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Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industry?

HughPickens.com writes: Michael Rosenwald writes at the Columbia Journalism Review that global online ad revenue continues to rise, reaching nearly $180 billion last year. But analysts say the rise of ad blocking threatens the entire industry—the free sites that rely exclusively on ads, as well as the paywalled outlets that rely on ads to compensate for the vast majority of internet users who refuse to pay for news. A new report from Adobe and one of several startups helping publishers fight ad blocking shows that 198 million people globally are now blocking ads, up 41 percent from 2014. In the US, ad blocking grew 48 percent from last year, to 45 million users. "Taken together, ad blockers are hitting publishers in their digital guts," writes Rosenwald. "Adobe says that $21.8 billion in global ad revenue will be blocked this year."

Publishers have been banking on the growth of mobile, where the ad blocking plugins either don't work or are cumbersome to install. A Wells Fargo analyst wrote in a report on ad blocking that "the mobile migration should thwart some of the growth" of ad blockers. But Apple recently revealed that its new operating system scheduled for release this fall will allow ad blocking on Safari. Apple is trying to pull iPhone and iPad users off the web. It wants you to read, watch, search, and listen in its Apple-certified walled gardens known as apps. It makes apps, it approves apps, and it profits from apps. But, for its plan to work, the company will need those entertainers and publishers to funnel their content to where Apple wants it to be. As the company makes strategic moves to devalue the web in favor of apps, those content creators dependent on ads to stay afloat may be forced to play along with Apple. Adblock Plus has released a browser for mobile Android devices that blocks ads, and it's planning to release a similar product for Apple devices. "The desire to figure out how to bring ad blocking to mobile consumers is a worldwide phenomenon," says Roi Carthy Ad blocking, he says, "is an inalienable right."

28 of 519 comments (clear)

  1. Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One can only hope so.

  2. Ad Blocking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I installed ad blocker this year, and its for mainly one reason: video ads. Since these have become popular, it eats up my bandwidth and starts playing ridiculously loud sound even when I don't click on it. If anyone is too blame for the rise of ad blocking technology its advertisers.

    1. Re:Ad Blocking by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If you keep putting up your No Solicitors sign then you will hurt the door-to-door shake-down industry. We need your dollars because we we like money, so won't you please take down your No Solicitors sign before we resort to harsher measures?"

  3. Its not ajust a right, its a security issue,. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ad networks profligate malware, as a result an ad blocking isn't just to block an annoyance, its to protect myself from a drive by download of a flash powered/explioted malware that takes over my system and ransoms it back to me. Ad blockers are the new anti-virus.

  4. I don't mind ads, but... by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Being a slashdotter in good standing, I have the option to turn off ads here, but I don't, because I find Slashdot's ads harmless and unobtrusive. But lordy, some sites I go to they're insane, causing the page to constantly reload, while my CPU and hard drive churn away full-bore. How can they expect people won't want to block ads like that? Seems like it's grown worse in the last few months, these stupid advertisers are driving me to block their ads.

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  5. Ad blockers aren't; ads are. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When ads stop playing sound, hijacking the page, redirecting me to app stores, acting as hovertraps ("Oh! You briefly moused over our ad! Let's take up the whole screen and play loud sounds!"), eating all my computer's resources, and distributing malware - then, and only then, I'll look into not using adblockers.
    Web-ad-serving companies complaining about ad blockers are like grade-school bullies, crying to the teacher about "So-and-so punched me back!" They keep escalating their 'services', and are acting surprised that people aren't just taking it.

  6. The thing I don't understand with the ad business by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's extremely clear that most everybody hates ads with a passion - else why would so many people install ad blockers eh?

    So even if ad blockers were to disappear tomorrow, what makes advertisers feel that forcing ads down the throat of people who hate them increase sales for their customers?

    To me, it seems that either people hate ads, block them and won't buy the shit being advertised, or people hate ads, can't block them and won't buy the shit being advertised regardless.

    Worse, forcing people to see ads they don't want to see may very well antagonize them. Me, when I see an ad that gets through my ad blockers, I remember the product as something I'll make extra sure I'll never, ever buy.

    So what's the business model here? I can't believe enough people actually like ads to make online advertising a viable business proposition...

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  7. You've only got yourselves to blame by cyber-vandal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I made the mistake of opening a link to a games website in IE not long ago and ended up having to kill it because it brought the browser to its knees. I opened it in Chrome with Disconnect and click to play Flash and it loaded pretty much instantly. You made your bed and then shit in it as well. Don't complain about having to lie in it now.

  8. Re:The thing I don't understand with the ad busine by 0123456 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're making one fundamental logical mistake.

