands. Do not attempt to foist an out-dated model on current technology. Learn to innovate, or die - I will not mourn your passing.

  300. No really? by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    Exactly. The user has no obligations. What crazy planet are you from where TCP/IP, peering agreements and ISPs work differently? When you put up a website, you are putting a SERVER out on the public internet which means you are making a calculated risk with known costs. Before you even lay out that initial month's payment you better have a fucking plan to make money that goes beyond serving banner ads.

    The burden is _entirely_ with you to figure out how to make money from giving away data. You can't make any hard assumptions about user client behavior, only aggregate assumptions. Right now your stats have to assume the impression rate is much lower than before AdBlock (and similar tools) were popular.

    Just because you're a webmaster and you're doing all this work doesn't necessarily mean your entitled to payment unless you're a salaried employee of a larger organization. The majority of webmasters who can live off their jobs maintain websites which are overall cost centers in their businesses which are not web-oriented. These websites DON'T make money directly; they enable the business the website is attached to make more money than they would without it.

    But if you're going to go your own and make money purely through a website, unless you're selling a product or selling access, it's INCREDIBLY difficult.

    You must deploy measures to deter non-money making uses of your resources, or only serve content to authenticated or paying users. Or be so insanely popular that advertisers throw money at your feet to appear up by your title line (Penny Arcade, Digg, etc.)

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  301. This has been said, most likely. by Runefox · · Score: 1

    But I never click banner ads anyway, no matter how relevant they are. They're chaff, and adblock or not, I automatically ignore them. When I download an ad while browsing, I waste both my bandwidth and the server's, and so it's just as well I don't download them at all and save everyone the trouble. Since practically EVERY advertising effort online is per-click anyway, they just don't make money from me.

    --
    Screw the rules, I have green hair!
  302. This coming from CNET? OMG, How ironic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CNET is EXACTLY the type of clunky, CORPORATE, bloated, bandwidth-heavy, SWF-riddled, ad-nauseating site with an EXCESS OF EMPLOYEES and an EXCESS OF SPONSORS that ***typifies**** the kind of website that adblockers like me filter _bone_dry_. CNET, you say that you need to defray your "bandwidth costs of serving up those web pages"? Well, I need YOU to fire your overpaid marketing managers, ad agencies, corporate VPs, product placement sales associates, and Flash developers, and then I need you to get a fucking grip and take a good look at yourself and realize that you're a COLLECTION OF WEB PAGES not a fucking corporation so drop the act.

    If you take my advice, you can start with your webmaster (fire her). Here's a tip: hire a BLIND webmaster. A BLIND webmaster will create a site that's bit-efficient and text-based. And it'll probably still be more attractive than your current clunky, yellow, bandwidth-bursting tsunami.

  303. Re:Tell me of this ad-blocking software you speak by Petrushka · · Score: 1

    I've got adblock. While it's cut down on the number of ads I see here on Slashdot, some are still making it through. Someone got a better list to dump in the hosts table?

    Use Adblock Plus instead. It's Adblock, plus automatic updating of filters, plus tweaked to be more powerful. I have had to manually adjust Adblock settings about twice since I installed it.

    Also use NoScript, which prevents execution of javascript except from whitelisted servers, and with the option of temporary whitelisting for the current session. Whitelisting is not laborious: it involves two mouse-clicks. I resisted installing NoScript for a long time, as I thought Adblock Plus by itself ought to be enough, but now that I've got it I will never, ever be getting rid of it.

    Some people also advocate FlashBlock, but any Flash that makes it past the above two add-ons is almost certainly Flash that I want to see.

  304. No. by lullabud · · Score: 1

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft? Is this right?

    If that's the case I'll just surf the Google cache, which doesn't have google ads, and an ad-blocker for those cached advertising elements.

    Better yet, just have these people host *their* site on Google apps, which is free.

    After all, it's not as if us anti-ad nazi's are going to pay for shit we find advertised on a website we browse to on a non ad-blocked computer. We'll just bitch and moan and probably hate that product for getting its grubby message all over our eyeballs.
  305. What are the DEFINED terms of use?!?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a web site wants you to not block their adds, then define that in a front page "terms of use" banner. (like a porn site checks to see if you're 21.)

