New Online Ad Technology To Bypass Popup Blockers 661
RetroGeek writes "Falk eSolutions AG is claiming it can detect and defeat pop-up and pop-under ad blockers. The best quote is that when they detect an ad blocker they will 'replace a pop-up or pop-under ad with what are called "floating" ads, or ads that appear as transparent images over Web-site content.' As far as I am concerned they can place as many transparent images as they want. He probably meant translucent. It should be easy to defeat the detection, after all visit a web site, the pop-up blocker detects a Javascript command, then doesn't run it. Replace this with: the pop-up blocker detects the Javascript command, runs it, then places the result into a bit-bucket. Any Mozilla devs here?" WebGangsta adds "While this may ignite another round of online advertising purchasing, this news doesn't affect anybody who uses a customized HOSTS file to stop the majority of ads from appearing anyway."
Wake me up (Score:3, Funny)
why (Score:5, Insightful)
using these popup blockers have said they don't want them, to try to
defeat them is only going to make many users hate you, and your product
I would see that if it is a legit company they just might see their sales
drop from the angry net users. For those who have not disabled javascript
this just might be the nail that gets them to disable it.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:why (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually a lot of spammers are middlemen, they make money wether a product sells or not, they work as advertisers and get paid by the people selling the product. What they rely on is the percecption that "spam works", so people will hire them to do spam campaigns.
Spammers make profits without making a sale [washtimes.com]
Re:why (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:why (Score:5, Funny)
Re:why (Score:5, Informative)
Once upon a time, PPI was the only way banners worked.
PPI is somewhat trivial to scam; have the image 50 times as a 1x1px image, tricking users to see it, etc etc etc.
Pay Per Click came next, and is still how "search engines" such as Oveture make money. But not used very much outside PPC search engines. Payments used to be noted with the search results, but I cant find any right now. "Casino" usually paid >$19.00 per click; usually was around 2-3c per click.
Most banner adds, these days, are Pay Per Lead, or Pay Per Sale. Cookies stay around for at least a couple of months, so the "proper" person is credited. half.com (part of eBay) was paying $5/per lead at one point.
Actual product providers (be it membership sites, or physcial goods) are notorious for not paying out for anything but PPL or PPS... The excuse being "bad ratios" Of course, they don't tell you what the required ratio is.
Anyone who has a PPI setup, and is honest about payments, would quickly go out of business.
Re:why (Score:3, Informative)
eBay is still paying $5/lead ... and that's the bottom of the scale. According to affiliates.ebay.com [ebay.com], they pay up to $16 per active registration. Obviously, there are a lot of people that do this professionally if one affiliate earned $1.3M in one month [ebay.com]. You didn't think that all those eBay's
Re:why (Score:3, Funny)
Except (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:why (Score:3, Insightful)
There is no reason to have an ad on a p
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, dude, that is an AWESOME idea! There's this whole space at the bottom of most remotes, where the heel of your hand usually goes, that is just blank except for the company logo. Put a little LCD screen down there, beam ads straight to it, and we'll make a fortune!
Seriously, there is nowhere they won't put ads these days. The bathroom, your credit card statement, the bucket your popcorn comes in at the movie... any space that people see has a price. Now DON'T GIVE THEM ANY NEW IDEAS.
because (Score:5, Informative)
This is a problem with technologies that allow your ad to be delivered to millions of people cheaply. If even a tiny fraction of people respond, it won't matter that you annoyed the hell out of the other 99%.
Re:because (Score:5, Informative)
the thing is designed to get people started, work for few weeks, a month at the most and some very rare sellers staying for longer than that(some people just have a good voice), and then to quit. so the usual caller is _supposed_(in their business plan) to make few sales and then to quit.
so in reality basically telemarketing isn't really profitable(for most of the persons involved in it), it's just driven through something that is in effect a scam to lure young, inexperienced, desperate stupid people to make phonecalls to people for few weeks without pay. Mainly because of this in my opinion telemarketing as such should be totally banned or at the minimum have a law that would state that you can't hire people to do it on provisional pay.
Re:because (Score:3, Interesting)
ONE person made the promised "$700 a week".
ONE person made about $100 for the week.
All the rest (about 30) made $40 for the week.
Mind you, that was a 40 hour week.