    The advertising industry exists to sell ads. It does not exist to sell the things they're advertising.

    They don't care whether it works. They care that people pay them to push ads.

  9. A Simple Issue by cirby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A plain ad, with a link to someone's site? That's fine. I'll even read them as I scroll down the page, most times. If it's something I'm interested in, I'll even do a quick search for the product and look at the actual seller's page.

    A really, REALLY annoying ad, with autoplay video and sound, popping up and getting in the way of the actual content, and often becoming home to all sorts of security issues like viruses or rogue redirects to trash pages? That's not. That's why I use adblocking software.

    Here's a thought, advertisers:

    Try spending as much time on creative and entertaining ads as you do in trying to come up with new and more obnoxious pop-ups. That actually works.

  10. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by tehlinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good riddance. The Internet is shit because of ad-sponsored content and SEO.

    --
    Most linux users don't know this, but the man pages were named after Chuck Norris. Chuck Norris fsck'ing hates noobs!
  11. There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by sycodon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have no problem with ad on the margins of the page. Slashdot has three up right now and they don't block my view of the content, they aren't playing music or videos (chewing up my bandwidth), and nothing opened a popup. Those are Ads in the tradition of a news paper.

    The Fucking Ads are the opposite. They block the content, force you to find that little X in some corner...if they didn't put a fake one in that's just a link to another page. Fucking Ads seem to be loaded first. So if some Ad service has shit slow servers, it takes forever for a simple Text article to appear. Fucking Ads also hijack random clicks. Ever click on a page to be sure the scroll is focused on the page and not something else so you can use the scroll wheel...and here comes a popup.

    Fucking Ads are also dangerous. To get rid of them you have to interact with them. Who knows what the fuck will happen when you click that close button?

    So if they just stick to what they've been doing for the last 200 years, we're fine.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The "disable advertising" checkbox has never made much sense. If you're reading Slashdot, you ought to be using an adblocker anyway

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    2. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bullshit. When I visit sites on the internet, I don't expect to see ads. That is the default state of the internet. It wasn't until little sleazeballs like you jumped into our world and started filling it with ads. Fuck you, go back to where you came from and get the fuck off of my internet.

    3. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by 0123456 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That said, I hope models like Patreon catch on enough to provide an alternative that is better for everyone, supporting artists directly and eliminating the need for ads and all the issues that come with them.

      I hope cable TV catches on, because subscriptions will eliminate the need for ads and all the issues that come with them.

      Oh, sorry, the adholes just pushed their crap onto cable subscribers, too, until it became as bad as over-the-air TV but you had to pay for it, too.

    4. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not true. If the creator of the web site does not want to me watch with adblock on then they can say so and I will never go back to their site. I don't need to see them, they are not vital to my life. But their third party advertising partner is slowing down my internet and slowing down my computer if I turn off adblock. The content creator needs to find a better way to make a living than to associate with scum advertisers.

      Who are these content creators? Why is AT&T showing me ads when I use AT&T's web mail when I pay then $50 a month? Why would you defend such actions? Are the bloggers? Screw them, they should get a job instead of relying on me; and I don't read blogs anyway.

      I am not using adblock because I want to be a freeloader. I am using adblock because ads are actively hostile to me and my computer, they introduce malware and slow down my computer. Too many ads on TV and I cut the cord; no ads, less cost, more actual paid content.

    5. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I didn't block them for the longest time because I was willing to look at the dumb ads as the price of free content I enjoy. I gave up and clicked the checkbox when Slashdot's ads went full jackass, and installed ABP when Slashdot (temporarily?) stopped honoring the checkbox. Yes, that's right: I installed ABP because of Slashdot.

      Slow golf clap. Well done, corporate overlords.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    6. Re:There are Ads and then there are Fucking Ads. by citylivin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Releasing something for free on the internet does not guarantee you a right to profit. I would think by your low user id you would have got this very basic fact by now.

      Advertising is cancer. It warps the mind to consume, causes needy people, mental problems and over-consumption. Something we cannot afford in this new century. Advertising wastes, time, money, bandwidth and fills peoples heads with garbage. Advertising should be banned. Its nothing more than for profit mind control.

      --
      As a potential lottery winner, I totally support tax cuts for the wealthy
  12. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by NatasRevol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Worst part? They'll never realize they killed themselves.

    --
    There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
  13. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by Darinbob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So many industries are this way. They assume that there is a captive audience with only a few malcontents, but over time it starts slipping away and they don't know how to cope. Like television, they decide to save money by having crappier unscripted content or hire only interns as script writers, then are baffled that people are cutting the cord.