    Just have the user acknowledge that they agree to not block adds if they view the contents of the website. If they do not "agree", then do not allow them to the site.

    If a user does agree to not block adds, and they still do, THEN there is something wrong. But there IS NO implied agreement for receiving adds when viewing a page. Just like there is no agreement to be spammed when reading someones mail.

  306. What a dumb question by mattwarden · · Score: 1

    What a dumb question. If your answer is anything but "no, it is not theft", then you are implying that we are obligated to look at stuff we don't want to look at. Absolutely ridiculous. Are you stealing if you are in IE and you don't glance at every ad? What if you just glance but don't click or at least consider clicking?

    Seriously, this story is almost as dumb as the facebook "hate group" story. What bothers me is that the OP surely thought he was stimulating intelligent dialog (but then one wonders why (s)he came here).

  307. Your missing the point... by WallaceAndGromit · · Score: 1

    If a web site implements this type of thing, then by default the web site is telling you that when "it loads that it's going to resize my browser, install software and watch everything I do" and therefore makes the decision for you not to visit it. I herald this as a new feature of AdBlock and/or Firefox which keeps the user from viewing annoying web pages. P.S. If you come across such a site, and really want to piss off the anal retentive, asshole webmaster, set up a script to reload the site every couple of seconds and run it for a while. That surely should burn up any of the bandwidth savings. And then post the script and the site on slashdot and say "go at it guys". I have a feeling most sites that would implement firefox filtering could quickly succumb to the slashdot effect (or DDOS if you will).

    --
    Name: Mr. Anon E Mouse; SSN: 555-55-5555
  308. Corpsite? I block you muthrfuckers back into 1993! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Adblock is not just useful for ads. Use it to block ANYTHING that is not purely navigation or content related (effectively sending the site back into the 90s where it belongs). This speeds things up nicely, and sends a clear message to corporate sites they need to treat the internet like a friendly little rural town with a bulletin board, a post office, and a library --- NOT TIMES SQAURE.

  309. Re:Tell me of this ad-blocking software you speak by ampathee · · Score: 1

    Might I recommend Adblock Plus (has integrated filter updates)?
    I don't see ads, ever. HTH :)

  310. Ad? What's an Ad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use Ad Muncher. And I install it on every single computer I come in contact with.

    www.admuncher.com

    Not only does it block regular banner ads and popups, it also defeats or removes pre/post roll video ads, interstitial ads ("skip this ad" pages), floating or fly in ads, overlay ads and blocks almost every single 3rd party tracking company out there.

    It also removes or blocks a large portion of browser exploits, including trojans and dialers.

    Did I mention it works for EVERY browser on windows?

    Cleans up the ads in my Yahoo Instant Messenger and Windows Live Messenger as well.

    Yeah, I have no intention of ever seeing another ad on the internet or on my computer again.

    I refuse to be tracked or marketed to without my express written consent.

    It's my browser, you will not control it or me.

    I prefer it to ad block because it has a wider range of features and doesn't require me to use firefox to take advantage of what it offers.

    I love launching any browser or program on my computer without fear that some advertisement will ruin my experience.

    Granted, advertising technology advances at a very fast pace, but that's where daily filter list updates come into play.

    Bottom line, my computer my rules.

  311. Banner ads are not the problem... by jbarr · · Score: 1

    It's not that banner ads (or other types for that matter) are the problem, but it's the intrusive nature of many ads. Flashing, annoying ads...ads that are not appropriate for the context...ads that masquerade as legit ads that ultimately lead to spreading malware. It's not the ad in itself, but the abuse of ads that makes it a problem. I run a Web site (JimsTips.com) and I do depend on Google ads to pay the bills. But the ads are not intrusive. And when I surf, though I admit that I do use AdBlock Plus, I do not block any Google ads. I'm very selective about what I block. Maybe that's hypocritical, but I see it as targeting the "bad" ads and favoring the "good" ones.

    --
    My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
  312. How the heck did parent get marked Troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, I know why. This is /.

    The fact of the matter is that the parent has responded directly regarding the subject of this entire thread, and has presented an opposing viewpoint. His viewpoint is just as legitimate as its opposing viewpoint, and is presented well enough and non-inflammatorily enough to be taken seriously without considering it to be a troll.

