Game Site Wonders 'What Next?' When 50% of Users Block Ads
6 writes "Destructoid, one of the few remaining bastions of independent game journalism online, wonders what to do now that nearly 50% of their users run ad-blockers."
← Back to Stories (view on slashdot.org)
Swallow it.
Then i realized exactly that without ads 3/4 of the internet would not exist. Now i simply manually block ads with my hosts file only when they are particularly annoying (autoplaying videos? Whose great idea was it?).
don't use advertising as a business model?
How about they work on creating something worth paying/subscribing to? Simple to suggest, hard to deliver. Perhaps that's the reason? I've been getting into Giant Bomb more lately and if I had a job I would consider trying out their premium service.
If the number of the users is not growing itself (which is not obvious from TFA) but only the percentage of users that use ad-blockers is growing, then don't you have to admit at some point that you have to change the business model and possibly try to charge a subscription fee? But in order to retain clients then you have to provide them with something actually tangible for their money. I have never heard of their site (I basically don't play video games, so I don't know much about the site), but I suppose they don't send out physical magazine or anything like that, it's a pure on-line business. But they have to figure out either how to go around the ad-blocking software or they have to figure out another way to get revenue, and maybe they should offer a subscription and bundle something extra with it (like an actual physical copy of their articles if anybody is interested)?
However I suspect that many sites facing the same problem will just shut down, since their model is purely ad based and technologically they can't really win, so it's their business model that will have to adapt or die out.
You can't handle the truth.
The swedish gaming journalism website FZ has started informing their users how the ad-blocking is hurting their business.
And I do think that most gamers who frequent that said site have started unblocking ads on said site so that they can continue to enjoy the reviews and other content on the site.
However, I don't think that this is a solution for EVERY site, but it might be a solution for sites with a large steady user base.
The culprit's there stares you back.
Pretty much the answer is to embed ads in the site code itself, rather than simply link to some dodgy advertising company's site.
I recall WebhostingTalk site had a pdf describing their site that they would use for potential advertisers, you paid your money and supplied some ads in the required formats and they'd put them in their site themselves. Nowadays, 'ads' are just a couple of clicks to the most annoying syndicated rubbish (along with all the tracking cookies) that have nothing to do with the site you're looking at, except an easy way to attract money.
So the solution for this site is simply to work at getting the advertisers and give up the ad networks.
Post a Slashdot article about the site and boost its page-views x100. Jackpot.
Readers block your ads because they are crap.
Your advertisers only want to reach people that are useful to them.
Cross the two.
Facebook et al try to steal personal data, why not negotiate with users ?
Treat them like adults, say “you are going to get one ad per 5 page views, so why not tell us what sort of ad you want ?”. I care about storage, you probably don’t, so why not honestly ask the readers ? You’d have a higher quality product to sell and readers would be bugged less.
Also, make a virtue about only having non-irritating ads and be honest that having the ad pays for the content, so that people ad your site to their exception list.
The thing I hate about most ads is that their server slows down your page load, that's fixable, and would cause a lot less use of blockers.
Dominic Connor,Quant Headhunter
I think that the ad agencies just aren't thinking about how to make ads more appealing to consumers. Maybe they don't understand the technology, maybe they're trying to do it on the cheap. But the actually delivery of these things needs to change.
For the most part it's not the ads. If they're not blinking or obnoxious I can live with them.
It's the tracking intrinsic to the ads that are the problem.
Use a service that allows you to host the ads on your own servers, so that I know the only person collecting my data is the site that I'm visiting.
Ad blocking came about as a reaction on the huge multimegabyte flash ads with sound and moving images - at least for my part. They were slow to download on 56k modem, and waste of space. Then, google started tracking me across sites using google ads, and I don't particularly want them to track my browsing habits. So I blocked that too. But how much is lost to blocked ads? Did the people blocking ads click ads before blocking was common? I did certainly not. Also, a lot of the ads on the web is quite US-centric, and of less interest to me as a european. Is this really a loss? I'm not so sure. Maybe a clean advertising standard, with text ads and as little tracking as possible would be a better way to go?
Assembling etherkillers for fun an profit
I block all ads by default but if the ads are non-intrusive (non-flash and don't constantly reload every 10 seconds) then I am happy to whitelist certain sites I frequent. Just by making the assurance that the ads are non-intrusive may well reduce the number of users that ad block.
Don't use ads from other sites/domains that are easy to block. Host ads from the same domain as your content; much more difficult to block.
Or go subscription only. Or have part-free, part-sub.
Or just stop. Is a business model that is demonstrably built on annoying your customers really viable in the long-run?
I have been running Ghostery for a while for this reason, and going to Destructoid it hit an all time high score of blocked content. 43 items blocked, even News Limited's news.com.au only gets 10 blocks and there is enough crap on there to annoy the hell out of most people.
http://i.imgur.com/a6gWxbN.jpg
This is exactly the problem Flattr was invented to solve. Users simply tip for content they like - and since each user has set the max size of their monthly tipping jar themselves they'll never tip more than they can afford.
http://flattr.com/
Disclaimer: While not associated with Flattr in any way, I know several of the people on the team. They really are out to make the world a better place for content authors.
it's in my head
I don't see the problem. Actually, I would be happy to see all those ad-supported websites disappear (especially those that make you click through 10 pages to read a single article). If the internet were to become a place where enthusiasts write their weblogs, scientists and hobbyists share results, and some really good content that is worth paying for hides behind paywalls, I do not have a problem with that at all. In fact, it would be a brilliant improvement!
How much money would I have to pay to balance out my blocked ads? TFA doesn't seem to say, but it's kind of all over the place so I just skimmed it.
It's the only viable solution, in return we will all switch off our adblockers.
Like color-coding ads? And setting ad filters? By : type of content, length, bandwith stolen, duration, "noisiness", "flashiness" (intense to mild, continuous to intermittent, etc.), "naggingness", "greenyness", good-bad business practices, spam quotient, and so on. Just like entertainment. Your favorite chemo-mental hypnotist psychosis-inducing overlords could provide tailored filters to your particular flavor and saccharinity of koolaid. All those shiny choices.
It could even help self-regulate the internet ad scene. And add value to page real-estate. Like, big media x tabloids?
Advertisers really only have themselves to blame. Huge-sized, CPU intensive Flash ads with jarringly annoying video & sound and which track you across different websites are extremely annoying. As ads get more intrusive, is it any wonder that so many people resort to ad blocking technology?
It is true that in the early days of simple banner ads that some people still blocked them. You are always going to get some freeloaders who block even text only Google ads, but it wouldn't be such a high proportion of viewers if ads were a bit more reasonable. I have always browsed without Flash (or at least with it disabled), and I always turn off GIF animations because I like stable web pages that don't give me a headache. But where ever possible I prefer to show ads to support the sites I use (I don't disable ads on this site). I have even been known to click on them and look at the advertised goods when they are of interest.
However, I would never support an advertiser or the hosting website that makes ads that look like they are legitimate parts of the website (eg. an ad with a big button saying "Download" on a freeware file hosting site). I will always disable sites that track where I browse (oh look, the linked article uses DoubleClick advertising). Be reasonable to your audience and enough of them will be reasonable back. It is not rocket science.
They had a kickstarter and put a target up up remove all ads.
I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
... show double the number of ads to the remaining 50%.
AdBlock has a scheme where if your Ads are place sympathetically, they're not blocked.
But this article (and TFA) reads as 'We don't understand or communicate with our readers, but this is somehow THEIR fault.'
Simply don't provide content to people who use ad-blockers.
If people don't want to unblock ads on your site, they can look at a simple, cheap to serve HTML page telling them to go away until they change their minds. Alternatively, offer a subscription to allow ad free use of the site for those who want to visit and not see the ads.
Even if you lose 30% of your readership, these people were simply a drain on your bandwidth and were basically expecting everyone else to pay their way.
Eventually, if ad-blocking rates keep going up, almost every place interesting will be forced into the same situation.
People didn't install ad blockers to block your site specifically, they did it once because of some annoying ads or just the vast volume of ads everywhere. They don't really think about the fact that they're doing it and depriving you of ad revenue. I would make a box one pixel higher/wider than the ad (since many blocks are based on standard ad sizes in addition to lists) with a background that said something like "[website name] is funded by ad revenue. If you like the content you find here, please do not block our ads. Thank you." so that if you have no ad blocker installed the ad loads on top. If you block the ad they get that message instead. Start there, only take more drastic measures if you have to.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
And a big chunk of the other 50% probably just ignore them and block them out mentally.
I use a popup blocker, a flash blocker and Mozilla's "Do not track" feature. I don't mind if your webpage has advertisements at the side of the page or if I need to click through a brief commercial message after 5 seconds to get to the content I want to see, but stop throwing flashy movies at me, creating new windows and watching where I'm surfing. These are the tools of malware authors! I shouldn't have to make myself vulnerable to abuse just to help keep your website up and running.
Myu:
Have the game publishers pay for good reviews
Site gets money
Readers get content
I ran without an adblocker for the longest time because the ads on the side don't bother me. Even the occasional interstitial I could deal with. Then, one of the sites I visit regularly started running that damned Meebo toolbar that manages to cover part of whatever you're looking at. It looks like it's been fixed but for a while it repopped up on every page you went to on the site. So, I installed an adblocker, and I've been a happy camper ever since. I don't even think about it running anymore.
This is sad for the sites who have not been annoying with their ads. However, even those sites that want to keep the ads under control apparently have trouble. The writer at Destructoid said that they try to keep the annoying ads out, like the ones that start running audio as soon as you open the page. Try is the operative word, though, and many other sites do not try, so it's always a possibility that something stupid will start blaring out of your speakers. The industry as a whole needs to stop looking at consumers as sheep to be milked instead of customers to be convinced.
And no amount of begging or making ads "relevant" is going to change that. Not to try to put rose-tinted glasses on it, I remember when the internet before commercial interests took a hold, which consisted of mostly academia, and nobody made money off it - it was for the spread of information for the benefit (or bewilderment) of everyone involved. It wasn't a huge commercial success, because not everyone measures success by how much money you can make.
Nobody is stopping you selling real products on the internet, and if you have a service or information that people want to really *that* much then paywalling is an option. But don't kid yourself that you have a right to make money just by being "on the internet" somehow - when every single site and its dog is cannoned up to the gunwhales with advertisements, the value of said ads for any single site isn't going to be worth much to you, even when they're not blocked.
Perhaps if ads hadn't continued to dominate more and more of the content of an average website, and become more and more obnoxious, then nobody would have felt the need to create and use ad blockers. Now its too late - believe me, try using an ad blocker and you'll find that many of the large glossy sites look very, very sparse and lacking in real content indeed.
"But how will I support my site?" - I don't care, it's part of the natural evolution of these things, people get greedy when they see a way to make money, everyone jumps on the bandwagon, then the market collapses. It's always been this way and always will. Perhaps once a lot of ad-revenue supported sites have collapsed there will be a market (paywall or micropayment) for a small number of good quality sites (which presumably does not include the NYT), rather than the acres of glossy crap we have infesting the internet today.
There are several ways in which a site can gather funding using bitcoins.
First of all, this is exremely easy to use, because no banks are involved. Just a bunch of python scripts. Or a regular bitcoin client.
1) you can let people send donations with bitcoins, but since bitcoin is not too popular yet, that will not be big income, until it gets popular.
2) so make it popular. For example implement a bitcoin-based forum system, in which people can choose to participate. If they choose to participate it works following:
2.1) users pay a tiny amount, like 0.001 BTC to post a comment.
2.1.1) If someone who is participating liked their post, they can choose an amount of BTC they want to tip the poster
2.1.2) if someone replied to it, the poster gets 80% of those 0.001 that the replying perspn paid in order to post
2.2) forum users who did not choose to participate, can post comments for free, but also cannot earn any BTC for being a helpful community member.
the remaining 20% for each posted comment goes to the website.
Now bitcoins get more popular on the website, and the website can earn money without advertisments at all.
#
#\ @ ? Colonize Mars
#
See here's the thing, I don't have problems with ads, per-se, I have problem with ads being served by third parties that also serve ads on thousands of other sites as well and track me from site to site. Serve up your ads from your own servers, under your own domain, then I'll see your ads just fine. But if you expect to show me ads that track me, you can go get bent.
The answer to this is standardization of the subscription model across domains / projects / etc.
1. Get browser makers to implement a feature for subscriptions and small donations within the browser. Make it prominent the first time the users install the browser / or it starts up. .5 cents, 50 cents, and $2) should pop up a question that the user MUST confirm (or if it is a subscription). Then have these number be configurable for different regions. So users who are well off (say most people in the US and Europe) can have a default that makes donating quarters easy while people in say South America, China, Mexico, and other countries with a lower average income don't accidentally over donate.
2. Make it easy to give a donation with a single click of a button- a small donation might even be just a few cents. But make it just like the Google + button. Cent transactions should not need user confirmation. Just let them pass. Nobody will contest small transactions like this even if it is a mistake. Its no significant loss. Larger transactions (say $5 or more, maybe there is a like button, and a really like button, and a feeling generous button with three different amounts, say
3. The web masters can then decide what content or features to restrict. If your not subscribed (and this should be anonymous- bitcoins would be great here) maybe they would show advertising for example. If they offer some sort of commercial support for a product that section would be disabled to non-subscribers.
interesting ads, behaving nicely in a side bar. no sound without permission, no expansion without permission, no animation without permission. include a "brought to you by" splash when loading, and "click on them, they paid for this game" message.
One site I visit frequently gives me the option to see their ads or not.
I like that site and second, and they're very careful about how intrusive the ads are.
So I choose not to block them.
Privacy is terrorism.
Banning obnoxious adverts was a beautifully productive side effect of blocking a previous drive-by ad infection. Every time this comes up I feel like pouring hate on the complaining site and company. Host your own ads, negotiate sponsors, whatever, but do not blame your users who pay for their connections and are actively giving their time reading your site over the hundreds of other sites offering exactly the same damn content.
I refuse to read ads. I refuse to click on ads. People trying to manipulate me piss me off, and now I'm reading your site and I'm pissed off. Ads are computer viruses for the mind (trying to rewrite the software to their own ends); if a website came to me and said "Don't install antivirus software because malware pays for our bandwidth" I would laugh in their faces and I hope you would too.
I'd be happy to load the ads if I didn't have to look at them. Perhaps I could have a special sandboxed browser where you type in all of your favorite sites, and it loads them up with the ads in the background every day (at 3am when I don't care about bandwidth).
But the real sin to advertisers isn't blocking the ads, it's ignoring them, right?
Advertisers will eventually pay less or stop paying entirely when nobody inevitably buys their products. If they pay an agency, then the agency will reduce the payout or block the site entirely in favor of the higher performing sites. Nobody seems to consider that branding alone on the internet is not where the money comes from. Rich leads that end up buying products or signing up for content is normally the desired outcome of the advertiser. Take that away from them and they stop paying. Lose lose.
You and your peers ran annoying ads. So we blocked the hell out of them. There were 43 blocked items on your page when I visited it. To not get in the way, ads must be scriptless and not animated, and perhaps only text. You, on the other hand, run full-page interstitials and had to ASK your advertisers to not run ones that expand and stuff like that. Fuck that shit. You made your ads too annoying. You made a mistake.
Honestly, we won't cry if you do go out of business. We do not owe you a living. There are more than enough paid games journalists already, and there are plenty of very good amateur ones. And you're not top-tier like The Escapist or Angry Joe. If you take the route some are tempted by and try to block your site to those with ad-blockers, 50% of your readers will ignore you, and when the other 50% link to your site from the places traffic is driven and discover the other half can't see the site, they'll link somewhere else instead because there's no point sharing a site to someone who can't see it, the same issue sites which are geographically restricted face, and you'll fade into obscurity and go out of business. (Also, the next generation of ad-blockers will work around anti-ad-blocking scripts.)
Gamers are sometimes picky about who we give our money to. That will not always work in your favour. In short, what you need to do is suck it up and adapt. I don't know why your bandwidth costs so much, consider moving your hosting and reducing your costs. I'm able to run a site that gets way more traffic than yours without ads: hell I don't even ask for donations, and I'm not going to plug it here either. If your ads are no longer breaking even for you, you have a cashflow problem.
the advertisers we use ad-blockers! Aw, now you've ruined it for all of us.
assignment != equality != identity
I don't have a problem with a simple graphic banner across the top of your page if it does not flash or play sound or grab my mouse context or jump to the middle of the screen and do an overlay of something i am trying to click on or if there are so many of them i have to scroll to get to the content I am looking for.
