Jimquisition: The Adblock Episode

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Thanatos2k

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The excuses for ad blocking are getting flimsier and flimsier. Claiming you want "the best experience" is just a smokescreen for your own selfishness. Pirated games often have a "better experience" but that doesn't excuse you stealing them. It would be an "optimal experience" to just take my groceries straight out to the car without having to wait in a checkout line and pay but sometimes you just have to suffer a little so the world keeps working.

I've never gotten a virus from an ad, because I run anti virus programs and update my browsers and operating system. These aren't the days of ActiveX anymore.

If you use ad blockers, you are basically stealing from the sites you visit. Internet sites are not "free" - you "pay" by displaying ads.

If everyone ad blocked most sites on the internet would go out of business. That's how you know what you're doing is wrong.
 

KisaiTenshi

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Aardvaarkman said:
KisaiTenshi said:
Look this all comes back to "don't be an entitled jerk", nobody has presented a reasonable excuse for interfering with the content.
Except for the dozens of people who have done exactly that in this thread.

Like the fact that ads often contain malware and privacy-invading tracking mechanisms. And that the ads can crash your browser, or interfere with the viewing of content. And that they are frequently damn obtrusive.

And why does anybody need an "excuse" for doing it in the first place? Receiving data in the way that you want it is foundational to the concept and engineering of the internet. That's what enables blind people to have websites read out to them by a speech synthesizer, or allows websites to be reformatted to different sized screens and devices.
Ads almost never contain malware, and that is a result of the advertiser's network being poorly vetted, or in the case of ones we previously used, they themselves being hacked. Lots of ad networks are using openX, which has some pretty terrible security holes. This is not an excuse for you to interfere with the ads by default. This is something where the browsers "safebrowsing" hilariously inaccurate warnings prevents you from visiting the site with the ad in the first place. If the site gets blocked by google, then absolutely everyone gets blocked. Ad blocking or not. It takes less than 10 minutes for a site to get blacklisted by google and up to a week to get unblocked. Do you really think a site wants to lose a weeks worth of revenue by allowing malware on their site? Think again.

Don't excuse your entitled behavior by claiming ads are a hazard to your health.
 

Aardvaarkman

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Jul 14, 2011
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KisaiTenshi said:
Ads almost never contain malware, and that is a result of the advertiser's network being poorly vetted, or in the case of ones we previously used, they themselves being hacked.
"Almost never" is not never. And it's actually pretty common. Why is the advertiser's network being hacked an excuse? Every ad network is vulnerable to being hacked. So, why would you expose yourself to any more risk than necessary by exposing yourself to those networks?

KisaiTenshi said:
Lots of ad networks are using openX, which has some pretty terrible security holes.
That's a very good reason to block ads.

KisaiTenshi said:
This is not an excuse for you to interfere with the ads by default.
It's not an "excuse," it's an extremely good and valid reason.

KisaiTenshi said:
Do you really think a site wants to lose a weeks worth of revenue by allowing malware on their site? Think again.
Most don't have a choice, because the ads come from an ad network.

KisaiTenshi said:
Don't excuse your entitled behavior by claiming ads are a hazard to your health.
What entitled behaviour are you talking about? I pay a subscription to The Escapist.

Ads are a hazard to my computer's health. That's not an empty claim. That's the truth. Claiming that I have a sense of "entitlement" about this is an empty claim, because I do not. I am engaging in perfectly legal and legitimate transactions.

Isn't the idea that everybody has to watch ads so companies can receive revenue a sense of entitlement? Ad companies are not entitled to nobody blocking their ads.
 

Karadalis

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Thanatos2k said:
The excuses for ad blocking are getting flimsier and flimsier. Claiming you want "the best experience" is just a smokescreen for your own selfishness. Pirated games often have a "better experience" but that doesn't excuse you stealing them. It would be an "optimal experience" to just take my groceries straight out to the car without having to wait in a checkout line and pay but sometimes you just have to suffer a little so the world keeps working.

If you use ad blockers, you are basically stealing from the sites you visit. Internet sites are not "free" - you "pay" by displaying ads.

If everyone ad blocked most sites on the internet would go out of business. That's how you know what you're doing is wrong.
Sorry but i have to strongly disagree.

They upload the videos for everyone to see. Thats like standing in the middle of the street playing on your violin and accusing everyone that comes along and doesnt pay you of "stealing your music"

It only would be stealing if the videos and content where locked behind a paywall and someone pirated it, you know... like all of your comparisons? All the products you can only get if you actually pay for them? Instead of getting them for free? I mean if you watch TV... do you feel guilty when you switch channels during commercial break?