    Welcome to /., where having an opposing viewpoint is considered trolling.

    Now, here's my chance to be scored as Troll:

    The parent post has a lot of validity to it. You extract a benefit from viewing a site's content, and impose a cost on the provider of the content in terms of both authoring (or licensing) said content as well as distributing it to you. You are under at least some (if not large) obligation to experience that content in the context in which the provider intended. In this case, the intended context includes the ad(s). To continue to extract benefit from the provision of said content while excluding the provider from receiving their compensation in return is quite clearly in violation of a moral obligation. This moral obligation is reasonably analagous to that of stealing from the newspaper box.

    To show that I have an open mind, however, the "going to the bathroom during the commercial break" analogy is also quite applicable, so I do find myself torn on the issue. In the advertising space one could easily argue that advertisers (and those dependent on revenue streams from advertising) must accept a certain percentage of "loss", or whatever you might wish to call it, from people that bypass the advertisement, this "loss" simply being the nature of the advertising beast. In one case it's taking a piss while the ads are on tv, in the other it is ad-blocking on the web.

    At the end of the day there is room for both viewpoints. Neither of which deserve to be marked as trolling solely because someone dares to express an alignment with the unpopular option.

  313. using lynx, not having flash installed, ... theft? by danny · · Score: 1
    By this guy's argument, using lynx to view a web page is a crime, as is using Firefox without having Flash installed (which, since it doesn't come installed by default on Fedora, is how I use it).

    If people people are that fanatic about making everyone see ads, they have an easy solution -- turn all their web pages into images. Or push all the content into Flash. Or use PDFs.

    Danny.

    --
    I have written over 900 book reviews
  314. Not theft, we're just smarter... by BarnabyWilde · · Score: 1

    ...as opposed to being STUPID consumers of ads.

  315. I do in fact do that by Rix · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There aren't really very many web pages with ads on them, at least since I installed Adblock.

  316. You owe me $10 by Rix · · Score: 1

    I spent my time posting this comment, with the expectation that you would send me $10 in return.

    I'm waiting.

    1. Re:You owe me $10 by plover · · Score: 1
      Well, I expect that half that $10 should go to the people who spent the money footing the bandwidth bill, so I just put $5.00 on my Slashdot subscription.

      Feel free to keep expecting your other half of the $10.

      --
      John
  317. I block anything that moves by qzulla · · Score: 1

    I find them distracting. I have trouble reading with jumping ads.

    qz

  318. The billboard vs. web ad by dickdono · · Score: 1

    Suppose I am driving on the highway and there is a billboard. I decide that I don't want to view this particular billboard; so I hold my hand up to obscure my view of the billboard. Granted, the person whose ad is on that billboard may have spent a lot of money developing the ad and paying the owner of the billboard to display the ad at that location. But that does not take away my right to choose to not view the billboard. And it certainly does not give the advertiser the right to force me to lower my hand and view his/her advertisement.

    The same holds true for the web ad. I don't feel that there is any moral issue here.

    Advertising always was and always will be a gamble. Just like the billboard advertiser, the web advertiser needs to consider the content and placement of his/her ad. If you, as an advertiser, want to maximize the probability that I won't block your web ad, there are 2 things that you can do: 1. don't make an annoying ad. 2. don't place your ad on a web-site that has annoying ads.

    If I block your ad, it doesn't mean that I'm immoral. It means that you are a poor advertiser.

    1. Re:The billboard vs. web ad by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
      The only difference is that the advertiser isn't being held financially responsible for the stretch of highway you're motoring on.

      I still agree with your sentiment, though. --Because the internet is built the way it is, the stretch of highway the advertiser buys doesn't have to be there and the only reason you're driving on it is because he was hoping to persuade you to visit his massively redundant piece of tarmac. Now that he's done that, he wants you to give him some money for the experience. Whether or not you do is entirely up to you, but to claim that it's morally wrong to refuse to view a bunch of billboards is exactly the sort of guilt-tripping which will incline me to keep my wallet and my heart closed.


      -FL

  319. Thank you... by Rix · · Score: 1

    For conceding the point.