If you want advertising revenue, go back to a single simple ad banner.
I don't read Destructoid, but I read plenty of other gaming sites.
I run strict adblockers for the same reason pretty much everyone does: because the obtrusiveness of ads - popover, popunder, audible, garish, and intellitext ads all are simply annoying, not to say that some (scripts) are flat-out security risks.
The fact is - not as bad as broadcast TV, but close - the hook is too large for the bait. Few people understand the true relationship between viewers, content producers, and advertisers: the ADVERTISERS are the customers, the viewers are what are being sold, and the content producer is like a fisherman, throwing just enough bait (content) into the water to get the fish to swim closer (read the site and thus the adverts) to sell THAT to the customer.
50% of the users block ads? I think that's low, actually. I also put adblock on every computer in our family (it means less service work for me).
So, you ask, how is a site like Destructoid supposed to survive?
1) recognize that (contrary to the OP) you're NOT "working 2x as hard as anyone to survive"...everyone else's ads are blocked at the same rate.
2) you are in a market where there are a glut of suppliers because the entry-price is so low: a website is cheap to start and there are all sorts of budding writers that are simply happy to have their crap posted somewhere more official than their facebook page.. The sad fact of capitalism is that many of them will fail.
3) Sadly, whether you fail or not will probably have little to do with the quality of your content. Life's a crapshoot, and choosing a business with a zero-depth entry point means your business is going to be CONSTANTLY challenged by other people who think they can do it better. Further, it is overall a relatively puny business, something that a corporate giant (a Sony, or EA, or whatever) can 'blow' $$$ on with little/no hope of return, compensating writers more aggressively. The only thing you have to offer that beats that is neutrality - any corporate-sponsored site (if it's identifiable as such) is suspected of being biased in its reviews, or (at best) being a gross corporate shill (ala Game Informer magazine). But ultimately (as especially those of us having spent time in the industry know) you are hostage to your advertisers too. In point of fact, the agglomerated sites (Telefragged, etc.) are probably LESS hostage to a particular advertiser, although as I'm not sure how fast the zeroes pile up at that scale, I'm not certain that's true.
For what it's worth, there is no bad publicity; I'd never even heard of Destructoid having been in the gaming industry as a consumer and reviewer since 1994. I'll check out Destructoid for a while, see if it's worth reading.
I don't have any advice for you. If I could be certain that the ads provided through your ad-providers are never going to be minimally-obtrusive, sure, I' d suspend adblock on you pages. But I can't change the fact that your industry is easy to get into and you will always have lots and lots of competition...I doubt it will ever get easier for you.
Truth in commenting 1: I personally can't understand the advertising economy; the amounts paid for advertising seem to me staggeringly out of line for the benefit. I rarely watch/view ads, those I do see often dissuade as much as persuade, and I've never (as far as I can tell) made a purchasing choice based on an advert.
Truth in commenting 2: on Slashdot, I have deliberately left unchecked the 'disable adverts' box because I've never been annoyed at their ads; however, I don't make an adblock exception for them either.
-Styopa
video ads [...] for movies that i couldn't even legally see in my location!
They're ads for getting on a plane and flying to where the movie can be seen. Or maybe they're just ads for a movie that will eventually be released in your location, just as movies coming soon to theaters are advertised in the United States.
Now i simply manually block ads with my hosts file only when they are particularly annoying (autoplaying videos? Whose great idea was it?).
I used to do that until I discovered the Flashblock extension. Now I block ads only when they're presented in SWF format. Chrome on my tablet doesn't even support SWF, and Firefox on my laptop and tablet makes SWF click-to-play except for a few sites on the whitelist. Text ads and still image ads still load just fine; an advertiser wanting to reach me should use those.
And I do think that most gamers who frequent that said site have started unblocking ads on said site so that they can continue to enjoy the reviews and other content on the site.
If I am viewing a web site, but Flash is click to play on my machine and HTML5 video in MPEG-4 format is not available, am I "blocking ads"?
Ready answer - nectar the ones who complain are not willing to pay a dollar even for some of their favorite sites. Slashdot allows you to choose to turn off ads by paying. Something like 0.001% pay. 99.99% won't pay.
Some time ago I wrote a shareware program that does something no other software does. 100,000 people downloaded it. It got top ratings everywhere. About 60 people emailed me saying how much they like the software. Exactly ONE person paid the $5 "donation" for it. Web sites are like that - people will visit daily, they'll talk about how awesome the site is, but no way they'll fork over $1. They just don't.
No, readers block ads because they're capable of researching what they want on their own
When automobiles were introduced, people thought they wanted a faster horse. How would the benefits of an automobile end up in such a person's research?
I block ads because some sites are *so* horribly infested with annoying, blinking, screaming, memory-hogging, loud crap that there is no choice but to install something.
I am willing to whitelist a site that asks nicely AND takes care that the advertisments do not make their site un-viewable. No popups, no animated crap that makes reading text impossible, no flash that bogs down entire computer, no loud sound, no articles divided to 20 parts so they can cram 20 times more ads down our collective throats, no double-underlined words that display a caption add when I move mouse over them. It can be done. Have a look at google site.
Please understand: the vast majority of users out there are too lazy and ignorant to mess with switching on the add blocking. They are even willing to use browsers horribly infested with unbelievable amount of crap. In order to make such user to go and ask someone knowledgeable to install an adblock for them they had to be extremely annoyed.
So, if you want to blame somebody, blame stupid webmasters and super-greedy advertisers that created sites that drove us to block ads.
Apparently you find slashdot valuable, you're here. Have you paid for a slashdot subscription? I'm on Slashdot daily. I haven't and won't pay, so they'll have to use ads to pay for this post.
Mostly because their website, which I would use far and above their pulp delivery edition, has a dozen or so foreign sites that need to be blocked and on of top of that they require a friggin' facebook login to comment on a story. My $15/month probably doesn't mean much to them but from what I hear they are seriously hurting for money. Maybe someday they will stumble across a business model that is both agreeable to them and their readership.
Oh, and as far a that 30 day free trial BS "pop up", my offer expired over a year ago yet I can still access articles.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
1: ads are a VERY common way to get Windows infections; can you GUARANTEE that none of your ads will EVER infect a reader/casual visitor? It would require hosting the ads on YOUR site and vetting every single one of them. If you don't do that, please go out of business.
2: many/most/nearly all ads are annoying, even if not destructive; constant "I went to a site and the damn commercials nearly fried my speakers", "that flashing crap caused a petite mal event", ... mean, again, that I'd rather you disappeared.
3: tracking cookies; why would anyone with an IQ higher than a houseplant's want that done to them?
4: offer me a box on the screen with something, presumably of interest since I'm at your site, then allow me to "click to play" if it's video/animation, "click for link", and, you know what, I may (have in fact) followed them. /. allows me to kill ads, but I haven't bothered on my tablet. I have found items of interest here.
Simply don't provide content to people who use ad-blockers.
Then you'll end up blocking users who have enough disposable income to buy an iOS or Android device because lack of support for SWF has the effect of blocking SWF ads.
I also use Adblock+ and visit gaming sites. Believe me, I get plenty of ads. The videos of gaming events that I download (this being the primary reason I'm on those sites - I'm a sucker for competitive Starcraft 2) are full of advertising. I tolerate it because the advertised companies are genuine sponsors and make the tournaments happen. Destructoid really doesn't. They are parasitic on the interest that has been generated in games. I'm not saying that's bad, but suggesting that the internet doesn't need them. Gaming will be just as good without them, and their role will be filled by people who do their job for love and not money. Or, it won't be done at all, but, so what?
Destructoid needs to put their business model in perspective. They're in an industry that isn't a necessity; it requires people spend their disposable income. If your business plan involves doing things your customers don't like (meaning, things other than charging them) don't be surprised when your customers try and avoid those things, or just leave altogether. Crying about people not suffering through your ads doesn't help anything. Chances are if these people are blocking your ads, they're not going to click on them anyway.
Advertising is an odd, middleman-style business that seems to somehow justify its own existence. Yes, I understand the need to spread the word about your product, but effective advertising is extremely rare. Instead of "relevant ads" we are bombarded with useless and vague ads about things. If I see a commercial for people dancing around at a party, this doesn't make me want to buy a hamburger.
And it's becoming more and more ingrained in society as acceptable. I know this really doesn't apply to TFA, but if I see ads in more places, shouldn't I be paying less for the services?
The online ad model is stupid. These ad companies want to host ttheir own ads so they can count each hit. This is how they hope to maximize their income. The problem is, it's working against them and they are STILL doing it. They need to go back to the broadcast and print model where the "sponsor" trusts the publisher to present the ads faithfully. Once the ads are moved from sites like "doubleclick" to the originating site, the ads become more difficult to block.
But I would prefer they sef-destruct due to their own greed and lack of trust.
Right now we associate annoying ads with the site we see them on. Our only options are to put up with them or block them for a site. There's no fine grained feedback.
A better system would be to have a reputation system. A Slashdot style reputation system of rating ads and ad sources combined with filtering based on preferences would let users both control why types of ads they will put up with and give feedback to advertisers as to which characteristics are going to get them blocked from a lot of eyeballs.
The world is made by those who show up for the job.
I, too, only block annoying ads. Too bad that is all of them.
To be honest, I wouldn't mind a (as in one) unobtrusive, relevant ad on a webpage. But too many sites just plaster the page with wall-to-wall blinking, flashy, garish crap that only serves to generate impressions. The page viewer suffers, the advertisers themselves get nothing of value by it (wish they would understand this), the only one that benefits in the short term it the site owner.
Well, color me unsurprised that more and more people block ads. The site owners have only themselves to blame. Had they kept it reasonable it wouldn't have happened but in this race to the bottom the user decided he has had enough.
Here's the thing, though. As I would never buy any of the products advertised on any of the sites I read unblocking the ads would still not help in the long run.
Fortunately, most people have more money than brains and buy lots of silly crap. Thanks.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
What if I really just want a faster horse? By convincing the masses that faster horses are old news and the hip people use cars you effectively shut down research into making horses faster. It's an allegory, but you see it today: everyone had to have a wide-screen tv, then Hi-Def, then 3D. What about making just a better tv?
In creating markets you invariably destroy old markets. And, not to sound like a Luddite, but replacing badly made (but shiny and new) crap every few months gets on my nerves.
This is all part of the wider question, which is "how much is information worth?" Traditionally, information was relatively expensive. You had to go out and buy it in book, record, tape, 8 track or newspaper form. And so on.
Then the internet came along. Zero-cost perfect copies met a cheap global communications network. The middle men - that is to say not the content producers themselves, but the record labels, newspaper houses and so on - are and should be terrified by this. It made their job as relevant as the buggy whip manufacturers. Ads are just one of a number of ways to try to somehow still make money off the distribution of information. You stitch an ad into the information, and money magically appears from random X marketer.
In terms of games reviews, this is one area where the commons makes far more sense than a tiny elite of reviewers. A large aggregation of people communicating about the relative quality of a game beats out reviewers every time (you just have to look at metacritic scores to see how combined customer reviews are always far more accurate than combined critic reviews)
At the end of the day, if we want to continue to support the obviously flawed model of "paying someone to try to get people to look at something they don't want to see" then the answer is simple.
Ad blocking software that downloads the ads as normal, but does not display. A fiction so that the viewers and publishers continue to get what they want at the expense of marketers. But marketers are all scumbags anyway, so it's perfectly alright.
As other people have said, it isn't merely advertising I'm worried about.
I started blocking when ads became:
- Intrusive.
- Annoying and bandwidth wasting (ads with sounds and video).
- Privacy-violating.
- Potentially Dangerous. (Seriously, why exactly should I allow scripts or Flash from third party domains when a new zero-day browser/plugin vulnerability is being exploited on a near-weekly basis?)
Okay kickstarter has proven pretty awesome for some .. and even small projects are getting funded.
NPR has a fundraising week every year.
Isn't anyone combining the two?
Every year, have a fundraising drive that offers stupid crap (well that's what npr does) for big donations. Set your funding goal for the year... and try to meet it.
I started using ad blocker when ads became very annoying, distracting and in some cases NSFW. I've found that good sites now that have ads relevant to what they show and have begun to turn ad blocker off for those sites. I still have no script turned on which usually stops the ads from moving etc.
I think Destructoid should inform users of the problem. Ask to be white listed by users or offer an add free subscription version of the site.
What happens when 50% of Users block advertisements?
Why, you have now have two kinds of users. The smart ones who block, and the dumb ones who don't.
The smart ones probably have more money to spend - but it'll be harder to extract money from them.
The dumb ones will have less money to spend - if for no other reason than they've spent it already on dumb ideas. But it'll be easier to get money out of them.
Pick your mark.
There are several reasons I block ads: I don't want to be tracked. And I don't want to be conned, gamed, decieved and/or lied to (and for most ads, this is their goal). But most of all, to me it goes back to a fundamental concept of computing: This is my computer, I'm paying for the network link, and I get to choose what enters my computer and how I use/display that data/info.
Sadly, advertising permeates our society and is forced down people's throats everywhere. Back in college when they had ideals, Sergey Brin and Larry Page of Google said, "We expect that advertising funded search engines will be inherently biased towards the advertisers and away from the needs of the consumers." They were right. The same concept applies to other advertising.
Does this mean that Destructoid or other sites might disappear because people like me don't want advertising? Yup, it might. But that's not my problem -- it's an "adapt or die" mindset. If they choose a less deceptive way of funding themselves -- straight subscription, crowd sourcing, whatever -- I'll decide whether their value is worth me paying what they ask.
Then I'll decide whether to allow their text, data, pics and videos, etc., into my computer, and I then I'll decide how I want to use/display that content.
There's an old saying in business: The customer is always right. If the customer doesn't like your advertising or business model, the business has a problem, not the customer.
In the past month, many if my regular sites have been flagged by Google for malware and when resolved it was all down to malicious software being served by their ad provider.
For the first time in years I visited Youtube on a freshly installed system without any addons installed, and it blew my mind how many ads there were. The main page had about 3 ads including a huge video ad in the middle. This was on a netbook and so the time it took for the ad to load was not appreciated. I loaded a music video and there was a video ad, a popup on the video, and that annoying frame around official music videos that show the next crappy pop star (in this case it was Nicki Minaj, and that was really unappreciated).
Some sites that I do visit ask me to turn it off and they so far have only served me very simple image ads or text ads which I don't really mind. It's when an ad starts playing animation and/or audio that I block them and sometimes just block the site itself completely.
You don't need to be intrusive to sell your product. It just annoys the end user. I don't remember a single flashy ads name, so that obviously does not work (in my case).
Stop using ads and start doing stuff like being an Amazon merchant. Link your reviews and stuff to your Amazon merchant account - when a user clicks through to buy something, they get revenue. There are several Blu-Ray review sites that do just that. Stop bombarding us with flash ads and stuff - give us your story, and a link to where we can buy the game. Happy users, and a solution to your issues.
Here is some links to sites that do just this:
http://www.highdefdigest.com/ (notice the ads are off to the side of the page, its not distracting, and relates to the site)
http://bluray.highdefdigest.com/7388/santa_martians.html (provides Amazon link to buy the product. Side bar has some ads relating to the site)
http://www.blu-ray.com/ (Links at the top of the page take you to their articles, with a link in their article to buy the product on Amazon)
http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Life-of-Pi-3D-Blu-ray/60865/#Review (example of an article, with links to the Amazon store)
Both of these sites are very clean and well designed, do not bombard the users with ads, with the exception of links to buy movies, which is exactly why the users are at the site to begin with. The sites make enough from click-throughs to stay in business (unless movie companies are paying them to write reviews, which is possible). In any case, the sites are able to stay in business, pay operating costs and pay staff, and are able to keep from bombarding users with ads.
It's not that foreign of a concept. If I go to a review site, don't bombard me with a flash ad for Pepsi or some reverse-home-mortgage, or something. Just give me a link to where I can buy the product you are talking about.
It's an ad. A picture and some words and a link. It doesn't need to show me a movie or play me a song. Flash and Java are at or near the top of the list of frequency of vulnerabilities found. Plus, they're often pigs.