There is no stealing going on here, the content is in plain sight for everyone to see. How they get their money is not my problem but theirs. They choose to make the content available for everyone who comes along no strings attached.

Also you ignore that the Escapist is not above hosting adds for obvious scam companies that will gladly infect your PC with Malware to hold it hostage and extort money from you.

I said it once and i say it again: Aslong as the Escapist does not guarantee me that none of the adds it hosts are not harmfull for my PC i will not re enable auto play for flash elements.

I dont mind banners for "legit" products, services, and companies nor do i have a problem with whatever commercial plays before videos in the player, but i will not be guilt tripped into re enabling adds for scamsites and browser crashing flash crap.

As soon as the escapist gets rid of these and those ear shattering auto play vids ill gladly re enable auto play of flash elements for the site.
 

Aardvaarkman

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Jul 14, 2011
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Thanatos2k said:
If you use ad blockers, you are basically stealing from the sites you visit. Internet sites are not "free" - you "pay" by displaying ads.
No, it's not stealing. And if the method of payment is viewing ads, then maybe they should block viewers who use ad blockers? It's the sites' choice to serve content to people.

Thanatos2k said:
If everyone ad blocked most sites on the internet would go out of business. That's how you know what you're doing is wrong.
Why is that wrong? It's not my duty to keep business on the internet in business. Perhaps you can explain why I have any obligation in that matter?

I'd love it if advertising on the internet went out of business. Then we could return to the days when the internet was for non-commercial purposes only.
 

Thanatos2k

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Karadalis said:
Thanatos2k said:
The excuses for ad blocking are getting flimsier and flimsier. Claiming you want "the best experience" is just a smokescreen for your own selfishness. Pirated games often have a "better experience" but that doesn't excuse you stealing them. It would be an "optimal experience" to just take my groceries straight out to the car without having to wait in a checkout line and pay but sometimes you just have to suffer a little so the world keeps working.

If you use ad blockers, you are basically stealing from the sites you visit. Internet sites are not "free" - you "pay" by displaying ads.

If everyone ad blocked most sites on the internet would go out of business. That's how you know what you're doing is wrong.
Sorry but i have to strongly disagree.

They upload the videos for everyone to see. Thats like standing in the middle of the street playing on your violin and accusing everyone that comes along and doesnt pay you of "stealing your music"

It only would be stealing if the videos and content where locked behind a paywall and someone pirated it, you know... like all of your comparisons? All the products you can only get if you actually pay for them? Instead of getting them for free? I mean if you watch TV... do you feel guilty when you switch channels during commercial break?

There is no stealing going on here, the content is in plain sight for everyone to see. How they get their money is not my problem but theirs. They choose to make the content available for everyone who comes along no strings attached.

Also you ignore that the Escapist is not above hosting adds for obvious scam companies that will gladly infect your PC with Malware to hold it hostage and extort money from you.

I said it once and i say it again: Aslong as the Escapist does not guarantee me that none of the adds it hosts are not harmfull for my PC i will not re enable auto play for flash elements.

I dont mind banners for "legit" products, services, and companies nor do i have a problem with whatever commercial plays before videos in the player, but i will not be guilt tripped into re enabling adds for scamsites and browser crashing flash crap.

As soon as the escapist gets rid of these and those ear shattering auto play vids ill gladly re enable auto play of flash elements for the site.
It's not standing in the middle of a field - it's standing in the living room of their house which has an open door and a sign out front. You're not in a public place - you're on their site. I repeat - the internet is NOT a public place. For example, unlike a public place, you do not have freedom of speech on the internet. If you would like proof of this, start swearing at another user.

"Hosting ads from scam companies" is again no excuse. If you CLICK on the ads and go to a site that has mal ware, that's completely different from seeing an ad that MIGHT go to an unscrupulous site. No one is forcing you to click ads, and ads that auto load malware just by themselves are extraordinarily rare. (Again, the days of ActiveX are over)

The price of entry is to watch ads - all ads, not just the ones you think you deserve to watch.
 

KisaiTenshi

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Aardvaarkman said:
Isn't the idea that everybody has to watch ads so companies can receive revenue a sense of entitlement? Ad companies are not entitled to nobody blocking their ads.
Let's cover each point without making swiss cheese of the quotes:

I "Almost never" get sick, I don't order all my food, clothes and toilet paper online just so I can be a NEET and never get sick. "Never" doesn't exist.