    1. Re:Thank you... by plover · · Score: 1

      You're welcome. And just so you can feel doubly victorious over me, you should also know that you shamed me into finally sponsoring User Friendly too, which is only fair since I've read his strip daily since it came out.

      --
      John
  320. poor definition of theft by v1 · · Score: 1

    Basically this is just a case of providing something at no or reduced price, because as a side effect you are benefiting. There has been no promise that good things will be guaranteed to you as a result, but in the past that's how it's worked out. This does not constitute a guarantee nor a promise. Yesterday I took a cab to work, today I'm going to walk. That doesn't mean I'm stealing something from the cabbie today.

    A man in the park sets out a basket full of roses and sets up a camera a short distance away, he is a professional photographer that wants some pictures of random good looking gals picking up the roses and smiling. An ugly hag strolls up and takes a flower. Did she just steal from him? He didn't get what he wanted and provided something free in exchange for nothing. Oh the thief! Same thing.

    if you provide something free as "bait" so that you benefit by some indirect means, and some people decide they don't want you to have that benefit but still take your bait, it does not change the fact that you are giving something away. There was no contract made and you freely gave something away. Quit complaining.

    Theft in this variation requires there to be an agreement between two parties for an equitable exchange, where one party delivers and the other fails to deliver. Or when one party fails to enter into the agreement and takes from the other what was only offerend under conditions. And here I think lies the problem - it's hard to draw a line where a contract has been formed. The seller usually wants to benefit from the openness of no contact to help his image which will improve his trade, but on the other hand does not like having create the possibility of giving something away when he will get anything in return. You can't have it both ways. You either give something away without requiring compensation, or you don't. If the trade you're interested in is not practical to prevent me from not giving you what you want in exchange, then you are doing something wrong. That's like setting cases of pop on the street with a pail beside it for people to drop their 50c into as they pick up cans of pop, and then coming back an hour later and being pissed off that there's little or nothing in the pail and all the pop's gone. Don't be mad at the public. You did something stupid. If you go to the police station and ask them to post guards or arrest people that are walking by and snag a can, you are working on the wrong end of the problem. (think "vending machine", there is the proper solution to the problem)

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  321. Morality of Ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about the Morality issue of shoving semi pornographic ads on my screen!? Sheesh. The web is sometime a sespool that could use a good filtering!

  322. I'll remove adblock if by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) the advertisers STOP using flash (or any other animation) in their ads. It's distracting me from the real reason I came to whatever website I'm visiting, and I actively avoid advertisers which use animation.

    2) there are no third party cookies set. The advertisers can have their cookies when I visit their sites.

  323. customeracquisitionsite.com blocked, thanks CNET! by beeblebrox · · Score: 1

    Well, my Adblock extension wasn't blocking customeracquisitionsite.com (I'm not using autoupdated block lists, perhaps I should). But, since CNET uses them to serve ads and they use cookies, they came to my attention and were added to my block list.

    Thank you CNET!

  324. They're stealing from me. by JetScootr · · Score: 1

    When a website uses my bandwidth to transfer data I don't want, they're stealing from me.
    It's immoral to call it "stealing" when I'm protecting a resource I pay for. That's good economic sense, not "stealing".

    --
    Pavlov wouldn't be so famous if he'd used a can opener instead of a bell.
  325. Whaaat?? by JavaIsCool · · Score: 1

    Gee - If I look away from a TV ad - should I pray for forgiveness .. Get Real!

  326. That's not how it works? by FuzzyFox · · Score: 3, Informative

    I was given to understand that this is exactly how AdBlock operates: Your browsers goes ahead and fetches the blocked content, it is simply not displayed.

    In other words, the advertiser sees you downloaded the ad, but has no idea whether it shows up on your screen.

    The best of both worlds.

    --
    splunge (n) -- A good idea.. but it could be lousy... and I'm not being indecisive!
  327. From the other side... by kicken18 · · Score: 0

    I hate web ads as much as the next bloke but I used to work at a national newspaper in England and worked very closely with the project manager of the systems we used for Online advertising on our website. Funny thing is I used FF with AdBlock and some of my colleagues blocked ads in different ways and we all agreed, still ads are fine, its the moving, noisy and expanding ads which are the worst, oh and those ads in the middle of the article, they also drive me nuts!!