Stop that and people won't be annoyed by the ads. Will a single site that addresses those concerns still suffer because of ad-backlash to all the other sites? Probably.
I remember a time when videos were being shared on P2P networks. Kill youtube and bring back peer to peer video sharing.
Palm trees and 8
In the beginning, there were no ads on sites with content that you wanted. Ok, that's kind of a lie. But when the WWW started out, everyone hosted content to make it available to others, not to make money out of it. Sure there were ads for porn on warez sites and similar, but none of those ads went through Google or doubleclick. Or maybe some went through doubleclick. But the point was, people on the Internet made information available for the sake of doing that. Funding their activities and infrastructure was done via other means.
10 years later and people everywhere are trying to use advertising as the means to fund their work or Internet website. Problem.
The problem is that by making the website the source of their funds through advertising, they're presenting a website to the user that is worth, well $0. If I don't pay to use it, why should I care if it makes money? I paid nothing for it, therefore if it disappears I won't be out of pocket and my life will continue.
The economics of running a website are not the problem of those that surf to it with their web browser and what's more, there are plenty of websites out there from which to get your web fix, so if one disappears because of a bad business model, so what? The ones that have worked out how to make their website stay alive in the absence of advertising will be the ones that are worth visiting because people will actually associate value with them.
Think of this ad-blocking and revenue restriction as Darwinism in action on the WWW.
What if ads get harder to block? There's a name for that: arms race.
Abusive ads have one or more of the following:
These are the ones I block. I suggest advertisers start treating people as people.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
I like the advertising-free internet that ad blockers give me, but I do like to support some sites that I visit whose main source of income is from targeted ads. So, a simpler opt-in capability (one click - this site can spam me, along with a one click - stop spamming me) would be appropriate IMO. It may occasionally annoy me, just like the semi-annual NPR station fund raising campaigns; however, I understand why they have to do it, and the nagging sometimes makes me pony up some $$ because my conscience gets the better of me! Besides, once in a blue moon, they advertise sometime I really need! :-)
My Ghostery blocked 14 scripts from loading on that site. The sad thing is, with all that blocked, the entire left and right quarter of the screen came up blank. If a site needs that much revenue from ads for mostly re-reporting what other people have already written they do not deserve to be in business in the first place. I can't stand that most of these types of sites have nothing but garbage opinions and things I've read elsewhere AND think they have a right to gather my information for free, even if its just my IP. If it was for their own metrics, fine but not to 14 entities that I never clicked on or agreed to share with. I've never clicked on disable advertising on Slashdot and yet I'm still looking at most of my screen showing content. I don't have Musinex ads screaming out of my speakers. If they want to survive, sites like Destructoid need to figure out how to do it in a way that consumers are willing to put up with.
It is not like it is hard to detect adblocking. And display a message, or just block all content.
I really do not know why sites do not do this.
But in reality, just asking nicely for all your customers to turn off their adblockers would hopeful do enough.
Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
There isn't a website that has yet existed that is necessary. That could also apply to every movie and television show that has even been produced, and most books. If your content is valuable, it will generate value. You just have to find out how.
If I visit a site where ads ruin the experience, I'm gone. There is no content that can justify that reality for me, so I act accordingly.
I find advertising to be reprehensible in its mass form. It conveys the very worst of us, and exists upon, and strengthens, a platform of dishonesty. There are exceptions, yes, but that is the general rule IMO.
I block ads in every way that I can - if I find a site with great content that interests me, I pay for it. That's exceedingly rare.
Point being: if you want to exist, find a different revenue model. If your users are blocking ads, that should be communicating something to you - and very strongly at 50%! Change your behavior, don't try to change theirs.
How would the people paying for the ads know that half their users are blocking it? Oh wait they tell the world via a post their website. Gee i wonder if the advertisers are going to want to pay them anymore. Adblockers dont allow the content (ads) to download to your computer why dont we have smarter adblockers that download them to a sandbox and immediately destroy them giving them the impression that we are seeing them? And our browsers should NEVER let websites know we are even running these plugins EVER
Before AdBlock I got so frustrated when visiting some websites because of the ridiculous choice of the devs to force the ads to load before the rest of the page, ads loaded on another server. So I had to sit there for 20 seconds looking at "Waiting for x.net" because the advertisers couldn't pay for proper hosting.
Now when I click on a site it just loads.
This BS prompted me to go out and find something like AdBlock. This was both the site owner and the advertisers fault.
Anyway, who said the internet has to be a "commercial" thing? What, I won't get to see what fucking celebrity is fucking who or have YouTube tell me what to do, any of a million companies track me and everything about me?
What will end up happening is someone/multiple someones will be paid off and a law banning this type of software will be passed. I'd love to think website owners would actually have to innovate and find another way, but there's too much money in this.
http://i.imgur.com/IZDxmzb.jpg
I appreciate the ads that get in people's faces pay more. Until they're blocked.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
But if you're too fucking lazy to serve plain, straight ads which work without Javascript, I'm not your target.
Ah, and cookies are off most of the times.
Business people need to accept things: Copyright infringement is here to stay, so deal with through ignoring it.(its advertisement). People hate ads for many reasons, so only use them to grab that initial group and accept that people will block them. Charge for content. You can't do infinite growth. Grow slowly. There is a hard ceiling for everything. Punch through it and you will fail. examples IBM in 90's Microsoft now, Digg, facebook, venezuela etc.
There's gotta be a table somewhere that shows, more or less, how many ads a person like me potentially would click on a year and fundamentally what that's worth. Figure out what that amount is, combine it with my, say, top 5 or top 10 visited sites, multiply it by 100 (since it's probably pennies), make it easy for me to pay and I'll cut them a check in exchange for an ad-free browsing experience.
I pay for NPR; I would pay for my most visited websites if they made it easy.
fire Jim Sterling.
Internet advertising is an excellent example of tragedy of the commons. Everyone who runs ads has something to gain by making theirs bigger / more obnoxious than the other guys to get more attention and presumably more clicks. The tragedy is that it destroys internet advertising for everyone -- nobody has built an "obnoxious ad blocker" -- so we're all running an "all ads blocker". Advertisers: you've shot yourselves in the feet.
...and that is quite revealing when surfing.
(my browser is set to javascript off per default, but some sites are broken to the point of being useless without javascript, these get it enabled per domain)
My tedencies are:
* It has sound = stop visiting the offending site, and add the ad-server in blocklist
* It moves = block no matter if it is content or ad or whatever (usually don't look at it for long enough to determine which before I start to set up a block), exception being sites I visit for the video (in which case content remains unblocked)
* _Big_ ads = blocked when they have reached my pain threshold
* Discrete ads = no block
* Ads that doesn't fit the content = See big ads.
* Text ads = no block, exception being ads in all caps (gets blocked with customized css-file)
* Things (ads, "navbars", dead badgers) that follows along when scrolling = See sound
Interestingly enough this has led to my internet-experience to be roughly as annoying as it was back in 1998 and I still see ads (however, was a few years since last I clicked a non-text ad (it is content that gets me, images rarely convey content)).
Just my two 100ths of whatever you local currency is
Try stay in business doing this to users (infecting & slowing 'em down) -> http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43130167
* You can state that ALL YOU LIKE, but the damage is being done to users who pay out a monthly fee out of pocket to be online, AND, they get slowed down by banners on that note + infected by adbanners too!
APK
P.S.=> I had NO problem with adbanners until I realized THOSE things were going on (and I pay a monthly charge to an ISP for a certain rate of speed for things I WANT TO SEE, not that which I do not, like ads)...
Thus, I actively did something about it, for anyone interested in STOPPING it, via the most efficient & technically superior method possible (@ the IP stack level, via custom hosts files)!
Fact is - I could have released MY solution years before too & held off (out of empathy for webmasters ONLY), until the "malware explosion" started around 2005 onwards & really "hit" the past 2-3 yrs. now or so!
THAT is where I "drew the line" @ that point in fact (of which, yes, adbanners HAVE been part of - infecting users with malicious script MANY times)!
... apk
By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing kill yourself.
No, no, no it’s just a little thought. I’m just trying to plant seeds. Maybe one day, they’ll take root – I don’t know. You try, you do what you can. Kill yourself.
Seriously though, if you are, do.
Aaah, no really, there’s no rationalisation for what you do and you are Satan’s little helpers. Okay – kill yourself – seriously. You are the ruiner of all things good, seriously. No this is not a joke, you’re going, “there’s going to be a joke coming,” there’s no fucking joke coming. You are Satan’s spawn filling the world with bile and garbage. You are fucked and you are fucking us. Kill yourself. It’s the only way to save your fucking soul, kill yourself.
Planting seeds. I know all the marketing people are going, “he’s doing a joke” there’s no joke here whatsoever. Suck a tail-pipe, fucking hang yourself, borrow a gun from a Yank friend – I don’t care how you do it. Rid the world of your evil fucking makinations. Machi Whatever, you know what I mean.
I know what all the marketing people are thinking right now too, “Oh, you know what Bill’s doing, he’s going for that anti-marketing dollar. That’s a good market, he’s very smart.”
Oh man, I am not doing that. You fucking evil scumbags!
“Ooh, you know what Bill’s doing now, he’s going for the righteous indignation dollar. That’s a big dollar. A lot of people are feeling that indignation. We’ve done research – huge market. He’s doing a good thing.”
Godammit, I’m not doing that, you scum-bags! Quit putting a godamm dollar sign on every fucking thing on this planet!
“Ooh, the anger dollar. Huge. Huge in times of recession. Giant market, Bill’s very bright to do that.”
God, I’m just caught in a fucking web.
“Ooh the trapped dollar, big dollar, huge dollar. Good market – look at our research. We see that many people feel trapped. If we play to that and then separate them into the trapped dollar”
How do you live like that? And I bet you sleep like fucking babies at night, don’t you?
“What didya do today honey?”
“Oh, we made ah, we made ah arsenic a childhood food now, goodnight.” [snores] “Yeah we just said you know is your baby really too loud? You know?” [snores] “Yeah, you know the mums will love it.” [snores]
Sleep like fucking children, don’t ya, this is your world isn’t it?
Ads get more and more obnoxious as time goes on. I guess the train of thought is that people don't click ads because they didn't see them, so they have to be more intrusive to get seen and then people will click.
Bzzzzt. Sorry, wrong, but thanks for playing (I'd even thank you more if you stopped playing).
The reason is a very different one: You're hawking a product nobody wants. The way I see it, to get me to click on an ad, getting me to notice it is only the first step out of many. There are so many others, and the most important two are simply that
- I have to have some use for your product
- I have to want to do business with you
Now, please tell me why I should even consider doing business with you if you yell in my face. Would you? Be honest. If I came up to you and jumped up and down in front of you while you're trying to have a conversation with your friend or read something that interests you, would you even listen to me when I yelled into your ear and generally be as obnoxious as I can be? Most likely you'll grab me and throw me into the next garbage bin you find. And that's, essentially, what the people using ad blocking on your ads do: They toss your ads into the garbage. Without even looking at them. They may even be for a product they'd be at the very least mildly interested in, but presented in THAT manner? I wouldn't do business with you if you were the last person on earth offering this product.
The only thing I'd ever want from you is to be left alone.
For the longest time I had no ad blocker running. What I did instead was to automatically close every pop up that started to load, without even looking what it was about. It was a popup, it was obnoxious, I didn't even WANT to know what it was about.
Lately, YouTube started to insert ad clips before giving me the clip I want to see. What does this accomplish? The same. You sit there with your mouse hovering over "wait 5 seconds to skip ad", and as soon as "skip ad" is offered, you click. I've probably seen the first 5 seconds of a few ads by now, and I even have no idea what those ads were for. Who thought it would be a bright idea to do that? There's this user who wants to see a clip. And he wants to see it NOW because, well, when he types his search string into YouTube and hits go, he wants to see it. No matter how interesting your ad could be, this is NOT the time this user will watch it. He wants to see his clip. Unless, maybe, he has the attention span of a gold fish and gets easily distracted by shiny things, but then, chances are that he will have forgotten about your ad by the time his clip finishes, so what's the point?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
I will always get modded down for this, but put a JavaScript miner in ablocked regions! Make some money the "hard" way. Also the game, you just lost it! Inb4 the hosts file troll and Wikipedia can not that I'm still on their "checkuser" terrorist watch list so if Any Wikipedians are reading this you better run checkuser on my again, I think you know who I am, "checkuser" your privilege and SRS can mine bitcoins for women if it will make them feel better about the so called gender "pay gap".
This post brought to you my Slashdot's biggest troll! I've been here longer than the GNAA, and the Taco Snotting! You will not get away with trolling with me!
Personally if i find value in the content, im more than happy to pay.
I currently subscribe to paywall sites on topics i'm interested in or have something to do with my profession because they offer me unparalleled original content that cant be found anywhere else.
I donate monthly to sites such as wikipedia because i believe they are providing me a great service, and again a wealth of content unavailable anywhere else.
Will i ever unblock glorified wordpress blogs or plain news sites esp in the field of tech and gaming news basically copy and pasting the latest headline which are primarily press releases from wherever they can find them or plain link bait opinion pieces of no journalistic worth with their biased slant and read the varied opinions of fanboys as they battle back and forth with schoolyard tactics? Never.
The lack of actual content they provide is past a joke, if they cant find a way to fun themselves without ads, i'll shed no tears at their demise.
Have a cookie. A real one now a "tracking" one. I knew you would be here so have a -1, troll of the day award.
How does this mean you're working twice as hard as other sites to sustain your company. Are you under the impression that Destructoid is the only site on the internet that is subject to having its ads blocked?
Seems like the more correct thing to say is that sites are having to work twice as hard in general to generate the same revenue as before. And, given the adage "work smarter, not harder", it seems it's time for everyone to find a more efficient way to generate revenue.
Plead your case directly to the users. Promise that the ads will be sensible and non-intrusive and ask them to allow ads for your site. Ask for donations/offer premium access if that fails. Offer merchandise. Paywall if all those fail (this last one will either kill you or make you stronger).
I co-started and co-ran a niche forum for approx 5 years that quickly got popular and needed dedicated hosting. It is/was a community site, we presented funding options to the users (as we did any major change), to start with donations worked, but we started getting a high proportion of non registered users after exposure in a couple of national magazines. What we found was paid sponorship worked. Sponsors offered discounts, had permant/rotation (depending on how much paid) placement on places on the site. Were allow to post sales/discounts/group buys deals and be part of the community, posting advice, competition prizes, free stickers etc. Was such a sucess that one sponsor paid for a whole years hosting up front. But the main thing was these were businesses that came reccomended by the users of the site or we thought would offer value to the users of our site and that is IMHO the weak point of generic 3rd party advertisers, they really are third party, relevance can suffer and they seldom can provide back to the community. We worked hard with sponsors to develop relationships with the community and themselves and it was quite clear that it in our niche it was mutually benificial. But the clear thing is as we setup the discount deals, allowing sponsors to post, at every step we ran these ideas past the community, sometimes a one month trial to get feedback, but one thing that over five years never changed and that was a strong dislike for using a 3rd party ad service.
For the sites that I read a lot, I don't block ads. However, I have to be convinced that the site is useful before I'll switch off my adblocker. Destructoid seems to be slashdotted at the moment, so I can't RTFA. I would be interested to see whether it's 50% of regular visitors who are blocking ads, or 50% of all visitors.
Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
...and THINK why they block it - could it be that flashing, blinking, fullsize, layers-that-block-the-whole-site-until-you-klick-a-2x2-pixel-X-ads are so annoying that people eighter block them or leave the site for good?
Here is what happens: The advertisers submit ads to the person generating site content, who incorporates the ads into content such that it can't be automatically blocked. Not as dynamic as what the model is now but if sites with sophisticated users who block ads which are inserted on the fly by third parties want to keep up, well, that is the future.
If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
Fuck ads. I bock them and there is nothing you can do to stop me. Deal with it.
What to do now?
Well, as far as your audience is concerned, you are selling something that you don't own - their eyes. If your audience says "you can't sell my eyes", then you have a choice; lose their eyes, or find another way to make money.
Just remember, you are now making money by selling something that you don't own. In other fields, that would be called "fraud", the RRIA/MPAA would call it "theft".