I vaguely recall that some states require that commission w
Re:because (Score:5, Interesting)
On a side note, that is the only job i have ever left hanging. One saturday I woke up and realized I just couldn't be that guy any longer. So I just turned over and went to sleep. They treated us like children so I had no feeling of responisiblity to them as I did to other jobs i have had.
we were calling for donations to a hospital. our script had us start out asking for 2 grand and work our way down. my two favorite calls:
1. one lady told me that if I paid for her divorce, she would donate the 2k
2. One guy said he wasn't interested. I asked why? Poor service (this was a hospital remember). Not for him but for his wife. Oh really, I say, what happened? Well, she died. I could understand him not really being interested in giving the hospital that killed his wife a donation so I quickly got off the phone. Apparently the bosses were listening in on that one and told me not to let them off so easily but to continue to press harder. In fact, I think that was the last shift I completed.
Re:because (Score:5, Insightful)
But it should matter to the owner of the medium, because after all, ads can't exist without a medium to run on. Pissing off 99% of their users is not generally desirable for most web site owners, so I am not sure if this is going to fly. At the same time as pop-up blockers have become popular, site owners have realized they're actually hurting their own business by hosting them. No, not every site, and pop-ups do still exist (though as a Firefox user you can forgive me if I don't know this from experience), but there have been plenty of high-profile companies that have sworn them off recently. Even AOL's cutting back.
I think that's what's getting lost in all this. Advertisers are still at the mercy of the site owners, not the other way around (despite the bad economy... it only makes things worse to piss off your users). I doubt you'll ever see this technology used on a major commercial site; it'll probably be relegated to the internet red light district where most pop-ups seem to be served up these days to begin with.
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
If the people who are working on this actually cared about offending people, they wouldn't be working in marketing.
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
marketing is a career that one chooses once one has graduated college and realizes one has no other skills companies want
I dislike these arguments of moral superiority, which lend greater importance to these issues than they truly warrant. You are being annoyed by pop-up ads, not seriously harmed. You are free to avoid any site that uses them.
I don't think it follows that needing a salary so that one can feed one's family is equivalent to being morally challenged. I'm not sure if you have children or not. But if you did, would it be moral of you to turn down a marketing job in a tough economy?
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
If you had morals, you would realize that the ends do not justify the means. Just because your children are hungry does not automatically give you carte blanch to set your moral aside. In fact doing so only proves you never had any morals to put aside.
Character means you find a way to feed your children without being immoral or unethical. Saying there is a tough economy and you had no choice just shows the quality of your character.
What a man does with his life is not nearly as important as how he does it.
Re:why (Score:4, Insightful)
I simply don't believe that causing minor annoyances should be declared immoral. Immorality is a weighty word that should not be overused.
Re:why (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm a fan of directed advertising. I don't mind sites knowing my purchasing tastes if that means I don't get ads for pointless stuff I'd never buy. Ads for things I actually might like are much less annoying than wasting my time with ads that flood the market looking for those few people here and there that might be int
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
Get over yourself (Score:5, Informative)
I happen to work in a bio lab and actually like it when the sales reps come by. I need their stuff and they're constantly filling me in on their new products. The new RNAi stuff that these companies are coming up with make my life a hundred times easier. The sales reps are knowledgeable about them and don't feed me bull about what they can do, but give me the facts.
There are also tons of moral ad guys who do pro bono work for good causes. I know a marketing guy who does pro bono work for a local wild-life rehabilitation center. That's a pretty sweet deal for the non-profit conservancy.
So stop being so fucking ignorant and realize that not all marketers are out to dupe and harass people.
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
Marketing is an industry built to make you want things you didn't previously want. There are two types of things you don't want: things you know about and don't want, and things you don't know about yet but might or might not want. Marketing both brings products you did not know about to your attention and tries to convince you that you want them.
It can be done well or poorly. Probably 30-40% of the calls we get on our home phone are telemarketing of one kind or another (though we get substantially fewer since we opted out of long-distance service all together, so we don't have AT&T calling to try to sell us their local service and SBC calling to try to sell us their long-distance service in alternate weeks). There are telemarketers who call knowing that they're trying to sell you something and that you might already know you don't want it, and there are those who just don't know the difference. Lately, I've had pretty good success at ending calls quickly and painlessly by making it clear that I know about the product and don't want it. i.e. "Hi, my name is [name] and I'm calling from the Los Angeles Times--" "Hi. We don't want the paper. Not even just on Sundays. We get all our news from the internet. Save a tree." "Ok, thank you, have a good day."
If there were no marketing, you probably wouldn't own half the stuff you do. Marketing departments send demos of new products to places that publish the reviews you may read when deciding what to buy. They place ads in the Yellow Pages. There are a lot of methods of marketing that don't fall into the narrow definition you gave above... in fact, *most* marketing is non-intrusive; you just haven't noticed it. (By design.)