    The only problem is, as most people know, less people are buying newspaper these days, we HAD to had adverts on the website, or basically our company would collapse, and that's a sad truth, if people where still buying papers in their big numbers, it wouldn't be such a problem, but they are simply not and numbers are only going down more! But that is no excuse for companies putting the ads on we hate, but you have to sympathise with the company for putting any ads on because they need the money!

    In our newspaper, we had ads, everyone newspaper does, but they are still, they don't move, I can easily ignore them if I want to without going into a fit of rage, on the web cam I do that? Oh no no...unless I use adblocker, and I will continue to use, until the companies out there realise that we will keep on blocking, and telling everyone else to block until they use newspaper type adverts!!

    --
    Visit My Blog at http://spaces.msn.com/members/chrisharries
  328. lighter perspective by garphik · · Score: 1

    after some days ...

    Okay .. okay,
    you can block my advert. but please atleast accept my cookie

  329. in some ways yes by mr_musan · · Score: 1

    but you know the banner adds just take away from the internet, if they wernt so annoying and irelivant people wouldn't turn them off ! I mean i know i am not the 100,000 visitor 4 times in a row, nor do i need some windows program.

    maybe advertisers should learn that it is infact them who are driving the customers away.

    couldn't add blocker make it look like the add was getting surved then the only "losers" are the company who surve up the adds we hate so much.

  330. What cheek! Hope you got a fat check this month by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a cheek!
    Really, how dare you talk like that.
    The reason behind adblockers is the same behind popup blockers.
    Web Advertisers antagonized viewers.
    You cannot blame people for switching channels when the adverts come on.
    You cannot blame people for blocking webadverts. It is a reaction.
    You know what Chris. We the viewers pay for bandwidth too, and far more than CNET for that I'm sure.
    If it weren't for us, there were no bandwidth for advertisements, no CNET, no firefox, no internet explorer.
    Believe me if you were receiving "targeted" advertisements on your TV and then out of the blue, a porn ad at family breakfast time Sunday morning. Would you think of blocking adverts on your TV?
    Would you block adverts if they would shrink your viewing area to a 50% or less of the TV screen?
    Would you block adverts if you have to avoid reading a banner in the middle of the screen?
    Web Advertisers betrayed viewers.
    You insult my intelligence.
    So before labeling the very same people who contribute to your pay check as thieves, think carefully what you (or anyone else) had done to get to the adblock situation.
    Web Advertisers should understand viewers, not the other way around.
    You just lost any credibility you had.
    "Before you accuse me, take a look at your self"

    - Anonymous Adblock Coward

  331. Short answer: fuck off; long answer: by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    There has grown in the minds of certain groups in this country the idea that just because a man or corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and the courts are charged with guaranteeing such a profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary to public interest. This strange doctrine is supported by neither statute or common law. Neither corporations or individuals have the right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped, or turned back.
    - Robert A. Heinlein, "Life-Line"
  332. What about international site users? by Rexdude · · Score: 1
    I've been on the web since '98, and been blocking ads since a year after that. I first used AtGuard-an excellent personal firewall cum adblocker which was bought by Symantec and turned into their firewall product. After switching to Windows XP, AtGuard wouldn't work, so I switched to Ad Muncher a commercial Windows based adblocker. Today I use a combination of Admuncher, a hosts file with over 10k entries and the Firefox AdBlock Plus plugin.

    Here's a few counter arguments:

    • What if I live in a country where your advertised products/services are not available, or are too expensive because of the exchange rate?
    • The way I understand online advertising, mere clicking on ads does not help; one has to buy the product for the website to get credit from its advertisers.
      What if I don't ever buy any stuff online?(In my case, I don't own an international credit card)
    In short, what if online advertising is completely irrelevant to me?
    What's the point of trying to convert me to not block ads? I'm never going to buy anything online anyway.
    --
    "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
  333. Not "broken", just broken. by remmelt · · Score: 1

    No need for the scare quotes around broken. The business model is: everyone will look at our ads, so we make money. Users aren't looking at the ads, so the model is broken. That's the way it works. A different model could be: a lot of people will look at our ads, some because they don't know how to block them, some because they support our site that way, we also sell subscriptions with added benefits and t-shirts and other stuff.