Destructoid? Are we talking about the same site? The one where their major contributor, Jim Sterling, spends 99% of his time trolling the readers of the site? He is the Armond White of game journalism. Let's not forget about one of their writers basically taking a giant misogynist dump on Felicia Day that one time. Being crude, obnoxious, and stupid does not make you "independent".
Most people don't block ads on mobile devices, because it is more trouble than it is worth. Those sites that have mobile versions generally only have a few unobtrusive ads, if that, because they know that it would eat up their users' bandwidth/usage otherwise. Why not use mobile as a model of what to do and what not to do? If people aren't worried enough about ads on mobile versions to block them then clearly this method of content delivery is superior for everyone involved. Ad to that, the mobile version of sites is usually easier to read, less cluttered, and when done right (NOT Destructoid's current site, something more like Slashdots or Ars Technica's) an all around better experience.
If you don't gracefully degrade the functionality of your website to serve up ads if JavaScript isn't enabled, too bad. Your site is broken if you can't handle lack of JavaScript in the equation. Same if I don't have Flash installed or enabled. Your revenue model is broken if you can't financially deal with that issue.
I'm quite aware that this may impact advertising revenue, I do sympathize with a site if it's one I like and I want to support it, but if you're saying you expect me to routinely trust that your advertising code is 100% secure, so I should go ahead and do the web equivalent of dropping my pants all the time, uh, no. It's a rare site that manages to garner that kind of trust.
We've been doing renovations on the house here, so I recently moved in with my father for a couple weeks while getting everything done at home. I noticed that suddenly youtube seemed to have an incredible number of ads when I used his computer. I wasn't really sure what had happened, I assumed maybe there was something related to his google account that showed him more ads, or perhaps youtube had suddenly implemented a massive new ad campaign.
Eventually, I realized, my dad's computer didn't have adblock, while mine did. The difference this made was staggering. I'd always assumed Youtube was just really gentle with their advertisements - I'd still get them, but they were quiet and relatively few. Without adblock, jesus, I couldn't believe what the site was like without adblock. It's nearly as bad as cable TV.
The thing is, I happened to be building a new computer at the time and decided to forego the normal adblock install in chrome. That changed after about a week, youtube was a significant part of that decision, but there many many website that would pop-up shit on the screen that would block out all the other content and darken everything except the ad, or there'd be annoying little mini-videos strewn about the page, or they'd blare some noise loudly and randomly.
Seriously, I don't mind ads. They pay for the content I enjoy, but this is too much.
Video game web sites basically do two things; 1) they spend money to generate their own content, and 2) they scan other sites for news and then post it themselved. I have to chuckle whenever I go through Flipboard and see the same article posted 40 times by every outlet. A video game review site's key diferentiator, for example, used to be video game reviews (written and/or in video) and now you can find these kinds of reviews on Youtube where they tend to be better written and produced (and you're likely to find a critic who is more inline with your tastes so that the review scores actually have meaning.) And anyhow, for better or worse, Metacritic is the go-to source now for gaming reviews (and I understand the arguments against, I'm just saying.)
The ad space model is easy to do, everyone does it, and so the business model can't support all of these sites anymore. And, frankly, it's just as well. Most of these sites really aren't providing anything special - mostly they're composed of "articles" posted by "journalists" and then have links pointed to forums to help build a community. Anybody can do that and so everyone does.
The real winners, by a country mile, are the webmasters and DBAs who cut their teeth supporting these sites since now they have a marketable skillset on a production web site and can parley that experience to other roles in the field.
Overdo the ads. I look at video sites like Hulu - a block of 140 seconds worth of the same ads repeated over and over again? That's a blocking just waiting to happen.
One 30 second bloc of ads is fine. But when you start slamming 4 to 6 ads at a time and every 7 to 10 minutes of a show, fuck you and your advertisers with a rusty spike, you're getting blocked.
Interesting how not being able to stop people from being tightwads is considered a "failed business model". Why should they have to fix a broken behavior? You want nice things, you have to give something of yourself in return. Slashdot's moderation, and voting system works on that principle. So does either advertising or a paywall. You give nothing, you get nothing, that's a successful business model...for the rest of the world.
I do mind advertisers tracking me across multiple sites. Find a way to fix that problem and I'll put up with ad banners. In fact, if some though has gone into their placement, I might be interested in related products.
Have gnu, will travel.
I have ad fatigue, plain and simple. Some marketing genius decided we must be advertised to from the moment we wake up, until we go to bed.
They just need to create a plugin doing Auto-click on ads, without showing anything to annoy users.
Just beam the ads directly into our dreams to subsidize ad-free websites!
Deltron 3030 - Virus (music video)
Before even one ad company existed and thing will work long after they are gone. I block everything all the time. And will never stop until they are all gone once again.
.. but then I took an arrow to the knee.
HEYOOO!
I used to block every single add out there but I started to whitelist the sites I actually want to support and use on a regular basis. While watching 20 seconds of some stupid coca cola add on youtube might be annoying it is nothing if I can support the guy who made the half an hour video for me to watch for free.
The problem is that I simply can't convince my friends to do the same. The good old "1 guy doesn't make a difference"-mentality is really strong in them and they're in general very ignorant when it comes to monetization of online content.
The biggest hypocrites are the people who use adblock but condemn piracy though.
Tell them that many people have been infected by ads that were serving up mal-ware. *That* is one huge reason to block ads. (Never mind some of the questionable tastes of the ads.)
Host your own non-flash ads from the same domain and I'll see them fine. Very few do this though so I rarely see webvertisements.
Also /. seems to like adding "(?)" at the end of my subject lines in preview. Weird.
Ever notice that Cobra Commander sounds an awful lot like Star scream?
And serve them up in the most annoying ways possible (blinking images?) to only folks who block ads. Or serve your content from a blocked ad site. Either way you'll just be pissing off more people.
Just be glad you're getting money for 50% of the visitors.
I would never, ever buy a product or service suggested by a graphical browser ad. For big brands, I just ignore it, for any previously unknown brand, it makes the advertised item cheap and phoney. There are so many better, and less obtrusive ways. Clearly marked articles (that are in line with the rest of the articles on a site), infobox in a related article, sponsored tweets, anything that fits the content on a site, and doesn't want to jump out.
But . . . But . . . that's Socialism!!11!1 11!!1!!111!111!!!!!1
Nobody wants ads in the way while they're trying to read something
You can safely shorten that by 9 words.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
were created and are used because the ads got to be so obnoxious and numerous on some sites the they were nearly unuseable. When more space on a site is devoted to ads than to content, thats just wrong to me. I wouldn't mind ads so much, but they have gotten so obnoxious...way too large, flashing bright colors, way to many on the page at many sites. And some pages split a single page worth of content into 5-6 pages so more ads can be displayed.
Ad blockers are a response to extremely annoying ads, and overuse of ads on a page. The local newspaper is a good example. I pay to read it online, but it still has so many adds (and tries to run so many unnecessary scripts) that I have to be able to block all of that stuff just to read it.
It was a long time before I started blocking ads. They finally got so annoying and so pervasive that I felt I had no choice but to block them or give up on the internet altogether.
People that block ads are not going to stop, because advertisers are not going to place less ads or less annoying ads.
"there is a pretty good chance that the particular advertising they were doing was particularly annoying (possibly lots of malware delivered too.)"
Advertising on the web is not like traditional advertising. No alteration of layout article page to article page (meaning every page looks the same and thus everything but what you are reading becomes easier to ignore, visually uninteresting). Annoying MOVING ads that distract those trying to read no matter how long or short they may be. Interstitials, overlays, pop-ups...hell I only run No-Script and I barely ever see ads because of all the crap they are scripted to do that *I do not want!*
Maybe I'm an old-fashioned fart but ads are so incredibly intrusive now that they are not helping you build revenue but instead seem intended to steal it! They do so much to divert eyes from your articles, your content, to themselves its no wonder users fight back and spread the knowledge on how to disable to them to as many people as they can. The necessary change doesn't need to come from the users, it needs to come from the businesses doing the advertising. It needs to come from Marketing realizing they are doing more to kill their business model then ad-blocking technology could ever do. Force us to see ads and we will begin only going to sites that have little or no advertising at all.
captcha: mounted
Yeah that sounds about right.
Not any one site in particular but ads overall got way to obnoxious in the mid 2000's. Pop up videos that autoplay for new movies and cars, flash ads on everyweb site that blast out "congratulations you won a new.....click here to claim your prize" For whatever reason my boss still uses IE, he gets tons of viruses on his computers, many from legitimate sites (MSN once) probably though ads that they have no control over.
.. but I whitelist certain ad servers.
I have three simple rules.
1. Ads should never have audio, popouts, popunders, or Flash/Javascript/Java content.
2. Ads should never exceed the download size of the page
3. Ad systems should respect my privacy and be responsive to complaints and concerns.
If your ad site adheres to these three rules, I see no reason to block it. Oddly enough, only Google's, Reddit's and Fark's ad servers are on the whitelist. Everybody else can go rot in hell.
Run shorter ads, inform consumers that ad revenue pays for the free stuff. People can and will selectively disable it. If you corpratize to much though it becomes a nuisance. 2 minutes of add for a 2 minute video is dumb. Recently movies.com started running trailers for watching trailers. This kind of shit is bullshit and why people use ad blockers.
I'm informed so I do not block ads here because /. despite its conspiratorial bias and evil moderation gangs deserves a few cents here and there from me ;p
Also if your running a journalistic company you have to keep it small. Run the website with 5 employee's instead of 50. A lot of ad dependent websites are run by 1 person soley.
and now all their star systems have slipped through their fingers. Seriously, if you go to the site first of all it hangs for a long time. This does not appear to be due to loading ads but I bet a lot of users think it is. Then you get an interstitial ad. Once you're past the interstitial, you get a huge animated banner at the top and depending on the page, possibly also animated ads to the right. If you were trying to push users to adblockers, this is how you would design a site.
I've used it for my site glimmersoft.com for months and not had a single complaint. It pays for my bandwidth bill. You're right though. The guy that runs somethingpositive nd the angry Nintendo Nerd just got popped. It's best to stay off the smaller ad networks if that's how you fund your site. Yeah, they pay better, but they can't keep up with securing the ads.
As for the ads themselves, I'd say keep 'em out of your content proper. Banner ads are one thing but lately CNN has been putting them in the content as plain links, and it's distracting. I didn't mind when they were clearly delimited by a box, but I keep seeing these ones where they're in the middle of the paragraph. I can't tune those out, I've got to stop reading the article and realize it's an add.
Online ads seem to work best for brand recognition anyway. It's hard to get somebody to buy something specific, but if you're just trying to remind them that McDonald's and Coke exist (important with so many cable TV cord cutters) it's the way to go.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
I was fine with displaying ads for web sites until most web sites signed up for the various online 3rd party advertisement networks. The problem with these is that you never know which Ad site has been hacked, which ad site has been submitted by phishing groups, etc.
I don't deliberately block all Ads. My solution is to run "no script" for firefox. If you have ads being served locally, then I'll see them. If you have ads being displayed by a third party javascript then you're out of luck. Granted, this isn't perfect because even local sites can be hacked. But most of the sites I visit are reputable and would quickly (hopefully) fix their sites.
None of us get paid to download ad code, images, flash, and more often then not virus or malware code so if you don't like ad blockers then go fuck yourself.
Somethingpositive.net and Angry Nintendo Nerd both. They had ads serving up Malware. It happens on the smaller ad networks, but the smaller guys pay better than google and Amazon. If you're trying to make a living you're kinda stuck.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
When an advertiser places an advertisement on a billboard, they must rent the space. When an advertiser places an ad on television, they must purchase the air time. On the internet, they steal the medium from me.
I purchased my computer and monitor with my own hard earned money. I pay for the electrons that flow through the wires. I paid for the router and the modem. The bandwidth that delivers content is paid for by me. If I did not incur these expenses an advertiser could not place an ad on my screen. Just like I have a right to filter out pornography, obscenity, illegitimate news sources, and Justin Beiber; I find no value in advertisements and reserve the right to exclude them from my private property.
In many circumstances the content I receive (advertisement and profanity filtered) is a fair exchange for my cost of displaying it. There is occasionally content of such great value that I will not only display it for free, but also pay an additional fee for it. Much more frequently I encounter links that add no value to my life at best, or I regret having clicked on at worst. So, does your content (and your ads) have a value and contribution to my life that is greater than my cost of displaying it? If not, find a different way to make money than by the theft of the medium that I own.
Your analytic javascript and horrid flash is the problem. I don't run advertisement blocking software. I run NoScript, and the way you try to advertise to me is why you fail. Why not put an image up in that 200x80 that is linked to whatever site will make the desired product pitch and make sure that site doesn't require flash or javascript. Then use javascript to change the image advertisement with your horrid intrusive analytic scripting and/or lame flash. You still get to advertise to me it is just that your advertisement customer can't find some way to use your advertisement delivery channel as a great way to compromise my system's security.
I don't mind tasteful relevant advertisements, and no that does not mean you have to anal probe me and track me everywhere I go. Nor do you need to compile a database on the things I like. Open your eyes, where am I now? Slashdot... hmmm... this one is probably a geek! You can tell what a person is interested in by the content they are viewing during your advertising opportunity. Advertisements that try to block the screen or have some stupid "hit the monkey with a hammer to win the prize" bullshit are why you have this problem now. Congrats, you pissed off the user so much with your marketing department stupidity that you gave incentive for users to find a solution to rid them of it.
Now adapt, evolve and try not to be a dick this time, ok?
As far as I'm concerned, the commercialization of the web was the worst thing to happen to it. These people who view the internet as a money-making scheme, if their sites disappeared tomorrow, I wouldn't miss them. Perhaps if everyone used ad-blocking, we could bring that day closer? What we see now is, the same dumbed-down, lowest common denominator type of crap you find on television, cluttering the web, and chewing up bandwidth. And because it's been dumbed-down, law-enforcement and politicians followed the herd right into it, threatening the freedom once taken for granted online.
So, don't pity these people who are having a hard time filling their pockets by monetizing our interests and personal information. Encourage them to find an honest way to make a living by using ad-blocking, anti-tracking, and cookie-managing software. Please.
-- sudon't
Air-ride Equipped
Who gives a shit? We don't have to view their shitty ads. If that makes them collapse or find a new way to charge for content, great. There's not some magical genie in the sky demanding that we view overly obtrustive ads. MY computer does what I want it to do. That doesn't include trying to hawk someone's shitty wares, and it DEFINITELY doesn't include doing so in a disruptive way that abuses the fuck out of java, javascript, and flash to pop up, pop under, full screen, volumejack, and sometimes drop exploit code on my box.
"I'm doing this immoral thing, but unlike the rest of the net where adblock is rare, enough of my users are sophisticated enough to jump through the hoops because we suck Satan's dick so much. What do I do next?"
Get fucked.
As I understand it, ad-blocker users would click like crazy on all the ads if they did not have a blocker.
It's a simple calculation, really.
I would like to pay for websites I like, I would like to donate to Wikimedia foundation for instance, but what keeps me from doing is this :
Enable cookies and javascript ; Naviguate through the bad UI design ; Create account (paypal or other) ; Fill all text informations ; Donate.
Fck off...
I think the simplicity of bitcoins will solve this problem.
i would read the article but it is not loading for me. guess my internet service provider is acting up again. but it is interesting to read that fifty per cent of users and visitors to Destructoid block advertisements. never heard of Destructoid until now.
I used to block ads because they slowed down my computer or interrupted what I was doing. For example, if an ad was a popup of some sort, or if it had to load a plugin like flash. 10 years ago I had an Athlon XP 3000 with 256mb of RAM, and with my internet connection and computer speed even normal ads slowed down my browsing. The most logical thing to do was block the ads; I never even looked at them anyway, and I certainly had never clicked on an ad.
Fast forward to now, I have an Athlon II 4x, 8gb of RAM, and Google Chrome, and ads just don't seem to make a difference anymore. I don't notice the time it takes for them to load, and they generally don't get in my way. Now just installing an ad blocker would be a hassle. On systems that are a little sluggish I will mainly just use a flash blocker, which I find to be more simple and effective than ad blocking.
I don't believe very strongly in online advertising. It works effectively for some companies, but also there is this prevailing notion that you can make any web-based company/endeavor work just with ads. Not everyone is entitled to a slice of the pie; I'm not going to stay awake at night wondering if video game bloggers are getting paid to blog about video games or not. Let them eat cake.
