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iOS 9 To Have Ad Blocking Capabilities

An anonymous reader writes: iOS 9 will reportedly carry ad blocking capabilities for it's Safari browser when it is released later this year. The feature wasn't rolled out with the usual fanfare one might expect, and flew under the radar. ZDNet reports: "It's not immediately clear why the new ad-blocking privacy feature was included in iOS 9, due out later this year. After all, the iPhone and iPad maker has its own advertising network -- even if its success was limited (which is putting it nicely). What's clear is that allowing ad-blockers in iOS 9 could deliver a serious blow to Google, the biggest rival to Apple in the mobile space, because advertising remains a massive portion of the search giant's income."

5 of 161 comments (clear)

  1. simpler? exclusive ad channel? by MessyBlob · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This makes sense in the Apple ecosystem. It speeds up web browsing and streamlines the experience, and if ads are blocked at browser or OS level, it gives Apple a chance to create their own approved ad market. I think it's a step too far to assume that they can insert unintended content arbitrarily into a web page or existing ad slot.

    1. Re:simpler? exclusive ad channel? by msauve · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why sell ads, when you can sell the ability to let ads be seen?

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    2. Re:simpler? exclusive ad channel? by Black.Shuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple makes, relatively speaking, no money at all from advertising.

      Indeed, if you take its entire software ecosystem as a whole, it makes up for a mere fraction of Apple's total profit when compared to its hardware sales.

      So when we're all being very clever cynics and conspiracy theorists, perhaps we would do well to look at the motivation of a company in a holistic sense. For Apple, perhaps if they let users control ads, their overall experience of the platform improves, and they're more likely to remain loyal and keep buying hardware.

  2. Including App Store ads? by garyok · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The ad-blocking better include those bloody irritating ads that switch you out of the browser with no warning to the App Store for Clash of Clans, or some other flavour of freemium shiteware the kids are degrading themselves with these days.

    --
    One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors - Plato
  3. Not clear? by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not immediately clear why the new ad-blocking privacy feature was included in iOS 9

    Well there's a pretty obvious reason why, and I don't see any reason to discount it. It's a feature that users will like, and Apple is in the business of trying to make devices that people like. Even more specifically, Apple's general approach to making "devices that people like" tends to be to try to take the hassle out of using the product, as much as is possible. Ads are a big hassle.

    It seems like a pretty obvious answer, so much so that I don't see a reason to go hunting for another one without some kind of additional information that there's some other reason.