    Am I stealing from Penny Arcade because I haven't bought any of their t-shirts? Am I stealing from Toyota when I go to a dealer and get informed about one of their cars but decide to buy a Porsche instead? (Had to get the car analogy in there)
    The answer is no. It's not no, but... It's just no.

    Remember, when people aren't making money with their business model and rant about how users are immoral, it's a clear sign of bullshit.

  334. What about mobile browsing? by Rexdude · · Score: 1

    These days more and more people are using their mobile phones to browse the net. Especially now with Safari on the iPhone, you can browse full fledged websites. Mobile users who aren't on an 'all you can eat' plan have to pay for every freaking byte that they download (Is it the same with the iPhone on AT&T?) ALL THE MORE REASON to block ads that one doesn't want to see!! A mobile browser is anyway slower and has a smaller display than a desktop browser; why should I waste my screen space AND pay for bandwidth for such ads?

    --
    "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
  335. Theft? Freeloading? Please. by GlobalMind · · Score: 1

    TiVo users are freeloading? Blocking ads is theft? Please.

    This whole thing is such BS. I love websites who try to say that you have some kind of agreement with them to see the ads. See here's the thing. I don't get to see this supposed use policy or agreement until after I have visited the site. I have to go there to see it.

    Thus it has no standing. There is absolutely NO requirement for me to view ads. I have not entered into any agreement with any website or TV network which compels me under penalty of anything to view ads.

    Having said that, I understand their situation. They need to generate income to help fund the site. I get that. However, even if you think you can say that by using the site I agree to view ads in some "policy" or t&c... I would laugh at you. You don't put up a splash page that says I have to agree to this before I see the page (which would be utterly stupid) - so to see this thing I supposedly agreed to, I would have to dig into your site to find it. LOL

    Yea nice try.

    The fact is that the majority of folks won't block ads, so they'll still get revenue in some way.

  336. What they don't understand... by sherriw · · Score: 1

    The thing is, that people who have a public website out on the 'net are doing the same thing as radio, tv, newspaper, etc. They are broadcasting information for people to consume in their homes. If I were to cut ads out of the newspaper, plug my ears during radio commercials... or channel surf during TV commercials... it amounts to the same thing. Adblock and the like just makes it easier- complimentary to the fact that the web makes it easier to get that information. These complainers will have to accept it as a cost of providing web content. If they don't like it, they can slap a password on the content and charge a subscription fee.
    What makes me laugh is they are worrying about losing the attention of visitors who are in the demographic less likely to be attracted by annoying ads in the first place. They should be hoping their content is good enough that the adblock using visitors will spread the word to other non-adblock-using people.

  337. The commercialised internet by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Call me a communist if you like, but I fail to see the merits of this reasoning. The internet is a public space, IMO - and just like I object to being forced to look at all-dominating, tacky adverts on all the beautiful, historical buildings in Central London, I object to being force-fed intrusive adverts from mostly dishonest companies every time I access a web-site. I would much rather be without it, even if it means that 90% of the web isn't viable any more.

    And just like I mentally shut out adverts on building or switch channel when the adverts start, I will continue to avoid looking at them on the internet. I am not against companies trying to earn an honest buck, but the crucial word here is HONEST. Apart from that, I don't believe that people buy because of adverts - or at least not the kind of adverts you mostly see; the 'research' may say that we do, but who is it that actually pays for this 'research'? I have only seen one article about the effects of advertising, that was certifiably independently funded - its conclusion was that after the age of 30 people would as a rule simply ignore adverts. The explanation is that people think before they buy - first they realise that they need to buy an item, then they look for where they can get it and compare prices, then they buy. In other words, to most people, most of the time, most adverts are simply irrelevant noise or, even worse, an irritation.

    Think about that for a moment - would you buy Coca Cola if they advertised in a way that constantly pissed you off? Fortunately there is a practical limit to how many cubic meters of junk mail you are likely to receive, but not so on the internet; if we don't block advertising, browsing will simply become a nightmare where we have little or no control over what happens on our computer. The sad fact is that we can't trust the advertisers to respect us and allow us a reasonable amount of personal space.

