It is fair. The market is driven by the actions of individuals. If you don't like something, don't buy it. Don't feel compelled to buy it because you feel bad for the guy.Jinjiro said:That's a fair point, but take it to the extreme. If everyone started using Tivo to skip ads, eventually advertisers would catch on, stop paying the studios and bam, no more content.stinkychops said:TV doesn;t ban you for using tivo does it?
Point won.
So until someone comes up with a genius idea that lets publishers get paid and consumers watch for free, some of us that watch adverts get to be the only ones who do, to make sure the advertisers pay for the content we enjoy, while others block them and enjoy the content for free anyway?
Jeez, that sounds fair.
I think a lot of people have been spoiled by the amount of free content on the web, and they forget that because of the commercial success of the Internet, that it's evolved into a media marketplace where people post their own intellectual properties as a service, NOT for free.
If you don't like malicious or even just annoying ads, don't watch them. It's not your responsibility to provide income to the provider...it's the provider's responsibility to innovate.
You don't owe them anything. They don't owe us anything...but they want money, and they need to do a song and dance to get it from us. Not the other way around.
Edit: I'm not opposed to advertisements on a fundamental level. I do actually like some ads because they make me aware of products and services that interest me (OMG like that's totally the purpose of an ad!)
I don't like irrelevant ads, hulu fixes this by having you rate the ads they show you.
I don't like annoying ads, the mute button fixes that.
I don't like ads malicious ads that strong-arm you into watching (like the guy below pointed out) or that give viruses and other goodies.
Adblock fixes that.