OpenX was replaced by Revive http://www.revive-adserver.com/ , but it takes time for ad networks to upgrade, being hacked being the quickest reason to kill the existing openX installation.

Again, it's not an excuse to block the ads. You are in control of your device. We can always make it so that you can only use an iPad to view the site for free, and have to subscribe to view it on a desktop or android device. Why else do you think sites keep pushing their apps?

It doesn't matter if you subscribe to the escapist or not, there is more than one ad-sponsored website on the internet. If you aren't whitelisting the sites you visit, then you're the villain. Villains always think they are entitled to everything.

Your last statement is the most uneducated one. Of course companies feel entitled to being paid for content they produce, that is the entire point of the ads. Ad companies pay ad brokers to have their ads shown on sites that are part of whatever package they asked for. If those ads are being blocked, then the ad companies are more than happy to not have to pay for those views, because they aren't even being counted. Every ad you block, means that's one more ad someone else has to view before that ad disappears from the system if it's not set to expire.

The only people being harmed when you block ads, is the site, and the content producers of that site itself.
 

Thanatos2k

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Aardvaarkman said:
Thanatos2k said:
If you use ad blockers, you are basically stealing from the sites you visit. Internet sites are not "free" - you "pay" by displaying ads.
No, it's not stealing. And if the method of payment is viewing ads, then maybe they should block viewers who use ad blockers? It's the sites' choice to serve content to people.

Thanatos2k said:
If everyone ad blocked most sites on the internet would go out of business. That's how you know what you're doing is wrong.
Why is that wrong? It's not my duty to keep business on the internet in business. Perhaps you can explain why I have any obligation in that matter?

I'd love it if advertising on the internet went out of business. Then we could return to the days when the internet was for non-commercial purposes only.
It's coming. As more and more people adblock it's going to reach a breaking point. Up until now, sites have been scared to block people who use adblock from viewing their entire site because it would be bad PR and cause the usual uproars amongst the entitled on the internet.

Sites CAN detect who's blocking their ads and they CAN block you. We've almost reached the point where the sites will judge that it's not worth it anymore to support that portion of their viewers. And it's going to be a domino effect. Once someone big enough does it everyone will rush to follow.

I liken it to the IE6 situation. Every single site out there despised IE6, hated having to work 3x as much to get their site working in IE6, and all the bugs and insecurities inherent to it. But they bit the bullet, because a HUGE portion of the userbase on nearly every site on the internet was still using IE6. No one wants to dump 20%-50% of their entire userbase (which means 20%+ of your revenue) on principle, so people kept toiling away wasting time and money to keep sites working with IE6. But eventually they reached the magic point as IE6 use fell enough that sites finally said "Time to cut it off" and lots of sites all jumped on the bandwagon to not support IE6 (and IE7) anymore. Hell, even Microsoft is on board ( http://www.modern.ie/ie6countdown )

It's going to happen with the ad blockers, and it's even more prudent for companies to do it since ad blockers aren't even lost revenue. Just lost audience....

That's not an internet you're going to like, but you'll have no one to blame but yourself when it gets there. Who's going to pay for this magical non-commercial internet? The government? Is that REALLY what you want?
 

KisaiTenshi

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Thanatos2k said:
It's coming. As more and more people adblock it's going to reach a breaking point. Up until now, sites have been scared to block people who use adblock from viewing their entire site because it would be bad PR and cause the usual uproars amongst the entitled on the internet.

Sites CAN detect who's blocking their ads and they CAN block you. We've almost reached the point where the sites will judge that it's not worth it anymore to support that portion of their viewers. And it's going to be a domino effect. Once someone big enough does it everyone will rush to follow.
It's just a lever I can pull on my sites. We've tested some of it before and some readers are like "um i think the site is broken" when in fact it was intentionally designed to trip on blocked ads.

It's as simple as setting all the content's css to display:none, and flipping it off on domcontentready. If the ads don't show, neither does the site.
 

T_ConX

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Here's one reason you should whitelist game sites: it lets you know who is paying for that new game review. 'This review of Call of Duty 11 is brought to you by Call of Duty 11!' Thanks for the heads up GameSpot!

That said, I had to sit through two shitty ads for some unfunny TV sitcom called Spin On, or Spin Out or TailSpinWHATEVER, before the video even loaded. Clicking the mute button did nothing.