Now, I have wondered what the effect on our economy would be if there were no more advertising. Television would all be public or by subscription. All entertainment would be more expensive. On the other hand, many products would cost a lot less, because they currently have such huge advertising budgets. I truly wonder if a significant proportion of the wealth in our economy is *created* by the existence of advertising, and I speculate that some of our economic growth is dependent on innovations in advertising (hey, we can sell ads in public restrooms!)
But marketing is not inherently an unethical business. It's easy to do it that way, of course. But the same is true of freelance computer support, health care, legal assistance... almost any service.
Re:why (Score:3, Insightful)
Point well taken. I tend to think that American society (and most of Western society, but we're the worst) is way too caught up in consumerism. It's damaging on many levels.
But anyone who does own plenty of stuff and claims to disdain all marketing is blind to the effects marketing has on them... which is, IMO, even worse.
I can watch a commercial, and at the end, know whether the commercial had a positive, negative, or neutral effect on me. I'm aware of whether o
Re:why (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah we would all prefer TV without commercials but we have them and they influence some people enough to make them worth buying. Its the same with web ads.
I personally dont block any ads except pop-ups, they dont bother me that much and I understand that sites need ads the generate revenue. If I was on dial-up though I would be blocking left and right.
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
For the large, reponsible companies-- brands 80% of the population of your home state would recognize-- of course not. But for Fly-By-Night-Porn.com and other tiny web companies which would otherwise get zero business, even a minimal response rate from those getting the ad can be well worthwhile, even if the other 99.999% of the people seeing the ad swear up and down they "will NEVER do business with those #$%^ing @#$%^&*s so long as they exist". And they can always change names [infoworld.com] if the original company name gets tarnished.
Do you watch television? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you could choose, would you choose to have the commercials disabled? Of course you would.
With this reasoning advertisers can safely assume that even annoying ads pay off.
Re:Do you watch television? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course i am - i make sure never to buy anything for which i can remember a commercial.
Re:why (Score:5, Informative)
The truth is, popup ads have about 10-20 times as high a clickthrough rate as regular banners do (even flash banners) - so the companies will keep paying for them. Where there is a will and a lot of money, there is a way.
If popups become ignored (as you propose, as opposed to being simply blocked) on a significantly large scale (doubt it will happen though), ad companies will not even attempt to show popups, but jump straight to DIV layer ads, so you're not really going to ever solve this problem permanently.
However, consider that Mozilla has had blocking for a couple of years now, and the ad industry didn't really do anything about it. It's not until Yahoo and Google (and soon MS) got in on the action that they started to get worried and started coming up with circumvention techniques. The truth is that Mozilla is currently not a big enough market for the companies to worry about. In fact, most current implementations of floating DIV ads leave mozilla users alone.
Don't expect this privilege to continue if our little underdog of a browser earns any significant market share.
click throughs (Score:5, Informative)
some are priced by impressions, so I might pay for 700K downloads of my ad image.
Some are priced by click-throughs so I might pay for a 100K clicks.
Some are paid by a commission on sales generated durring the visit after a click-through.
There is advantages to each as well as disadvantages no matter which side of the fence your on. Few people realy object to seeing well targeted, tastefull ads, almost everyone objects to tacky, intrusive shot-guns ads.
Re:why (Score:5, Informative)
As a webmaster, let me assure you that the percentage of the web audience who have disabled javascript (or in fact knows how to do so), is so insignificant that it's not worth talking about.
Again, it's not people who run mozilla or paid $29.99 for an IE blocker that this measure is targeting. These people hadly make up 10% of the web users... The reason ad companies are scrambling now to circumvent blockers is because the two largest toolbars now provide them, and soon so will the most popular web browser.
Re:why (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:why (Score:5, Insightful)
So one ad busting proxy can protect thousands of people from ads all day
These guys missed the boat. (Score:5, Insightful)
These people are trying to serve ads to people actively trying to block them. Oh yeah, that's brilliant.
You're missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Kjella
Re:These guys missed the boat. (Score:5, Funny)
Will I pay to renew in a couple years? Hell no. Will I click another banner ad to do so for free? Oh yeah.
Re:These guys missed the boat. (Score:3, Interesting)
And fine address labels they are. Their mistake was sending such a large roll. It's now 2004 and we're still using those same labels.
Re:These guys missed the boat. (Score:4, Funny)
And they're still selling your same address...
Re:These guys missed the boat. (Score:3, Informative)
Is this really a problem? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Is this really a problem? (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is this really a problem? (Score:5, Informative)
This is too easy (Score:5, Interesting)
Every time I see a pop-up that defeats my pop-up blocking, first I'll for damned sure never buy that product. In addition, I will never go to the hosting website again. And I'll make damned sure they know why.