  338. Freedom of choice ? by ulysees · · Score: 1

    If I choose to not look at a billboard am I stealing from the advertiser ?
    If I choose to not read my junk mail am I stealing from the people who sent it to me ?
    Short answer, no.
    At the end of the day this is advertising, where someone pays for their message to be placed where you could see it and may look at it.
    If you choose to not look or prevent yourself from seeing it that is your own free will.
    The only exception is where you have entered into a contract where viewing of the advertising is required.

    --
    The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from. -- Andrew S. Tanenbaum
  339. Spurious, no doubt! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pity the poor, poor mind-slave who believes this marketing dreck. Now because I'm SAVING THE ENTIRE WORLD MONEY by not having tons of banner ad images consume bandwidth by being sent to me, I'm a moral offender? Precious. Even funnier? This is clearly the same moronic argument used by the RIAA and MPAA, when they state that a pirated work translates into a lost sale. BZZZZZT! Wrong. An unseen ad is not a lost click-through, you narrow-minded sons of bitches - I would not click on your ad even if it were disgracing my screen! The WWW was here before advertising came in and spewed digital diarrhea everywhere, suggesting that the WWW is not in fact dependent on advertising! What a concept! Get this: it's MY computer, I paid for every cent of it, and I bloody damn well have the RIGHT to control what appears on MY screen.

  340. nobody blocks google ads... by simplerThanPossible · · Score: 1

    ...do they?

  341. don't webmasters employ the same morals? by Snibriloid · · Score: 1

    So some people are saying it doesn't matter wether you are interested in the ads or not, you shouldn't block them because that way, the webmaster will get paid for his efforts.

    But doesn't that just shift the load to the advertiser? If you are going to shove the ads down the throats of people who don't want to see them, but charge the advertiser the same amount as for the people who are willing to look at some ads - isn't that the same morality?

    "i take what i can as long as he can't do anything about it"

    Just a thought...

  342. buyer beware, seller beware by rhendershot · · Score: 1

    I once tried to sell a bicycle to a friend of mine. It was sweet! Had a banana seat, it was dark, metallic blue. The tires on it were nearly brand-new! I needed a 10-speed but me and this ol' bike had had some good days. It also (these were the days when having them wasn't so weird as I guess it is nowadays) had a bell on the handle. I'd bought that with my own paper-route monies and it was pretty useful in reminding errant pets that I had a job to do and to please move along.

    I wanted $25 for this bike. It was used, after all. And that's how much I needed to effect a transfer of my bike ownership from this one to the new 10-speed I was to buy. I thought that a very fair price and included the bell!

    Well, Timmy wasn't at all interested in the bell. Said if I'd sell for $20 I could keep the bell. I told him I *needed* to sell it *with* the bell and for $25. I pointed out all the advantages of the bell. I asked him to come over and *see* the bell. I rang it for him and it made this sweet ringing you could hear all down the street. I even showed him the package it came in with its guarantee.

    Despite all this effort, my cost, and all the flashiness, well, Timmy just wasn't interested. All I could do was keep the bell and wait just a bit longer before I could buy my 10-speed. It was a pain walking the route for awhile, but I adjusted.

    I guess you'd have to say I learned a lesson from that.

    Buyer Beware implies Seller Beware.

  343. Snork by notabaggins · · Score: 1

    If the website designer has to pay for bits each time you view their website without viewing their banner ads, are you engaged in theft? Is this right? Ignoring advertising is "theft"? What's next, refusing to buy a product is a felony? Where do people get this idea that profit is a right? You have the right to persue profit, you have no fundamental right to profit.

    I've said it before, I'll say it again:

    If your business model doesn't work, go do something else.

    People whining they can't make money on the web remind me of the old joke, "Doctor, it hurts when I do this..."
  344. Bandwidth ain't free either? by heybes · · Score: 1

    I live in South Africa and except for having some of the slowest internet connections in the WORLD, I also pay $40 for 3GB (excl my ISP cost of $20 for a 384kb line)...and that is WOW!! It cost me more to display the add then the advertiser is willing to pay the web page owner!!! So ethically speaking, they are stealing MY bandwith, that I pay for! Beat that!