I tried Jim, I really did. I can stand the banner ads, League of Angels is always worth a chuckle, and for the captcha ads I can either refresh past or give a humorous response to (What word would I use to describe People Magazine? Genocidal!), but shit like that is just too much for a man.

Shouldn't The Escapist have some sort of power in deciding what ads get used? The site caters to a very technically literate demographic, one that's sure to turn ad-block on the moment they start hearing some unwanted audio being emitted from a page. I, and users like me, would be a little more reasonable on the ad-block if I knew I wasn't going to be assaulted by unfunny jokes just for opening a new tab.
 

Barbas

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Oct 28, 2013
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T_ConX said:
The site staff have a modicum of power over what advertisements are displayed, but ones that expand to obscure the page, or auto-play with sound, should be captured in a screenshot and reported to the Tech Team, so they can be replaced with ones less intrusive and annoying.
 

Thanatos2k

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Credossuck said:
I do not ad block, because seing which sites bombard me with adds is vital in telling me which sites never to visit again.
I hate adds that actively require me to remove them from the field of view.

Thats a 100% bye bye for that site.
That's what you should do. If you think the ads are so bad you don't want to visit the site, don't visit the site. It's a part and parcel experience.

You do NOT get to visit the site and pick and choose what you see to deprive the site of revenue. Either view the site with ads or not at all. Anything else is selfish entitlement. Do you slip in the back of the movie theater because you don't like how many trailers play before movies?
 

Aardvaarkman

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Jul 14, 2011
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Thanatos2k said:
It's not standing in the middle of a field - it's standing in the living room of their house which has an open door and a sign out front. You're not in a public place - you're on their site.
That's the exact opposite of how it works.

I am not "on" their site - they are sending the contents of their site to my computer. The analogy is much closer to them being in my living room than me being in theirs.

Thanatos2k said:
I repeat - the internet is NOT a public place. For example, unlike a public place, you do not have freedom of speech on the internet. If you would like proof of this, start swearing at another user.
Nonsense. That only applies if I make my speech on a third-party site where they publish what I write. If I run my own website, I absolutely am entitled to Freedom of Speech, and the First Amendment does apply to my website. Which is on the internet.

Thanatos2k said:
The price of entry is to watch ads - all ads, not just the ones you think you deserve to watch.
If that's the "price of entry" - then they shouldn't deliver any content until I have watched those ads.

Also, there is no obligation to watch the ads. I just typed an address into my browser. I did not agree to any contract to watch ads, nor enter into any contract of what I would receive when I entered that address.
 

Rect Pola

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I don't mind the ads, but I wish there was some bible of web advertising that kept the preload & midway videos at 15 seconds or include a skip button.
 

Aardvaarkman

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KisaiTenshi said:
Again, it's not an excuse to block the ads.
Again, you haven't explained why I need an excuse to block ads.

KisaiTenshi said:
We can always make it so that you can only use an iPad to view the site for free, and have to subscribe to view it on a desktop or android device.
Fine - go for it then. If ad blocking is costing you so much money that you're better off just serving content to subscribers via an App, then that's your business decision to make.

KisaiTenshi said:
It doesn't matter if you subscribe to the escapist or not, there is more than one ad-sponsored website on the internet.
Yes, and I visit very few of them. The vast majority of sites I visit regularly are ad-free.

KisaiTenshi said:
If you aren't whitelisting the sites you visit, then you're the villain. Villains always think they are entitled to everything.
The villain? That would imply that there is some crime involved. Since when was blocking ads a crime?

KisaiTenshi said:
Your last statement is the most uneducated one. Of course companies feel entitled to being paid for content they produce, that is the entire point of the ads.
So, how is it uneducated? I said the companies felt a sense of entitlement by running ads. You agree. So, what am I uneducated about?

KisaiTenshi said:
Ad companies pay ad brokers to have their ads shown on sites that are part of whatever package they asked for. If those ads are being blocked, then the ad companies are more than happy to not have to pay for those views, because they aren't even being counted. Every ad you block, means that's one more ad someone else has to view before that ad disappears from the system if it's not set to expire.
And how is that my problem? These companies are not entitled to my ad views or money, even if they may feel they are.

KisaiTenshi said:
The only people being harmed when you block ads, is the site, and the content producers of that site itself.
And the malware writers who distribute their malware via ads. And the ad agencies. And the publishers.

Also, "harm" is not really the right word. I'm not actually causing any harm. The only damage is to their misguided expectation that everybody will watch the ads. They have no predestined right to a particular amount of ad income.
 