If I am paying for bandwidth, is it any surprise that I only want to pay for what I actually ask for? I don't mind ads as long as they are not annoying pop over auto-play video/audio types. But when I am paying for that ad? No thanks.
Add to that the fact that ads are served from sometimes sketchy third parties and there is a lot of motivation to block ads.
I thought the most insightful exchange was the one in the article - it isn't about ads. Ads, and ad blocking are merely symptoms. It's about choice, or control. I want a say in whether I see an ad or not. I'm a significant part of the interaction. The idea of consumer that holds in the world of TV doesn't map well to the online world.
I have the ability to block ads. Using that ability doesn't make me immoral, dishonest, or any other disparagement I've see thrown around. It levels the playing field. Advertisers, website owners and I are informally negotiating a partnership of sorts, and I have much more say in the negotiation online than I do in other mediums. I'd be a fool to not use that power. Most importantly, I (and many others like me) *will* use that power.
The sites that figure out how to balance the control/dignity equation between their advertising partners and their viewer partners will do well.
It's not an easy problem to solve, but it is *the* problem. Not ad blocking.
"Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
Seems to me Destructoid should take it's own advice, the kind it dispenses dealing with issues like DRM and piracy on a regular basis. It's the industry's job to satisfy the consumers, not the other way around. Offer a non-intrusive alternative, for one. Users could switch to no-script, and the site could host simple image ads and hard-coded ones. The amount of scripts running on Destructoid and the level of obnoxiousness of the ads is too much, and guilt-tripping isn't going to get the vast-majority of adblock users to whitelist. Not to mention they're running with the assumption that all users deeply care about the Dtoid community, which is a farce; if I had to choose between ads and not visiting again, I wouldn't visit again. I tend not to notice ads on many journalistic websites, but that's an impossibility with Dtoid.
Place only unobtrusive ads, and offer SD videos and podcasts free to all, while keeping HD videos and extra content behind a paywall (mostly non-gaming behind the scenes just-for-fun fanservice). Or do like IGN and theme your site with a developer's game around the launch period and cater to almost every gamer niche with podcasts/videocasts. GameFaqs offers a survey every day and sells consumer metrics (but they have a lot of good will and most people don't lie on the surveys).
And maybe pick better ad partners? If your fans are blocking you then you must be doing something annoying.
Twinstiq, game news
Your cost of living is 9% to 12% higher because of Marketing. I think that if we took the money spent on ads and gave it to content creators instead
This is a horribly flawed understanding of where money comes from.
In your example, you are implying the flow of money is like:
Consumer->Advertiser
Consumer->Website
The reality for most websites is that it goes like:
Advertiser->Website
For most people money never enters into the equation when using a website. So what do you think happens when "the money spent of ads goes to content creators"? By that you mean ads are gone. Now the consumer is still spending nothing, but the website also has no income anymore, and has to close. How did that help anyone?
Advertising so far is the best of a bunch of bad choices. The only other model I can see working is one where it's so easy to pay for content that people actually do so, rendering a tip jar as a viable means of support.
Affiliate links also work as well but really that's just a more subtle form of advertising.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Here are their first 3 stories at this moment:
Teenage Pokemon: [Teenage Pokemon is a cartoon show about Pokemon in their middle stage of evolution -- we're all wasted. New episodes every week.]
This is an article about a cartoon show.
Sup Holmes :[Destructoid's Director of Communications Hamza Aziz asked Jonathan Holmes to make a show called 'Sup, Holmes?' so that Destructoid could later sell a t-shirt that says 'Sup, Holmes?' on it. This is that show. Subscribe ... more] So, this is an article about a response to an article.
Ten golden rules of online gaming: "..Here's our most popular article from January 2009..." Really? Something from 2009?
-Styopa
I stopped using ad servers, and my ad revenues went up. How did I do this?
I ripped out the Google ads and made myself manual text links to Amazon with my affiliate code.
Here is an example from one of my sites:
http://paydowncalc.com/
Adblock does not block that simple little link. It gets clicked way more often than my normal Google ads ever did. Amazon also pays far better than Google ever paid me.
Also, I have never gotten any complaints about my simple little ad either.
I consider this switch a "win-win".
Thanks to mobile data rates, Internet access is no longer unlimited. The rates in the US for mobile data are already very high. I'm not going to pay more because of your huge ads that load video and sounds and play automatically. And I'm not going to turn adblock off and on again when I switch between local wifi in a coffee shop and my mobile data dongle. Things can get expensive if I were to forget to turn adblock back on when away from a local net connection.
I'm not going to buy their product if it isn't bread, eggs, or milk. If the site I visit goes under from lack of revenue, I'll go to another site, or play outside. Advertising is just companies trying to convince me that I need their product. If I truly needed something, I'd actively search for it and pay for it.
Interesting. I have a simple domain-based adblocker in place on my pfSense gateway, and Yahoo's ads load because they're hosted on yimg.com. Adblocking would basically disappear if they were simply hosted first-party.
I read Tape Op on iPad ($5.99 per year to subscribe, 6 issues) and Rolling Stone ($19.99 per year to subscribe, 24 issues) and some others and the content is better than the Web, the reading experience is better than the Web, and even the ads are better than the Web. An ad will be full page, topical, and dismissed with a swipe if you are not interested. Web ads will show you off-topic ads. Web ads place ads on you instead of the content. You can buy back issues within the magazine, and you get a notification when a new issue arrives. Everything is EASY — everything you want to do is 1 tap or 1 swipe. The experience is so much better than the Web, it is worth paying for, and you don't need to make a username or get out your credit card, and sharing your personal info with the publisher is optional, a box asks you if you wan to share and you say no.
You're paying $50 per month or more to your ISP — you can spend $50 per year on magazine subscriptions and get 60 or more issues of various magazines that you like, and your brain will thank you.
Cheap is better than free. Free always sucks — it's 90% ads, it's closing soon, the content is 100 words you've already read on another site. But cheap is sustainable and can have great content, well-written, well-edited, well-curated. Valuable.
And Rolling Stone has push button audio clips next to music reviews. Sure, they could have done on that on the Web, but they didn't because they'd have to do it multiple times to work around the lack of ISO media support in some browsers, and the content simply doesn't exist outside of ISO MPEG-4. Another example of the Web killing itself.
When the Web started, we thought it would look like CD-ROM in no time. Instead, decades later, the Web looks like a shitty Windows app. Web design is now the art and science of making a document as unreadable as possible. I barely use the Web anymore because there are better options now on a $329 iPad that slips in your jacket pocket and weighs 300 grams and runs 10 hours on a charge.
So these guys need to make an iPad magazine and charge $10 per year and make something that is special and great and sustainable.
On several levels I invite anyone to disprove me on them, listed below in fact.
Here's how I generate them, easy as apple pie, from 12++ reputable sources for custom hosts file data online:
---
APK Hosts File Engine 5.0++ 32/64-bit:
http://start64.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5851:apk-hosts-file-engine-64bit-version&catid=26:64bit-security-software&Itemid=74
Which, if you read the list of what it can do for you as an end user of the resulting output it produces listed in the link above, you'll understand how/why...
"It's as strong as steel, & a 3rd of the weight" - Howard Stark from the film "Captain America"
---
Especially vs. competing alternate 'solutions', noted below in AdBlock/Ghostery & yes even DNS servers, next, as 'examples thereof'...
Solutions that used to be good & I even recommended them in security guides I wrote up over the decades now -> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbo=d&output=search&sclient=psy-ab&q=%22HOW+TO+SECURE+Windows+2000/XP%22&btnG=Submit&gbv=1&sei=ka3yUKzxB-6_0QHLroCQCA
That did extremely well for myself (and users of them), for Windows users, for "layered-security"/"defense-in-depth" purposes - the BEST THING WE HAVE GOING vs. threats of all kinds, currently!
(Not anymore though, & certainly NOT far as AdBlock's concerned especially, not after this):
---
Adblock Plus To Offer 'Acceptable Ads' Option:
http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/12/12/2213233/adblock-plus-to-offer-acceptable-ads-option
(Meaning by default, which MOST USERS WON'T CHANGE, it doesn't block ALL ads - they "souled-out"... talk about "foxes guarding the henhouse")!
---
Plus, Adblock CAN'T DO AS MUCH & not from a single file solution that runs in Ring 0/RPL 0/kernelmode via tcpip.sys, a driver (since it's part of the IP stack & tightly integrated into it) which is far, Far, FAR FASTER than ring 3/rpl 3/usermode apps like browsers, & addons slow them down (known issue in FireFox).
To wit, 10++ things AdBlock can't do, hosts can:
---
1.) Blocking rogue DNS servers malware makers use
2.) Blocking known sites/servers that serve up malware... like known sites/servers/hosts-domains that serve up malicious scripts
3.) Speeding up your FAVORITE SITES that hosts can speed up via hardcoded line item entries properly resolved by a reverse DNS ping
4.) AdBlock works on Mozilla products (browser & email), hosts work on ANY webbound app AND are multiplatform.
5.) AdBlock can't protect external to FireFox email programs, hosts can (think OUTLOOK, Eudora, & others)
6.) AdBlock can't help you blow past DNSBL's (DNS block lists)
7.) AdBlock can't help you avoid DNS request logs (hosts can via hardcoded favorites)
8.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. TRACKERS (hosts can)
9.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. DOWNED or "DNS-poisoned" redirected DNS servers (hosts can by hardcodes)
10.) Hosts are EASIER to manage, they're just a text file (adblock means you had BEST know your javascript, perl, & python (iirc as to what languages are used to make it from source)).
& more... as a tiny 'sampling' & proofs thereof!
---
Same with Ghostery:
---
FROM -> http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2931443&cid=40412193
I would like an ad-blocker that loads the ads and is otherwise undetectable for the site I'm reading, yet does not display the ads. If that were the norm, we probably wouldn't even be seeing this article, because the site in question wouldn't know which percentage of its users blocks ads and would only have to assume it's roughly the same as for every other site.
This would strangle the most the parties that I loathe the most, i.e. the advertisers. The site would still get their cut for the viewed ads. Granted, it might slowly make web ads a less lucrative business for everybody as advertisers no longer sell anything, but at least it would transfer the harm from the sites I access, which seems backwards to what I want, to the entire web ad business. Yes, it would come with a small cost to me in wasted bandwidth, but I don't mind, especially not when on a good connection.
To hell with this Web 2.0 crap. Seriously.
It's a good question.
I wonder... how did it work before Google?
I remember people used to use Geocities a lot because it was free. Other than that a lot of people used to make webpages just for fun and enjoyment of sharing something with the world. In the very early days I don't remember there being a lot of ads, not on the bullitin boards either.
Probably not the popular answer!
A blog I run for the wealth
There is also this thing called "Right to refuse service". Whats going to happen in a few years is you will just be blocked from accessing those websites if you use an ad-blocker.
I guess you're OK with that... good for you.
Destructoid.com - stuck trying to read assets from "craveonline.com", "bulk2.destructoid.com", etc. When it finally comes up, we get a giant picture from Teenage Pokemon, followed by clips from stories. Plus lots of ads.
Their RSS feed is more readable and loads quickly. Now we get to see the content.
It's just some gamer's blog. "This is my favorite episode so far." "There's not a whole lot of information disclosed on how and when the game will released". "Ten golden rules of online gaming." (the usual excuse for hanging ads on every paragraph.) "We had a delightful little Saturday Morning Hangover this morning, playing the recently released Phantom Breaker: Battle Grounds." No insights. No inside information. Not even good trip reports.
Why should this guy expect to make money for writing a personal blog about his hobby?
On several levels I invite anyone to disprove me on them, listed below in fact.
"AdBlock has a scheme where if your Ads are place sympathetically, they're not blocked." - by devitto (230479) on Sunday March 10, @08:39AM (#43130099) Homepage
Hosts have a BETTER one - don't WANT an ad (or anything else that may be blocked in hosts) blocked?
Just open hosts (in Windows, beneath %WinDir%\System32\drivers\etc, & you MUST do this as administrator class user - save the file elsewhere if need be, & then overwrite via drag-N-drop copy overwriting the original hosts) with a text editor to do so!
One like notepad.exe & boom: Edit out that line item entry, save hosts again, & DONE!
That easily! A user has DIRECT control of them...
Here's how I generate custom hosts files for gaining users & myself added speed, security, reliability, & even anonymity to an extent!
(Easy as apple pie, from 12++ reputable sources for custom hosts file data online):
---
APK Hosts File Engine 5.0++ 32/64-bit:
http://start64.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5851:apk-hosts-file-engine-64bit-version&catid=26:64bit-security-software&Itemid=74
Which, if you read the list of what it can do for you as an end user of the resulting output it produces listed in the link above, you'll understand how/why...
"It's as strong as steel, & a 3rd of the weight" - Howard Stark from the film "Captain America"
---
Especially vs. competing alternate 'solutions', noted below in AdBlock/Ghostery & yes even DNS servers, next, as 'examples thereof'...
Solutions that used to be good & I even recommended them in security guides I wrote up over the decades now -> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbo=d&output=search&sclient=psy-ab&q=%22HOW+TO+SECURE+Windows+2000/XP%22&btnG=Submit&gbv=1&sei=ka3yUKzxB-6_0QHLroCQCA
That did extremely well for myself (and users of them), for Windows users, for "layered-security"/"defense-in-depth" purposes - the BEST THING WE HAVE GOING vs. threats of all kinds, currently!
(Not anymore though, & certainly NOT far as AdBlock's concerned especially, not after this):
---
Adblock Plus To Offer 'Acceptable Ads' Option:
http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/12/12/2213233/adblock-plus-to-offer-acceptable-ads-option
(Meaning by default, which MOST USERS WON'T CHANGE, it doesn't block ALL ads - they "souled-out"... talk about "foxes guarding the henhouse")!
---
Plus, Adblock CAN'T DO AS MUCH & not from a single file solution that runs in Ring 0/RPL 0/kernelmode via tcpip.sys, a driver (since it's part of the IP stack & tightly integrated into it) which is far, Far, FAR FASTER than ring 3/rpl 3/usermode apps like browsers, & addons slow them down (known issue in FireFox).
Hosts are the 1st thing your IP stack queries on webbound requests, & since the IP stack is already loaded by the OS @ bootup & on requests by client programs - guess what? Hosts make adblock REDUNDANT also!
To wit, 10++ things AdBlock can't do, hosts can:
---
1.) Blocking rogue DNS servers malware makers use
2.) Blocking known sites/servers that serve up malware... like known sites/servers/hosts-domains that serve up malicious scripts
3.) Speeding up your FAVORITE SITES that hosts can speed up via hardcoded line it
Just writing and getting passive income from ads seems like a best case scenario for them. Maybe they need to create more content that people wouldn't mind paying for instead of just soaking in passive income for 7 years (their site went live in 2006 according to wiki) and then crying as soon as they might be noticing a decline in revenue from ads.
Communication is so tightly knit with the internet that we don't need ads, especially not for blog sites.
Think of how quickly videos or services go viral with no advertising. It's not uncommon for people to get 10 million views in a week for an unadvertised video. All they did was create a funny/informal video and word of mouth took care of the rest.
Products who require relentless ads to be successful likely don't have a product worth even looking at.
Saves bandwidth.
Most people don't block ads just to block ads. They block ads because of one egregious practice or another: tracking, annoyance, or outright rendering sites unusable.
The answer, then, is simple: no tracking, no audio, no popups, no Flash. Pledge not to use ads that do these things, and ask to be whitelisted. People will do that.
There was a time when these practices actually made ads more valuable, because they would get better response rates: upwards of 5% in some cases, which is freaking astounding for advertising. But if ad-blocker usage is really getting that prevalent -upwards of 50% for tech sites, so probably more like 10% for the general Internet- advertisers are washing away the potential gains from these practices. The consumer simply won't stand for these practices in enough numbers to make them worthwhile, and so it is time to abandon them.
I held out until Feb of this year before finally having to install an ad-blocker. Sure, a site like demonoid was relatively good about it's allotment of ad-space. The trouble is that most of the ad vendors are coke-fiends; the coke is money-for-ad-space. They get you hooked, and then they dial back the revenue and "work with you" to find a way to drive revenue up again. Or rather, increase their margin and get you back to what they were originally paying you. Which is why it always involves more, bigger, more aggressive ads, and never toning it down.