  345. My reason for adblock by nobuddy · · Score: 1

    The main reason I installed adblock was page load times. Many sites I visit use ad servers of some sort. They WAY overload those servers, making the ad loads VERY VERY slow. I noticed when I was waiting on a page that was slow, it was invariably an ad. So I installed Adblock. Lo and behold, all those slow pages load quite fast fron the hosting servers. I did a test of a couple of key sites, and page load without adblock was from 12-30 seconds. With adblock, 2-3 seconds. You do the math. If you aren't running adblock, you have plenty of spare time to work it out.

  346. Whatever... by jco · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the monetization of everything. I should charge bystanders every time I fart, since the emitted gas is likely a valuable energy resource. Seriously, tho... Maybe instead of trying to club people over the head with a business model they find annoying, maybe one should just come up with a new model that makes people want to do business with one.

  347. Advertisement split by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For ads that open a new window or layer, block all you can.
    For inline ads such as google's ads... deal with it!

  348. Excuse me, but... by ucla74 · · Score: 1

    MORALITY? So blocking objectionable material--whatever the source, and whatever the possible (negative) consequences for viewing it--is now immoral? Child porn is immoral. Murder is immoral. Incest is immoral. But exercising freedom of choice in what I view--so long as what I view isn't immoral--is not a question of morality.

  349. Ad-Blocking by CffnDwllr · · Score: 1

    WAY back in the early days of the graphics driven internet I used to use a filtering program called PROXIMITY to filter web sites for me. This was to change background colors, fonts, remove items to speed up page loading as I was on a dial up connection, etc., all strictly for my own viewing pleasure. Then X started their pop up/under cam campaign. I started filtering that out with Proximity. As ads became more prevalent I had to adjust the filtering more so my meager bandwidth wouldn't be overwhelmed When cable connections became available I continued to filter ads out as I was now able to do some serious multi-tasking. When Proximity's author dropped support for the program some of it's users banded together, created their own support network, and began writing filters for everyone to use. This worked great for a few years. I started using the Marathon browser a few years ago and found that I could accomplish the same filtering with that program. About that time FIrefox became available with plug-ins for ad-blocking.

    Currently, I have an 8 MB/Sec internet connection and letting ads load is no longer much of a bandwidth issue. However, I've become quite comfy with nice, clean, ad-free pages that load F // A // S // T and use little memory. For this reason, I continue, and will always continue, to block all ads.

    Doyle

    --
    I'm waiting for WOOT to offer an Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator. I need one.
  350. If I'm still paying for my downloads... by MilitantVeggie · · Score: 1

    ...then shouldn't the websites be paying me when I'm forced to download the advertisements they are hosting? Under my current ISP's scheme, if I download more than a GB per month I pay for every extra MB, per MB. And all that pretty flash animation does take up space, doesn't it?

  351. Good for you by Rix · · Score: 1

    I go through my comics list every now and then and hit the paypal buttons too.

  352. Rather like voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I run a small personal site of about 1K hits-per-day traffic and I indeed know the uncomfotable feeling of knowing some users block the barely arsing GoogleAds I have on it, but personally I wouldn't call that thievery, but rather compare it to voting.

    In the long run, 1 ad view like 1 vote doesn't make much difference - that is probably what goes through the mind of a user that understands the concept of bandwidth cost and yet chooses to install an ad-blocker. But as a goverment requires the initiative of the whole so does the author of the site need the help of his user-base to continue bringing fresh content and hosting it.
    But of course some site owners try to abuse their visitours trust - pop-ups which i don't think anyone will argue should be always blocked - but also by using trickery in ad placement - for example placing GoogleAds next to images to make them look like valid internal links.

    This is why I don't think calling such internet-users thieves, fighting for ad-blocker banning or creating sites that refuse to work with ad-blockers is the solution. Such an offensive would surely just backfire and lead to creating more and more advanced, undetectable ad-blockers.
    Instead, we should raise awarness of the issue, make people know that by blocking ads they vote against the future existance of the sites and perhaps try to convince adBlocker makers and hosters, to design their plugins to work only on a site-to-site basis for the non-invasive ads so that the user will have to choose manually which site he wants to block ads on. He will then surely think twice before blocking the ads on his favorite news blog, but will still be able to defend himself from shady sites.

    P.S. Will those damn flash popups ever die!?