Aardvaarkman

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Thanatos2k said:
Sites CAN detect who's blocking their ads and they CAN block you. We've almost reached the point where the sites will judge that it's not worth it anymore to support that portion of their viewers. And it's going to be a domino effect. Once someone big enough does it everyone will rush to follow.
Fantastic! I'd love to see that.

But I really doubt it's going to happen, because despite ad blocking, blocking ad blockers would likely be more detrimental to their business.

Thanatos2k said:
That's not an internet you're going to like, but you'll have no one to blame but yourself when it gets there. Who's going to pay for this magical non-commercial internet? The government? Is that REALLY what you want?
Absolutely.

I was on the internet back when it was not-for-profit in the early 90s, and nobody ran ads. It was largely run by Universities, research institutions and government funding as well as users funding their own systems. Before being taken over by greedy corporations. It was so much more interesting back then.

As for who's going to pay? We can just run our own server like we used to, and pay for it ourselves, rather than handing control of the internet to corporate interests. The current model is just terrible, where nobody wants to pay, but uses this proxy of advertising and privacy invasion to get a magical "free" internet.

The model I like is much less "magical" than the current one, actually. People running their own network nodes is much more direct than this bizarre and unsustainable model of advertisers paying for everything so people can get their "free" Facebook.
 

faefrost

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KisaiTenshi said:
Thanatos2k said:
It's coming. As more and more people adblock it's going to reach a breaking point. Up until now, sites have been scared to block people who use adblock from viewing their entire site because it would be bad PR and cause the usual uproars amongst the entitled on the internet.

Sites CAN detect who's blocking their ads and they CAN block you. We've almost reached the point where the sites will judge that it's not worth it anymore to support that portion of their viewers. And it's going to be a domino effect. Once someone big enough does it everyone will rush to follow.
It's just a lever I can pull on my sites. We've tested some of it before and some readers are like "um i think the site is broken" when in fact it was intentionally designed to trip on blocked ads.

It's as simple as setting all the content's css to display:none, and flipping it off on domcontentready. If the ads don't show, neither does the site.
And you will wash out your sites inside of 4 months the moment you do that. I hate to put it this way. But the moment a site such as the escapist takes an aggressive stance against their consumers in this regard, their entire user base will abandon them instantly. You know this, I know this. Anybody familiar with gamers, gamer culture and the gaming community knows this. Gamers are easy to anger, notoriously unforgiving. If you are making a return off of this community you must by definitions be playing a percentage game. And you will find that it is much better to ask for support and let them understand the problem, then to put any sort of ad based paywall in place. Because that's what that is. You must open the doors to accept my spam, potentially malicious code, unwanted invasive crap in lieu of payment.

And before you tell me that nono ads are perfectly safe these days and other such fecal matter, 2 things, go up a few pages and note the nice gentleman complaining about the in video ads. Notice the one critical element. "He could not mute his sound". The ad had seized control of a portion of his personal system in order to deliver itself. THAT IS NOT ACCEPTABLE!!! THAT IS IN FACT MALICIOUS CODE!!! The second is you obviously work for ad deliverers and understand the back end. Its quite possible you work for a large reputable network that is secure and is not run by eastern european mobsters. Good for you. Unfortunately you are in the minority. I spend my days cleaning up after those that aren't so nice. And let me tell you, they are constant, they are relentless, they are malicious, and they can show up on pretty much every ad supported site I have ever seen.

Now Jim has done this the right way. He has asked his user base to permit ads. he has explained why. His user base has countered that pretty much universally they have no real problems with advertising so long as certain very clear guarantees are put in place. This is once again quite reasonable by both parties. There is no theft here. But the moment a site attempts to move to a forced ad model, well they have just made a choice between their users, their community, their actual customers and their ad service. And the customers as a whole react very very badly to that sort of thing. Unless you are youtube that little experiment will be bad and short lived. And I hope anyone that is paying you for advise in those directions realizes how badly they are spending their money.
 

Aardvaarkman

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KisaiTenshi said:
It's just a lever I can pull on my sites. We've tested some of it before and some readers are like "um i think the site is broken" when in fact it was intentionally designed to trip on blocked ads.

It's as simple as setting all the content's css to display:none, and flipping it off on domcontentready. If the ads don't show, neither does the site.
Please. Do it.

You seem to be writing this as if it's something we should be worried about. I don't care. Do it.
 

bimon_1234567

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I actually prefer "sponsored by" messages that are part of the content to any sort of "dynamic" external advertising. They also have a zero chance of infecting your computer with malware.