-- A change is as good as a reboot.
I know nobody will likely see this comment because there are already >500 comments on this article, but I'll take the time to post it anyway.
The next step? Complete integration of ads into site content. I've already seen it in a few places. You design your site so no actual content is viewable unless javascript and Flash are enabled by the viewer, and the ads are mixed in with the actual content in such a way that you can't separate the two out without completely breaking your ability to see the site. I've seen it already, and it's not prevalent, but I think it's just a matter of time.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
If your business model depends on polluting my mind, I will do without. For example, this is why I and many others do without a television.
Life is too short.
I was able to visit the website in question and even some of the others people are talking about. I didn't see any ads, banners, text ads, or warning saying I was blocking their text ads. Huh!
You can still block individual elements.. so what's the big deal?
Websites whine about users blocking ads, but NEVER ask why. It is a running joke that the online ad business has always been out of control, abusing users to the full extent allowed for by technology.
-respectable websites serving trojans, scareware and ransdonware via their ad servers
-animated ads that easily require 50%+ of the entire CPU usage to operate
-ads that dominate the entire webpage
-roll-over ads that take over the screen when accidentally activated
-streaming video ads that are downloading tens of megabytes in the background, in readiness to force the stream on the user
-ads that ill-format, obscuring actual site content
-ads that follow the user from site to site, KNOWING personal details about the user, and the things he/she has already done/bought online
NOBODY ever wanted to block discrete polite ads that respected the user, and helped pay for the site. The original owners of most interesting sites were individuals who became corrupted by the earning possibility of ads. Then, when the more successful of these sites were bought up by Internet conglomerates, the abuse of advertising became far worse.
Where is the regulation of Internet advertising? Nowhere to be found. All we get is whining about functions like ad-block. Cry me a river, you scumbags. You have NO intention of playing ball with the user. Your 'game reviews' are crafted by the game publishers themselves, when they pay you enough. Technology stories are actually nothing but paid for output from the PR agencies of the major players in the industry. These dishonest and corrupt acts of 'journalism' are the ads we cannot and do not block. These are the 'hidden' ads that pay for the tech sites.
And please, no naive garbage about how, if the sites made money from ordinary ads, their reviews could be honest. The reviews will NEVER be honest. The PR departments for companies like Intel and Microsoft (and all the big game publishers) hand out freebies AND actual cash payments as commonly as record companies provided cocaine to 1970s DJs.
Where is the 'have a plan' then 'build it' gone? Stop with this offering something for free and then when you get a bit popular start throwing ads all over the place. Stop with having an open API and then when people actually start to use it, discontinue it. If something is good enough, people will pay for it.
I used to be
I've very intentionally left on "Acceptable Ads" in Adblock Plus. However, I still very rarely see ads. I'm guessing this means they're still racing to the "bottom" in terms of how annoying advertisers want ads to be.
Why not at least try to show your moving, music playing ads, and if a user doesn't load them, why not try acceptable ads on that person on the next page load.
I say, make a program which rewards users with points automatically for every few minutes they actively stay on the site, but only if they don't run Ad-blockers. Offer them prizes or something.
Only until ad blockers figure a way around the ad blocker detector. I've seen sites that ask me to disable my ad blocker before entering. Unless it is life or death information that only they have I will simply go elsewhere.
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
They should've wondered this before.
Why do we use AdBlock? Because the web without is intolerable. The fuckers who made it so are the ones you should be complaining to.
Ok, that won't help you now that things are the way they are. But here's what you (as the owner of an individual site) can do: Learn! Don't make the same mistake again. Your solution is not more are "higher-value"(*) advertisement. Your solution is less advertisement.
Heck, why is Google Search an online advertisement Goliath? Because the ads are tolerable, they don't distract from the actual task I visit the site for and *gasp* they might actually be relevant. Yes, they do lots of tracking and all that, I didn't say they are perfect. But copy the concept of "less, unobtrusive ads".
It's not just online, btw. - offline advertisement is taking the same route, just slower. There is more of it and it's more distracting (moving, blinking, animated, whatever technology allows). And there is the same counter-movement, though again, slower. But look here:
http://www.newdream.org/resources/sao-paolo-ad-ban
http://youtu.be/Vta6Cn_dLTE
(*) which is an euphemism for "more obnoxious and/or more tracking"
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
I have ad-blocking software for Firefox but I don't subscribe to any lists. I just block any porn type ads that come up in my surfing, not many of those come up for me. I do have noscript and ghostery but that is to protect my computer. If the ad is just an image or gif or something innocuous, I have no trouble seeing it. It's when it uses javascript or some other crap that I don't see it and I don't want to see it. So if advertisers want me to see an add, a simple image is the best way to do it.
Oh, also they need to be able to serve the ads in a timely manner. I have had web pages that took forever to load just because it was waiting for the ad servers. When that happens I either never visit the site again or find a way to block that server from sending me anything.
Reading some of these comments, the one thing that stands out for me is not the plight of independent publishers, nor the future of "content", but rather just how terrible some ads must have become. I had not idea, because...
I started using Adblock and Flashblock many years ago, back when ads where just starting to use Flash, back when their most annoying feature was merely GIF animation. I later switched from Flashblock to Ghostery and Noscript.
In some ways, this combination can be as annoying as ads. Noscript is the main culprit, because lots of sites have legitimate use for Javascript. But then again, many sites run lots of scripting for nefarious purposes. Likewise, nearly every major site includes several cross-site tracking elements that Ghostery blocks. I just don't trust them.
So, if any independent publisher happen to be reading this comment, the fundamental problem: trust. It's not that you have personally broken my trust. The entire "content industry" as a whole has acted so badly that I don't trust any website. It's no longer just about ads.
I agree with you. That single line of text is sufficiently unobtrusive that I don't care about blocking it. Assuming I even could. Obviously 99.99999999999999% of ads are nothing like that. Rather than whine about it the site in this article could just switch to ads that the combination of adblock plus lite and noscript (probably the most common setup) doesn't stop.
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
Seriously, I dont use anything to block ads specifically. I just block cross-site scripts and similar nonsense. That tends to whack the particularly obnoxious ads, of course.
This website, at any rate, doesnt even load for me - nothing there. That might be their sign.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
I take ad blocking off for good sites that request it.
And then if they ever serve up a large animated, pop-up, sliding, flash, java, or autoplay sound ad I turn it back off with a note never to turn it back on.
Still here, posting, having nearly every one of your posts modded down? Still brandishing a list of the few times you were actually up-modded? Still not understanding why people don't want to listen to you?
You asked the middle man , "insert advert company", to do all the work and pay you. Ya, that's a genius business model.
No content is irreplaceable. If you go out of business because of your failed business model, someone will come along and fill the void. Good riddance.
I'm surprised no one has mentioned Flattr which was made to address this exact problem. Of course, the issue with Flattr remains that it is opt-in so only those that really care will use it, and a low user base will mean content creators don't put Flattr buttons on their websites.
Assorted ad networks has been used as attack vectors to spread trojans and whatnot.
That is one reason I block some of them.
Additionally, I block any ad network that shows a particularily annoying ad, such as those that uses sound (I don't like to be surprised in that manner).
Otherwise ads are quite ok as long as they keep from using sounds (and heavy blinking).
Track stars aren't the only athletes in this world. My brain hits the gym for at least three hours every day, rain or shine, and this goes back since peewee league.
Just imagine that the athlete lives in a world where all the food is available free of charge, but in order for the restaurants to stay in business, they depend on customers gobbling down free Mars bars from giant bowls placed just inside the entrance. Turns out there's some kind of additive in the Mars bars that influences a person's future behaviour in some way that accrues profit to somebody who actually pays for the manufacture and distribution (including the free food subsidy) of all those Mars bars. But let's ignore that.
What's an athlete supposed to do? If you don't eat the Mars bar, you're cheating the proprietor. If you do eat the Mars bar, kiss your athletic excellence good fucking by.
Well, I've invested about half my conscious life over the four and a half decades since I reached the age of making my own decisions to keeping my brain relatively unburdened by the coagulating poison of cultural cholesterol.
There was a year in my teens where I became depressed about my schooling (where the only learning involved knowing when and discovering how to avoid my toxic schoolmates). During this year I watched a lot of stupid television. Then I came to my senses and said "Why the fuck am I wasting my life and destroying my brain?"
I haven't subscribed to cable TV as an adult ever since. All you have is this tiny gasket between your brain--your second favourite organ--and any damn infomercial filth included in your basic service whether you want it or not. At 3:00 a.m. after a bad day and not being able to sleep this tiny gasket fails you. You thumb twitches once to change the channel, but not immediately twelve more times to change the channel to anything a sane person would consider worth watching. For some people, this gasket blows out completely, and it fails them before they've even finished their breakfast.
I'll dump my ad-blocker just as soon as society puts a restraining order on cognitive filth, and not one minute sooner. Of course, everyone has their own personal definition of cognitive filth. Like everyone else, I'll register my views on the official Cognitive Filth Restraint Registry. But then, like any athlete, my list of banned foods will be longer than most.
Words to live by: If you won't put it into your body, don't put it into your mind. Not even if someone else pockets a nickel in the exchange.
This quote thatâ(TM)s being attributed to artist Banksy has been making the rounds for some time now. Thought Iâ(TM)d share it here:
The first two paragraphs articulate very clearly some of the most grievous issues with advertising, and public advertisements especially. Can you imagine the kind of world that wasnâ(TM)t filled with anorexic or steroid-infused supermodels grimacing from every available surface? The impact of advertisements on society is undoubtedly underestimated, and the distortion of our very culture by prurient commercial interests is certainly worthy of our contempt.
Fuck you nigger.
Well obviously you need to fight back, in the form of more irritating ads that last longer and are more eye-popping, as both some form of punishment and to convince the few still not using ad-blockers to spend more, making up for the others' thrift.
I'm seeing something like Flash^3, complete with two mandatory surveys and ten minutes worth of video ads, per site visit. No, make that per page. Meanwhile, you can launch a subversive campaign 'educating' people about how when their friends use ad-block, artists / web site owners / content providers don't get their cut, and are endangering their access to their freemium content (because the web wasn't worth visiting before '95, right?). Perhaps you can form some sort of lobbying group to get congress to pass a bill making use of ad-blockers illegal? Or that every adult / child over a certain age has to be subjected to a certain amount white-noise style spamvertisement, in the interests of keeping our consumption based economy on track? Oh, and be sure to get the 'soft' science types to update their book of labels, so anyone not wishing to partake in this will be considered anti-social or something. That's a good society, run along now.
I am John Hurt.
I am lazy and I am convinced most people are lazy as well. And that leads to what I would call the sticky readout effect. You all know the movie scene where a plotter graph is not showing a signal, then someone taps the needle and it shoots way into the danger zone. Well, people are like that needle.
The advertisers throw up a banner and they see no change in the their viewers, so they make it an animated banner, then flash banner then add sound and then they make it full screen. Still no movement. Then someone bumps something and BAM 75% of users are using ad blockers, ad blockers are the single most popular browser plugin, all browsers offer it and IE usage is down into single diggets. What happened?
Something broke the camels back and a camel with a broken back is a dead camel and you CANNOT reverse the effect by unloading the camel or giving it cookies, you broke the camels back and now it is dead forever and ever.
I installed ad blocking to get rid of annoying ads and the default config gets rid of all ads and I am to lazy to change it. I am DEAD to advertisers, back to broken, and there is no way to get me to view ads again. Ever!
It is the same with TV. I haven't watched it in years. NOT because I think there is only crap on, I quit like crap but because my viewing habits have changed forevrer and I no longer am willing to schedule my time around the tv guide. I did before the internet allowed me to watch TV when I want it with pauses when I want them and not when an advertiser wants them.
What can a website do? Adapt. Companies need to understand that people like me are NOT our parents who used to watch Soaps and make sure they were home on time to view their favorite show. I take my content when I want it and I take it on MY terms, not yours or I do without. This last one has been one of the most amazing liberations I have had in my live. I do not need to watch every show, no matter how much everyone is talking about it. I am not doing this to be hip but simply because there just isn't enough time in the day for it all.
When I install a new computer from time to time, it is a very brief but nasty shock to see just what the Internet is like before you install an ad-blocker. It is horrid. But what about the poor writers who are not making a high wage because of me? Right now, thousands of people are starting, being tortured, children molested, raped and killed and... fuck them. That is what YOU are thinkingright now if you are more worried about some fat rich white guy crying about his gaming website while NK still exists, mass starvation still exists, endless wars rage on. As an old far rich white man I have become very good at ignoring stuff that don't affect me. So have you, because really, if you are reading my post on this issue, you are ignoring far greater wrongs you should be fixing right now.
Ad blockers are here to stay because to many people have been annoyed for to long and once lazy fat people have gotten of their butts, they are NOT going to get off their butts again to help out someone they don't care about.
Destructoid is a gaming site rather well known for its annoying ads, it broke its readers backs, then it can't get to bitch about how dead their users now are.
Life is not a game, there is no reload from last save, you screw up, you work from there and don't moan about the effect you yourself caused.
Oh and btw, ad blocking is so last year, ghostery saves you from facebook and the likes too.
Adverts when they were there were OK. When they jumped in the way, they were not OK. And because there are almost no advertisers who aren't doing the "jump in front of you and scream for attention", they are being blocked.
So it is the other advertisers who have ruined it for this site.
Think of it similarly to the idea "DRM is the result of people who have decided to copy games, so if DRM is ruining gaming for you, blame the pirates".
And if they're served from other hosts, then if that host (who doesn't know or care that the site you're trying to access is blocked whilst waiting for this advertising "content" to be uploaded) is busy, you cannot access the site.
adhost et al are often swamped. And that blocks access to the site using them until after the thing is loaded.
Unless you use NoScript and other ad blocking.
My solution is for free users, run ads, and text that shows if they have an adblocker. For people who hates ads like myself, charge to use the game and not see ads. Pretty simple.
And users are blocking it.
Film at 11.
I just tried to go there on IOS and I got about three paragraphs and then a huge ad for "Olympus has fallen" what looks like a very crappy movie. I guess they won't get anymore of my page views or sympathy.
... right at my computer and before I see it if there is any (to a .0001%) chance that your ad might send malicious software (including tracking cookies/flash objects) to my computer or if they are so intrusive that I can't read/watch what I'm there to do.
If you don't want to police your ads, that's not my fault. You are the ones abusing people.
We are just not standing for that abuse.
So go away.
No! It's a *SIG*. Keep the Special Interest Groups away! (Con joke!)
Because it has Sports programs. News. Comedy. Action. Dramas. Kids. Soaps.
Part of the reason why it can do period dramas and science programs is because it doesn't have to chase advertising.
And the reason why it should do period dramas and science programs is *because* you don't like them. Which would make it harder to sell such a program to advertisers to fund.
But I bet you have some desire for snooker or darts which aren't shown on other channels because they aren't marketable enough, but the BBC can show them because they don't have to market it to advertisers.
Did you like "Brothers in Arms"? BBC paid for that along with HBO (paid by taxes). How about Sherlock? How about "Mongrels". Go check that last one out. It wouldn't be marketable AT ALL, but it's funny as hell and SHOULD have been made.
If I want something I will go look for it. Make it easy to find.
The convenient, running argument seems to be :
I like the product but I disagree with the price of admission. Therefore, I am justified to obtain the product through other means.
Does the option to just walk away ever cross anyone's mind?
Huh? The downside to AdBlock is that is only works within your web browser. For content accessed via Firefox, AdBlock is strictly more powerful than a hosts file because AdBlock will block content by URL (and other rules) as well as by domain. If you can't use Firefox or regularly browse the web using applications other than Firefox, then an ad-blocking hosts file is worthwhile.
How about using less invasive adds, don't auto play video and audio, pop-ups, stealth malware installers, don't let the meat upwards of half of the sites interface, etc. ; that would be a great start .
Advertising has to be one of the biggest scourges to this planet, falling just short of Malaria in that regard. And marketeers or whatever they like to be called? Nowhere else but a hospital would you find such a cold detachment from peoples personalities. A doctor must be that way, they will loose people and they'll only hurt themselves if they get attached. Got a job to do, can't be feeling sad, other people may yet live for their efforts.