  14. Same here by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am willing to play fair and tolerate some advertising, but it finally got too invasive and so I got adblock. I am fine with ads, but only so long as they don't disturb me using the web. No autoplay video/audio, no popups, no interstitial. When they start pulling that crap, well sorry but I'm going to have to opt out. If it kills a site off, too bad, maybe you shouldn't have been so annoying.

    Advertisers are going to have to learn to keep it reasonable if they want me to stop using adblocking. As it stands now I block by default and only whitelist sites I know aren't bad about it.

  15. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by LessThanObvious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dear Advertisers, Figure out how to do ads in a trustworthy way (i.e. no privacy invasive behavior tracking and little or no risk of malware exposure) and I'll be happy to allow those ads. I'd prefer the ads to be static HTML hosted within the site I visit. I don't want my browser touching 15 domains that all run scripts every time I visit a page. As long as ads compromise my privacy and security I will consider advertising networks the enemy and treat them accordingly.

  16. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by gijoel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And get rid of those fucking audio ads as well. I don't need some dick yelling at me about how to get free sex whilst I'm searching for Dora the explorer for a friends kid.

  17. Re:Hopefully, yes... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's more than that.

    Why the fuck should we accept being constantly tracked by dozens of analytic companies as a price of using the web?

    When there's 15 or 20 trackers in addition to ads in every page, the only reasonable response is to block the hell out of all of this crap.

    It's none of score card research's fucking business what sites I visit. Nor it it Facebook's business. Nor is it any of the dozens of other companies I've blocked with privacy extensions.

    This idea that self entitled corporations are entitled to all of this information about us is complete bullshit.

    In the real world it would be like a retailer implanting a tracking chip in you when you walked in the store.

    I don't care about anybody's damned analytics. And as much as I can, I'll block everything which isn't the content I'm there to see.

    The revenue model isn't my damned problem. My privacy is.

    And I'm not giving that away to some asshole marketer who wants to optimize his synergies.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  18. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by JonathanR · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Running NoScript; it boggles my mind how many domains are required to get some sites working (particularly MSM sites). Sometimes I just give up on trying to access the content.

  19. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by mlts · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What I find pathetic is that these companies, oftentimes the source of the most abusive and invasive software on the Internet, call themselves the victims when people just block their garbage.

    It has gotten so bad, that in the last 10 years, it is quite obvious that the #1 defense against malware on a computer is not a firewall, nor is it an AV program. It is an adblocking extension coupled with some form of click to play or NoScript. In fact, if a user doesn't run anything downloaded, adblock/noscript/updated browser/firewall is pretty much all they need for adequate security.

    Of course, iOS/Android tend to not be that better. Half the time, you find sites trying to shunt over to the App Store for some brain-dead F2P/P2W clone of Candy Crush or junk like that. Using Dolphin Browser on Android does help with this.

    The problem isn't the ads. Plain old static banner ads did work. Google text ads are useful. The actual problem is greed. The banner ads were replaced by tower ads, content was moved from one page and broken up into 5-30 pages. Hyperlinks were replaced by mouseovers. Even photos are broken up requiring 4-5 pages to see the entire pithy meme.

  20. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    See any retail industry. Anywhere.

    Quite frankly, if I go to a bookstore to get information about books and what I get is an employee who knows less about books than me and turns to her computer to search Amazon for recommendations... I can do that myself, thank you! I was hoping that I'd find somewhere there who, ya know, KNOWS a thing about the shit they sell?

    That's the whole point behind going into a specialized store instead of doing your shopping online. To talk with someone who knows MORE about the stuff than you do, or you could find out by using the internet. That is the whole point.

    But of course, people who actually know what they're doing cost more money, so what you get is people who sell you mattresses today, books tomorrow and in a week you see them flipping burgers.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  21. Re:Will Ad Blockers Kill the Digital Media Industr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dear Advertisers, Figure out how to do ads in a trustworthy way (i.e. no privacy invasive behavior tracking and little or no risk of malware exposure) and I'll be happy to allow those ads. I'd prefer the ads to be static HTML hosted within the site I visit. I don't want my browser touching 15 domains that all run scripts every time I visit a page. As long as ads compromise my privacy and security I will consider advertising networks the enemy and treat them accordingly.

    A co-worker asked which browser I used at home.
    Firefox I replied.
    Now many add-ons?
    About 30.
    Your favorite?
    Ad block plus.
    You know that's how the sites make money.
    I know.
    Why use it then?
    When the sites start paying a portion of my Internet bill for them using my bandwidth I'll quit using ad block.

    Nuff said.