There is no topic on the internet that can be served by only one site.
Re:This is too easy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is too easy (Score:3, Insightful)
I've done that, but more often I reconfigure my blocker. I use Proxomitron to block both ads and pop-ups. It uses regular expressions, so it only takes me a few minutes to come up with a new rule for the website. I don't mind simple ads, but animations drive me nuts.
Some websites don't work with
ho-hum (Score:5, Informative)
They're likely talking about layers.. which is something that Adblock [slashdot.org] already deals with. (along with Flash, images and custom paths - i.e. block anything in the directory */ads/*).
Just another reason to use Firefox/Mozilla.
Re:ho-hum (Score:5, Funny)
For a moment I thought you were linking to some great new software that stopped lawyers ... now THAT'd be a great new product!
Re:ho-hum (Score:5, Funny)
Re:ho-hum (Score:3, Informative)
Just like the old saying (Score:5, Funny)
Here's an example... (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's an example of this style of anti-popup-blocker advertisement. This site, which is very useful by the way, will not "work" if javascript is not enable or ads are not shown.
I haven't tested this in other browsers, but this system is pretty neat (awful?)... it changes itself so its hard to detect the functions and block them.
Not awful...They have the right idea. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds to me like they're taking a good approach. They're not attempting to circumvent anyone's ad-blocking software--anyone who doesn't want to see their ads, doesn't have to.
But they're providing a valuable service, and they deserve to be compensated. If you don't want to pay for it by letting them display their banner ads, then you don't get to use their site.
Salon (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, I'm not going to futz with my pop-up blocker settings trying to get a site to work. If a site refuses to load, I
Re:Here's an example... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Here's an example... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's an example... (Score:4, Informative)
The user-agent string seems to be a very bad hack. IE calls itself mozilla because it was forced to do so years ago, largely to keep stupidly-designed websites from automatically rejecting its connection attempts. But it still wanted to make itself known as IE, so it appended things in brackets that most stupidly-designed web sites didn't bother looking at.
Jump ahead a few years, and we have the same thing happening with Opera. It pretends to be IE (pretending to be mozilla), but adds its own signature after the end of the brackets, where modern stupidly-designed websites don't bother to look. My guess is that most scripts just stop parsing the user agent string once they hit the last bracket. The website referred to here looks at the whole thing because it's outright malicious and wants to "punish" opera users.
Re:Here's an example... (Score:3, Interesting)
I absolutely love The Proxomitron. I have an Excite portal page, that started redirecting me towards a whine/moan screen because I was blocking certain JavaScripts. Easily solved: found the redirect tag in the source of the portal page, and added a rule in Proxomitron
Re:Here's an example...(Alternatives) (Score:5, Informative)
As said before, there will always be alternatives that don't do such things. Boycott the ones who do.
Interesting, technique, but not foolproof. (Score:5, Insightful)
It can't actually detect if an ad was replaced by a blank image by a proxy server, but it'll know if the ad is the wrong size.
Solution? More sophisticated ad blockers should attempt to match image size to a URL pattern by fetching it a few times and seeing what it gets back. Then it should autogenerate the replacement content with that size.
Re:Here's an example... (Score:3, Funny)
DMCA? (Score:5, Interesting)
When will they figure it out? (Score:3, Interesting)
Even the spammers are smart enough to figure that one out. I've received about a spam a month since I changed my domain registration email address from "domains@" to "domspam@". Before I changed over, I was receiving one or two dozen a day, even though most bounced when the account's purposely low quota filled up.
I guess popup blockers have become too easy to use. Now that my mother-in-law, queen of "click anything", can install it, the spamvertizers have to find another way to infiltrate her system.
I'm looking forward to a future release of Opera [opera.com] with "pop-in blocking" built in.
Handy ad fighting URLs (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.mozilla.org/ [mozilla.org]
http://toolbar.google.com [google.com] (If you use IE)
Replacement HOSTS file:
http://www.everythingisnt.com/hosts.html [everythingisnt.com]
Tiny HTTP Server to respond to all those HOSTS entries:
http://www.pyrenean.com/edexter.php [pyrenean.com]
Flash Remover:
http://download.macromedia.com/pub/flash/ts/flash
http://flashblock.mozdev.org/ [mozdev.org] (for Mozilla)
Re:Handy ad fighting URLs (Score:3, Interesting)
Enjoy
My suggestion: (Score:5, Interesting)
There are several ways to avoid ads (Score:5, Informative)
2) "Block images from this server" -- blanket nuking.