But those in advertising? reducing the human populous to a set of demographics and assuming that those people are just as psychotically obsessed with sucking all the true value out of everything they possibly can?
Why oh why, do companies think that people WANT to be advertised to? that we want products shoved down our necks?
It's just as well they don't do it face to face otherwise there wouldn't be a single unbroken nose in the entire industry.
I block all ads, I delibratly wait for any program on TV I'd like to watch to be over, so I can pirate it and watch it without ads. I mean seriously, if they're driving people to commit crimes then something should be done.
They banned Tobbaco advertising in this country because it's essentially immoral.
But turn on any childrens TV channel (not the BBC of course) and what do we see? advertisments, for toys and all that crap.
So a bunch of people that went to university to study marketing and indeed many that studied psychology are allowed to ADVERTISE to children?
That's grooming in my book. A child's mind is impressionable and that's a good thing, it's how we learn. But I don't want some psychologist constructing ads to best appeal to the sensibilities of childen in the same way I don't want a pedophile constructing their sweet bag to best appeal to the appetites of children.
Where was I? yeah, ad-blockers all the way. block them all, lets have paywall's, don't bother me I'll just pirate that too. arrr.
And by "they" I mean the web-sector in general. My personal policy is this: If it is obnoxious (blinking, animation), I block it. The rest I just ignore and do not look at. For pop-ups, banners, etc. I either stop visiting the site or do an IP block (the opera browser supports that).
The whole online-marketing thing is stupid, with people believing they could get rich like Google. Well, guess what: Google only got rich because the ads on their pages are non-intrusive and targeted and because they sell ads to people that hope to get rich. The second is a bit like people selling "spam" kits. It is a bit like TV ads: All they do is make people mad. Then they remember the people that mad them mad and that is what the advertisers use as "performance" metric, i.e. brand recognition. This only benefits the advertising companies, not those paying for the ads.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I find advertisements to be deeply repulsive, no matter how unobtrusive they are. And when some particularly resilient advertisement makes its way through my blocks, I think my time is well spent if it takes me 15 minutes to track down how to block it (though it usually takes much less). Advertisement is psychological warfare, mind-hacking. Advertisers study psychology to find out how to bypass your rational decision process and make you buy things you do not need. As much as I hate advertisements, I don't think advertisers would actually want me to look at ads anyway. I certainly don't feel bad about blocking them - it feels pretty good actually, making a small part of the world better by ridding it of advertisements, even if it is just my computer. If I could, I would get rid of them everywhere.
The site in question tries to load content from no less than 13 other domains. How were people stupid enough to use it in the first place?
It's OK Bender, there's no such thing as 2.
Here's a little experiment I did. I went to the destructoid home page and, with no scrolling, I just measured content (real vs. advertising).
There was 257 cm^2 of real content and 334 cm^2 of advertising.
Are you really wondering why people block ads on your site when 56% of said site is made up of those ads? Advertising is supposed to be subtle (late night second hand car salesmen called Crazy Bob notwithstanding). I imagine a magazine where the first 50% was advertising would suffer similarly to this site. People would just skip the crud to see the real content.
Charge for the content. If it's worth it, people will pay. If it's not worth it, they won't, and you should be doing something more useful.
Have a link to donate via Paypal! Sell t-shirts or something, maybe.
But I'll block ANY ad I see, anywhere, no matter what, simply on a matter of principle.
I believe in the free market solution to this problem. People will only pay for what they value. If they don't value your ads, OR worse, if your ads are the reason why users are paying (in time, effort, or money) to hide your ads, you have no argument for claiming that they need to see your ads. You are free, of course, to increase the annoyance factor of your ads, hoping to either entice more people to click or squeeze more clicks out of your existing users. We, in turn, are free to adopt ad blocking in larger and larger numbers.
The key here is like everything else: if you want to make money, produce something of value and sell it. If you attempt to do things indirectly: produce value "for free" and charge indirectly in the form of annoying ads, you are setting yourself up for the consequences of that indirection. Try other things. There are lots of websites that make money without ads, it's just not going to be a simple-setup, one-size-fits-all solution that you may hope it would be.
telling me about something that I don't realize exists, but could use.
If I don't know it exists, I can't research it.
I don't block ads on reddit. Yanno why? What ads they do have are so minimal I don't notice them. If I have to click through 10 pages to see a text article, I'm going to make you suffer as much as you've made me suffer. There are ads that play video and sound with no way to stop them short of blocking. So I block. I unblock on sites that deserve it. Just like decent cops, the number of decent sites is shockingly small.
Advertisers, I am curious.... what is the ratio between bandwidth consumed by content vs. bandwidth consumed by the ads?
The thing that pisses me off about most ads is my ISP bandwidth cap on various devices; not strictly a cap, but the knee when it starts costing me more money, or when stuff I want to see more than the ads gets rate-throttled.
One of the reasons I install click-to-flash is that most of this high bandwidth content tends to be flash. Recently, some advertisers have been going to HTML5 to get around click-to-flash, but I'm close to interposing HTML5 content as well, at least for anything with an audio or video tags on it.
Yeah, animations are annoying, even if they are animated GIFs, and video and audio are annoying, but things like Sprint's policy of capping and then intentionally not enforcing the cap - nor any user controllable means of turning one on -- and instead charging buttloads of money per byte after the cap are what's forcing me to block your advertising.
If you want to get around ad blocking, then you need to figure a way to cut the ISPs in on your ad revenue such that your ads do not count against my bandwidth cost/slowdown count.
"The downside to AdBlock is that is only works within your web browser." - by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10, @08:03PM (#43134101)
First of all, this is the BIGGEST "downside" to AdBlock:
---
Adblock Plus To Offer 'Acceptable Ads' Option:
http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/12/12/2213233/adblock-plus-to-offer-acceptable-ads-option
(Meaning by default, which MOST USERS WON'T CHANGE, it doesn't block ALL ads - they "souled-out"... talk about "foxes guarding the henhouse")!
---
Plus, Adblock CAN'T DO AS MUCH & not from a single file solution that runs in Ring 0/RPL 0/kernelmode via tcpip.sys, a driver (since it's part of the IP stack & tightly integrated into it) which is far, Far, FAR FASTER than ring 3/rpl 3/usermode apps like browsers, & addons slow them down (known issue in FireFox).
Hosts are the 1st thing your IP stack queries on webbound requests -> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/172218
(Thus, since the IP stack is already loaded by the OS @ bootup & on requests by client programs - guess what? Hosts make adblock REDUNDANT & WASTEFUL also! )
To wit, 10++ things AdBlock can't do, hosts can:
---
1.) Blocking rogue DNS servers malware makers use
2.) Blocking known sites/servers that serve up malware... like known sites/servers/hosts-domains that serve up malicious scripts
3.) Speeding up your FAVORITE SITES that hosts can speed up via hardcoded line item entries properly resolved by a reverse DNS ping
4.) AdBlock works on Mozilla products (browser & email), hosts work on ANY webbound app AND are multiplatform.
5.) AdBlock can't protect external to FireFox email programs, hosts can (think OUTLOOK, Eudora, & others)
6.) AdBlock can't help you blow past DNSBL's (DNS block lists)
7.) AdBlock can't help you avoid DNS request logs (hosts can via hardcoded favorites)
8.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. TRACKERS (hosts can)
9.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. DOWNED or "DNS-poisoned" redirected DNS servers (hosts can by hardcodes)
10.) Hosts are EASIER to manage, they're just a text file (adblock means you had BEST know your javascript, perl, & python (iirc as to what languages are used to make it from source)).
& more... as a tiny 'sampling' & proofs thereof!
---
* You must have missed that list, I posted it in my last post you replied to...
APK
P.S.=> In case you hadn't noticed, there's 10 more things that are 'downsides' to AdBlock vs. custom hosts files...
... apk
When apk's list of upmods made ya "eat yer words" Sardaukar86 -> http://slashdot.org/~Sardaukar86 and ya ran afterwards, never to be seen around /. again?
"Doth not a valid point make", troll. Especially vs. this -> http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43130167
I block all ads as I've done for the past decades. I currently use AdBlock and NoScript and they efficiently kill just about all ads.
If you want to finance your website, use subscriptions, pay-per-view or proceeds from the sale of physical merchandise. If you want a free section, adjust the fees accordingly. Yes, it's that simple.
"For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
I bet people (users) would prefer to be charged a dime, to get rid of ads all together, however with this countries over bloated pricing, few people would be willing to give up a dime every time they visited the site.
You could do one better and Crowd Source, if you were still interested in keeping your site going.
I am one of those users, I also block all ads, because of malware, viruses. I didn't always do this, but when the ads became videos, or flash, coupled with web sites abusing the number of ads they became to large and cumbersome. If the ads were like the still pictures in magazines/newspaper adverts without pop-ups I wouldn't block them, if advertisers haven't learn there lesson that simpler is better then they are only dooming themselves.
Advertisers have nowhere to go without being blocked, this show you how arrogant/ignorant ads companies are, they do not bother to get input from the people who have to put up with the annoying BS ""they"" find to be funny, or innovative.
I am an unashamed ad-blocker. I never buy a product based on ads. I only buy something based on need or desire and then I go LOOKING for what will fill that need desire. Ads on sites are usually products I purposely avoid buying.
What I hate about advertising is that ONLINE ADVERTISERS think that the only way to do it is by raping the customer privacy in a dark alley before killing it. Advertisers in old media dodn't have problems selecting ads. Sell me geek stuff in slashdot. Sell me gadgets on gizmodo. Sell me videogames in reddit /r/Gaming. Sell me things about the site I'm reading. You don't have to know my entire web history to know what ads to show me.
I block ads because they come with a whole bunch of web bugs designed to build a comprehensive psychological profile of me. WTF.
I'm whiling to disable ad-blockers from a whitelist of good behaving advertisers. A whitelist that in no way can contain the likes Google and its immortal cookies or or Facebook and its aliased tracking servers.
But... the future refused to change.
A temporary 'solution' : We need an option to add blockers, that 'click' on the adds, and load the page (but don't display it) occasionally
on selected sites. We won't get bothered but just waste a bit of bandwidth. Sure: The income will then generally go down of the
sites, as it is discovered that the adds get less and less effective.
Okay, show of hands. How many of you ever click on a banner ad when you're not using ad blocking? I think I've done it a handful of times on accident, but that's aboot it. Aside from possibly some Google AdSense ads, though. But I fail to see how banner ads ever generated anyone much revenue.
In Soviet Russia, dot slashes YOU!
We need to get that to 100%..................
There's not really a conflict of interest here when you really look at it: the user doesn't want to see the ads, the site wants the user to load them to get clicks. Ad-blockers are a problem because they not only hide the ad from the user, but they also don't load it and reduce the site's ad revenue. This may be useful for a few low-bandwidth visitors, but the majority of Adblock users wouldn't notice if the blocker loads the ads in the background, as long as they are not displayed and don't delay the page display. In this way both the user and the site are satisfied, no conflict of interest.
Wide-spread deployment of such an undetectable Ad-hider however would cast serious doubts on the measurable effectiveness of internet ads...
"Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket." – George Orwell
If all the websites that can't exist without ads died tomorrow, the internet would be a better place. Some sites that many people use would go away, and they would be replaced by a sampling of other sites that Google would eventually learn to index intelligently.
If all the websites that can't exist without ads died tomorrow, Google would be among them.
I'm of the view that ads are necessary, how else do you market your product to a wider audience? But advertisers are taking the pee. There are too many obnoxious practices.
Popups, videos and malware aside, take a tv channel called 4oD in the uk for instance. You can watch all their back catalogue, which is great, but you'll be required to watch 28-32 adverts per programme for the pleasure. I refuse to watch or listen, I run through the entire show first and then watch it ad-free. There is no variety and certainly no concession if you're watching several episodes in a season. Anyway this seemed like a good place to moan about it.
As for the original post, it's a bit like Blockbusters or HMV moaning about Amazon and Lovefilm succeeding all because they (hmv and blockbusters) never rethought their business model in light of their competition. If people block ads, give them an incentive not to. perhaps the site should encourage their frequent users something extra for paying a donation, or having a subscription.
They're one up on everywhere else in that they have dedicated web traffic.
I don't bloack ads, I blocked plug-ins. Ad-blockers: you will find your life easier if you unblock ads because that is how you get infomation about new products and services; and advertisers: stop using Flash plug-in in your ads.
Make the advertisements relevant to the content, my interests, and less the center of attention than the content. Do that, keep out the malware, and you might even get some clicks from me.
But in order to discern "your interests" and distinguish "your interests" from the interests of others viewing the same web site, the ad network needs to track you. Are you OK with tracking if it means you'll get fewer irrelevant ads? I am.
If adverts are ruining it, don't visit that site - problem solved!
Am I the only person who remembers the 1990s? Back before hardly anyone used "ad networks" plenty of us were blocking web ads. It was typically done using proxies rather than browser plugins, but either way, the user's capabilities are about the same.
And if I recall, image dimensions were often a big clue the software used. For example, if you have an img tag with width=728 height=90, that image is an ad, period. You don't care what host is in the src attribute; the dimensions are enough. And if example.com happens (for their own convenience) to use helpful keywords in their path names, (img src="http://example.com/ads/ad12345.jpg") then all the better.
Maybe today's ad blockers are deliberately dumber about such things, perhaps even for the purpose of encouraging sites to run house ads, in order to foster a more responsible web. And if that's the case, cool. But let's not kid ourselves by saying that house ads are unblockable. At most, house ads come with one fewer clues. among several, that software can use to determine they're ads.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
In that case, how would the concept of a "vehicle" as a broader concept than a horse-drawn carriage end up in such a person's research? I remember hearing on a TV documentary that the railroads declined in part because they failed to realize that they weren't in the railroad industry as much as the transportation industry.
Everyone would have become aware of them because they'd see them on the road.
Learning about a product's existence by seeing it in use in public is limited to the physical places that one typically goes in a day. In the horse-drawn era, that wasn't very far. How would the first few people in a given geographic area find out about horseless carriages?
Yes, exactly. If some site wants to bar me from using their site because I block their ads, or only allow session cookies, or lobotomize JavaScript -- or whatever -- they're free to do that. I have no problem with that.
For example, I refuse to read NYT articles that require me to create an account. I feel not only is the NYT overrated, but the overzealous way they track users means I'd rather not use their "service". Ditto for Facebook, once aptly described as a surveillance service disguised as a "fun" social network.
More and more people are going to have to decide whether they're sheep being led to the slaughter, sacrificing their privacy, attention (in the case of ads), and forced to do this or that because some "service" wants this, or whether they're actual customers or consumers with real rights and the ability to make decisions. IMO since the Internet was privatized/corporatized after the 1990s telecomm act, the pendulum has swung way too far towards users being considered sheep for exploitation.
As Andrew Lewis bluntly put it: "If you're not paying for something, you're not the customer; you're the product being sold."
If the 3/4th of the internet that exists only due to ads disappeared, we'd live in a better world. In both cases, we'd move to enthusiast/hobbyist creations which would focus on content, not sensationalism.
Anyone reading this, please enable your adblocker (and disable the 'allow non-intrusive advertising' option).
http://www.accountkiller.com/en/delete-slashdot-account Stop visiting Slashdot.
We've seen this all happen before.
Back in 1999, I co-founded allakhazam.com A gaming database site which was specific to one game, and eventually grew to cover others. We witnessed the complete collapse of the online ad industry in 2000/2001, and as a result we worked very hard at establishing alternative monetization strategies. It worked, it worked very well, and in 2006 we sold the company doing very well as a result.
I then spent 3 years arguing against focusing on an Ad-focused revenue model, and renewed focus on the user experience.
Ad focused revenue models on websites are lazy, and very very broken. With a couple minor exceptions, most people are not swayed by the presentation of random imagery on the sides of the page they're trying to look at. Tech savy users either block the ads in the browser or they are just used to the ads and block them out internally. Most sites use 3rd party ad networks to sell the ads they're going to display, and as a result we get useless context-free ads displaying at the wrong time in a users day. Ads for Hyundai cars are pretty useless to someone reading a video game review for example.
Furthermore, having an ad-focused revenue model means that your customers are not your users. Your customers are now the ad networks or your directly sold advertisement. Your users are just a means to getting your customers to pay you more, and as a result the users often find that their user experience degrades. From articles which take multiple clicks across many pages, to invasive and irritating advertising, to vending of the users browsing habits, negatively impacting the user experience results in dollars for the operator.
Switching to a subscription model allows you to focus on developing content for the users as your customers. You no longer need to have the dichotomy of negatively impacting your users for money. Now you want to please them with a positive user experience, good compelling features and content. Good content is hard though. There are 10001 bloggers out there willing to write content for nearly nothing to free. So you can't assume that putting up a couple articles a week is going to be enough reasoning to get people to subscribe. Also many sites over value the value of a subscription. Make it small and I might be interested ($3/month), if you're going to charge me $20/month you're probably not going to get my money at all.
Subscription revenue is rewarding though. We had 50,000 subscribers paying us $3/month. We strove to constantly add features to the subscribed users. Ad revenue wasn't even a shade of that, despite doing over (at that time) 5 million uniques / day.
and so it should be. dont like it? stop with the audio and flashsurbation.
This perpetual motion machine Lisa made is a joke, it just keeps getting faster and faster. - Homer
I had no problem with adds until they became animated or had sound ( Any one rember those smiley adds ) or poped up over the information you were looking at forcing you to click a tiny close button. The worst are pages where you go to download something, and the download button is hidden with in a bunch of adds that have click to download buttons on them to.
So how should someone who is introducing a new product initiate this spread without any advertising?
Your constant questions bore me. It's like you have no opinion of your own.
Nobody is born with an opinion. I try to sample a range of opinions and inquire further where I foresee a potential problem with holding and acting on a particular opinion. Please allow me to rephrase it as a non-question:
It is unclear to me how how someone should who is introducing a new product initiate the spread of a product through word of mouth without any advertising.
Advertisers are to blame for this, but not for the reason you might think.
The problem comes when an advertiser, aware of what can be done with HTML, animated GIFs, Flash, and remembering their marketing classes where they learned the importance of grabbing eyeballs, makes an obnoxious high-impact ad that screams for your attention and buys space on a web page you visit. Then someone else, to remain competitive, makes another high-impact ad on the next page you visit. Until they're on nearly every web page you visit.
So you block them.
Ad blocking comes about when people want to see content without invasive ads. We don't have time or inclination to screen every ad to see how offensive it is, so we just block them all. Advertisers notice this and stop "sponsoring" the web sites since they're not getting the eyeballs they want. So now web sites are short on revenue and blaming people with ad-blockers.
Many web sites are run by businesses, and without some kind of revenue stream, they're going to simply shut up shop. Non-business ones also need some way of paying the bills, unless the site is hosted gratis by another entity. Ad-free Wikipedia needs an annual donation drive to keep it going, a model that is unlikely to work for everybody. So I have no problem with sites having ads per se.
Sites like Slashdot do advertising very well, and I do not block their ads (even though I get a checkbox allowing me to do so apparently for my "contributions" to this site). They're not invasive, they don't claim I have won some imaginary prize, they don't try to run Flash or DHTML and chew up CPU cycles.
In fact, the only ads I block are Flash (thanks to the FlashBlock extension). I figure any company stupid enough to use Flash for its ads doesn't deserve my business.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
Holy crap! I just visited the site to read the bloody article and was immediately inundated with so many ads I had to close the tab because it was making the page stall. This is just short-sighted of them... run too many ads, and people will want to block them all. The need to learn the lesson of diminishing returns. Chase your readers away with too many ads, and your returns will diminish.
And it ain't a cute ferret, either.
Lil' vermin chewing on your nose, pooping in your ear and scraching at your eyes.
While you're trying to drive at tripple-digit speed.
Oh, and sometimes if he thinks you're ignoring him he'll run around your head a half dozen times making this awful shrieking noise.
That, and after the race is over he runs out and reports on everything you did to some unknown shady individuals.
The fact that I wouldn't want a ferret in my helmet seems so obvious to me that it completely didn't occur to me that it might not occur to other people.
A ferret as a pet is adorable. A ferret in my helmet is not. thxkbai.
So here is my take on the matter. I fully understand that numerous websites such as Destructoid provide a lot of free (quality) content to viewers yet their servers come with increasing operation costs and therefore, ad revenue is a necessity to keep the site running without demanding a premium charge first. The same goes for several other websites. The problem is that I have encountered way too many highly abusive ads that I came to the point where I didn't WANT to shut adblock off nor do I want to go fishing through each site I visit and only enable adblock manually when they go overboard. I would rather preventative measures instead.
Point in case. I was at my brother's place and he needed help installing a Minecraft mod. I went to its download page and was bombarded with at least 5 gigantic download buttons and guess what? All of them were fake and were placed as a trap in order to get a free ad click from anyone who just wanted to download the mod. That is deceptive! Needless to say, I became very frustrated from being sent all over the place so installed Adblock on his machine soon after. After returning to the page, I eventually found the REAL download link "tucked away" BUT you had to give them a facebook like, tweet, etc just to view it. Don't believe me? See it for yourself and you'll know what I mean: http://www.minecraftmine.org/minecraft-1-0-0-modloader-1-0-0-mod/
THIS is the kind of crap that I couldn't stand prior to installing Adblock on my own machine. I've also come across ads that would slow down my machine (due to being a poorly coded flash banner), play obnoxious music, spawn a popup that abuses the unLoadEvent function thereby displaying a dialog box before it will close, or even attempt a browser hijack to change my default search provider or a drive by malware installation. Then there are the video streaming sites like Youtube which throw in half a minute commercials not just at the beginning but sometimes in the MIDDLE of a video as well which ends up being extremely loud compared to the video itself and therefore hurts my ears (I use headphones and yes I know that only partner videos have ads but hopefully you get the point I am making). I am sorry but enough is enough!
It's really nice that Destructoid heavily monitors what advertisers' banners appear but some sites just let it go way out of control and I have no way of knowing this until I hit the site. Therefore, to save myself a LOT of frustration, Adblock is going to have to stay on until the worst of ads are abolished (which does not seem very likely unfortunately). Text ads like what Google uses I could tolerate as well as small non-intrusive banners. In fact, Adblock HAS an option to allow "non-intrusive" ads and this is ON by default. Perhaps more sites should work towards only displaying those and perhaps less ads will be blocked. Only the REAL ad loathers would enable that options as well. Also, there are sites that just flat-out refuse Adblock users by inserting a script to halt all traffic that has it installed. If they really get desperate, they could do that too although I find this approach to be quite hostile.
I can't believe we're having an argument about the usefulness of ad supported web businesses with barely any mention of Google. Dear everyone, where do you think their money comes from? If there were no ads on the internet there would be no google and no facebook and no twitter, to name just a few. Maybe you can live with that, but it's hard to say that they aren't adding value or providing services that people like. The truth of the matter is that hardly anyone cares about ads, especially if they aren't obnoxious interstitials or flash spam and every once and a while you see something you like which is a win win. Run adblock if you like, but there's just no case for a crusade against advertising based revenue models. Those are the revenue models that support that suppor the services we love on the internet.
Great overview, if a little histrionic.
Correct me if I'm wrong, though: to generate blocked IPs in a custom hosts file, don't I have to know those IP's in the first place?
Ie, don't I have to have been bitten by that dog (or at least know he's vicious) to know I want to ban him from my house?
One of the adblock advantages (and I grant, they're not perfect) is that they ALREADY have built this list.
(I hope that despite posting AC, you come back and reply.)
-Styopa
You offer it for free. I take it for free. What is unethical about that?
Who said anything about "unethical"? The question was "why ads instead of donations / voluntary payments?" The answer is because people do not, in fact, donate to web sites, software, etc. in other than a very few exceptional cases. Therefore, ads are used.
But he offered the Shareware for free and people took it for free. And now he is telling that everybody is immoral because they took the free offer and don't give him money.
Who said anything about "immoral"? The question was "why ads instead of donations / voluntary payments?" The answer is because people do not, in fact, donate to web sites, software, etc. in other than a very few exceptional cases. Therefore, ads are used. I didn't say anything about moral or immoral. I said web sites have ads because people don't pay.
But he offered the Shareware for free and people took it for free.
By the way, it wasn't offered for free, just easily stolen. It was more of a guarantee, "Sample it first and don't pay if you're not satisfied, on the honor system".
It seems virtually everyone was happy with the software (great reviews, thankful emails, etc.) yet 0% paid. I would NOT have been surprised if 80% of happy customers never clicked the button to pay the $5 via PayPal. However, With 100,000+ downloads, I would have expected at least one per ten thousand to honor their agreement. Nope. Only in A HUNDRED THOUSAND clicked the button.
It's thanks to ads that most people have the attention span of a gnat.
And I'd bet that ads are responsible for most of the road rage on the highways as well. Being constantly bombarded by messages telling us that we're not good enough because we don't have things we don't want or can't afford...like they say, if you hear something enough, eventually you believe it's true. And you still can't get the "stuff", so you get mad, and you have to take it out on someone.
A full 20 minutes of every hour of television is ads. Now we all know how the commies in North Korea feel being constantly bombarded with propaganda day and night, except ours is a little more subtle, but it still wears you down.
And it didn't help any of us receiving the decree that corporations are individuals and therefore just as deserving of free speech rights as you and I.
We ARE doomed.
"You are a conceited ass." - by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 14, @04:50PM (#43175901)
See subject: You're an illogical ac ad hominem attack using troll that's off topic & OBVIOUSLY, you're also a "ne'er-do-well" that hasn't accomplished SQUAT on YOUR PART too... & THAT is that.
---
"We don't give a fuck about you or your 'achievements'" - by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 14, @04:50PM (#43175901)
I don't recall mentioning any, but since you asked? "Ye shall receive", in my p.s. below (blowing your b.s., clear away, easily)...
APK
P.S.=>
"we don't care about the content of your posts. The link you provided is to a comment modded -1. Wake up: you're not wanted here." - by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 14, @04:50PM (#43175901)
OPINIONS, clearly vary (in a 250++:1 ratio against yours, troll):
---
Roughly 250++ of them & I post as AC (hard to get even +1, as /. hides our posts & we "AC"'s start @ ZERO/0 points, unlike registered "lusers", lol!):
+5 'modded up' posts by "yours truly" (8):
HOSTS & BGP:2010 -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1901826&cid=34490450
FIREFOX IN DANGER: 2011 -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2559120&cid=38268580
TESLA:2010 -> http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1872982&cid=34264190
TESLA:2010 -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1806946&cid=33777976
NVIDIA 2d:2006 -> http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=175774&cid=14610147
Ubuntu Linux sends back local disk query strings to CANONICAL: 2012 -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3304601&cid=42234351
Question to Mr. Mark Shuttleworth @ UBUNTU/CANONICAL: 2012 -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3304725&cid=42243467
COMPUTER ASSOCIATES BUSTED FOR ACCOUNTING FRAUD:2010 -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1884922&cid=34350102
----
+4 'modded up' posts by "yours truly" (5):
APK SECURITY GUIDE:2005 -> http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=167071&cid=13931198
INFO. SYSTEMS WORK:2005 -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=161862&cid=13531817
WINDOWS @ NASDAQ 7++ YRS. NOW:2009 -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1290967&cid=28571315
CARMACK'S ARMADILLO AEROSPACE:2005 -> http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=158310&cid=13263898
What I admire about Theo DeRaadt of BSD fame: 2012 -> http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3007641&cid=40785151
----
+3 'modded up' posts by "yours truly" (8):
APK MICROSOFT INTERVIEW:2005 -> http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=155172&cid=13007974
Linux security failures 2011-2012: 2012 ->
"Correct me if I'm wrong, though: to generate blocked IPs in a custom hosts file, don't I have to know those IP's in the first place?" - by argStyopa (232550) on Wednesday March 13, @12:37PM (#43160641)
No, just a hostname/domainname (no ip needed to block). To speed up a site, just "ping" it by host/domain name, ala:
ping slashdot.org
Which WILL determine this site's IP address (as an example)...
(That will allow you to speed up access to your fav. websites (which AdBlock CANNOT do for you, whereas hosts can, along with blocking adbanners (or other content)).
To block a site? Just put this type of entry into a custom hosts file:
0.0.0.0 sitetoblock.com
As an example thereof...
---
"Ie, don't I have to have been bitten by that dog (or at least know he's vicious) to know I want to ban him from my house?" - by argStyopa (232550) on Wednesday March 13, @12:37PM (#43160641)
Nope - see the application in the link in my 'p.s.' below - it does it FOR you, "automagically" from 12 reputable & reliable sources for that type of data (for security online), vs. known malicious sites/servers/hosts-domains online (such as botnet C&C servers, maliciously scripted sites, adbanners & FAR more)!
---
"One of the adblock advantages (and I grant, they're not perfect) is that they ALREADY have built this list." - by argStyopa (232550) on Wednesday March 13, @12:37PM (#43160641)
Same deal via the application in my 'p.s.' below I created too, BUT, you can EASILY EDIT a custom hosts file using notepad.exe or other text editors (located by default in Windows in %WinDir%\system32\drivers\etc) since it's only a text file filter for the IP stack itself...
ONE THAT MAKES ADBLOCK REDUNDANT (as is, it's less useful anyhow by far, & moreso since they 'crippled it' by default vs. adbanners blockings).
---
"(I hope that despite posting AC, you come back and reply.)" - by argStyopa (232550) on Wednesday March 13, @12:37PM (#43160641)
Yes, sorry about the "belated reply", but I was out-of-town & offline for a few days is all... my belated apology, & my reply to you now then, right now!
---
"Great overview, if a little histrionic." - by argStyopa (232550) on Wednesday March 13, @12:37PM (#43160641)
You're welcome - it's only facts (undeniable, concrete & verifiable truths)... nothing more/nothing less.
APK
P.S.=> The application I speak of does it all for you, see its link below for its features & benefits to you in added speed, security, reliability, + even anonymity to an extent online:
---
APK Hosts File Engine 5.0++ 32/64-bit:
http://www.start64.com/index.php?option=com_content&id=5851:apk-hosts-file-engine-64bit-version&Itemid=74
---
That's the link to my custom hosts files generating applications (that uses 12 reputable & reliable sources for blocking out threats listed in that link above, in 16++ points enumerated there as to benefits in speed, security, reliability, & even anonymity to an extent online)...
It will speed up favorite sites YOU provide it (via a reverse DNS ping -a sitename.com) + import data to block out (in known malicious sites/servers/hosts-domains online & adbanners, too)...
... apk
See my subject-line above: You FAIL, & you know it...
* :)
(After all - I don't see you validly disproving facts/points I noted that had backing citations from REPUTABLE sources no less in my post you bogusly downmodded per my subject-line above, here -> http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43132381 )
APK
P.S.=> No, instead the "best you got" = bogus downmods, & then ac trolling off-topic b.s. replies... lol, you fail!
... apk
See my subject-line above: You FAIL, & you know it...
* :)
(After all - I don't see you validly disproving facts/points I noted that had backing citations from REPUTABLE sources no less in my post you bogusly downmodded per my subject-line above, here -> http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43132165 )
APK
P.S.=> No, instead the "best you got" = bogus downmods, & then ac trolling off-topic b.s. replies... lol, you fail!
... apk
See my subject-line above: You FAIL, & you know it...
* :)
(After all - I don't see you validly disproving facts/points I noted that had backing citations from REPUTABLE sources no less in my post you bogusly downmodded per my subject-line above, here -> http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43130167 )
APK
P.S.=> No, instead the "best you got" = bogus downmods, & then ac trolling off-topic b.s. replies... lol, you fail!
... apk
http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3532567&cid=43130869
* :)
APK
P.S.=> All the bogus unjustifiable downmods in the world can't hide truths I stated there... lol!
... apk
Trying to hide the post I replied to with unjustifiable invalid downmods isn't working trolls. My post pulls it right back into view.
See subject-line above, & no valid critique of my points = "best ya got", trolls? Please... lol!
* IF & when you can't disprove points I made on valid technical grounds in computing shows YOU FAIL TROLLS!
(It certainly also doesn't make your application of bogus downmods to my posts on hosts files numerous good benefits to end users of them in speed, security, reliability, & even anonymity to an extent, anywhere NEAR remotely valid on YOUR end... you FAIL, trolls (& you know it)).
APK
P.S.=> Thanks for proving my point on this note, yet again, trolls...
... apk