These are the "extensions" to mozilla and firefox that are very powerful
3) Adblock -- block images based on a URL pattern. Very powerful and easy to specify what to block.
4) Flash block -- block flash elements (even something like flash click to view)
5) Nuke Anything -- if something comes up on your screen, you can remove it "after the fact". For example, if you want to read an interesting article on some celebrity with a stupid image, you can remove the image very easily using this.
At the end of the day, the end user should be able to see what he/she wants to read and view. If the sites persist in doing annoying things or refuse to serve some pages to people that have an advanced browser, I believe it is better to avoid those pages.
S
notepad (Score:4, Interesting)
The amorality of direct marketing (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet they do it anyway! Remarkably obtuse people. Of course, I know the reason for it. It's all about eyeballs and the more they can prove they are shoving their stuff in front of more eyeballs, the more money they get. That's why this is so amoral: They don't care how anyone reacts, or that that are despised, or that it causes business problems for the advertisers. They just want mo' money, and that's the end of their thought process.
Buh bye, new technology. It won't work. I will defeat it. I will refuse to view ads on the Web. Don't yammer at me with the tired old whine, "But how else are I gonna pay for my web siiiiiiite?" I dunno, Sparky, figure something else out. I will never allow advertising on my web site. It doesn't belong on the Web.
The Web is about people to people communiciation. Just because a bunch of greedheads decided to use it to make money doesn't subvert the purpose of the Web. As for the endless war against pop-ups: They lose. Every time.
transparent vs. translucent (Score:5, Informative)
A tinted window is still transparent, but the windows in public restrooms are generally translucent.
You bunch of whiners (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You bunch of whiners (Score:5, Interesting)
When Advertisments start to deter a user from surfing the web, you know it's gone too far. yes, sometimes the ads are nice and you're actually looking for them, but generally, they're obnoxiours and rude. Salon, I think, has a good idea on how to handle things. I don't have time to really read much news online, so I don't subscrube to them. I do however go through their 1-ad view for a free-day-pass when there is 1 article that someone has sent me.
I will bitch and bitch and then bitch some more when I am bombarded with ads. I hate them when I pay 11$ to see a movie and I'm forced to see commercials, and I hate them when I pay money to go to a website (hey, access to the internet does cost money and image ads are a b/w hog).
Re:You bunch of whiners (Score:3, Interesting)
Company's web site (Score:4, Funny)
Hah, I use Links (Score:3, Funny)
Real solution (Score:3, Insightful)
I say let those sites that want to cater to sheep serve up as much as they want and get paid by advertisers to ignore the desires of their readers. I will get my data from sites that listen to their readers over their advertisers. (Reminds me of www.techreport.com which once had an advertiser whose animated image seriously sucked system resources. Readers posted complaints and the advertiser was asked to revise the image. Win/Win because the readers got a simple unobtrusive ad, the site got the advertising cash flow, and the advertiser adjusted to something that actually appealed to those readers who might be interested).
Do not worry (Score:3, Interesting)
JS IRNOR.M anyone? Really nasty malware I found on my system that NAV and others could not detect. It uses HTML and Javascript to install itself from a web page. Lookt2me was another one, the latest version could not be removed, it did pop-ups and destroyed my TCP/IP stack after I removed it. Forcing a reinstall of the OS.
You really want to get rid of pop-ups forever? Reformat the hard drive, install Linux and Mozilla/Firefox and avoid sites that require IE or Windows in order to work.
Banner Blocking Manifesto (Score:5, Interesting)
"Banner Blocking Detected You have been brought to this page because it was detected that your web browser, software on your computer or some other event is preventing some or all of our banner ads from being displayed on our pages correctly. If you are not using a utility to block banners, you may have been inadvertently brought here because a banner image did not load correctly. Please make sure you have enabled images and disable any ad blocking software then try again.
If you sincerely want a banner free experience on our site and are willing to help support our efforts directly, we do offer a paid subscription option. This option is especially useful for educators who would like to use our site in their classroom without the distractions banner ads create.
Banner Blocking Manifesto
We understand that you may find banner advertising annoying. This website, however, is not sponsored or produced by some faceless rich corporation or public entity. This site is the product of the hard labor of one individual and his family. Producing and delivering the content on this site is expensive. If we are to continue to make the resources on this website available to individuals like yourself free of charge, we must be allowed to use banner advertising as a means of paying the costs of maintaining this website.
The relationship between the web content provider (in this case us) and the content consumer (you) must be a symbiotic relationship. If small web publishers like us are to continue to be able to provide access to useful information free of charge, we must get something in return. In this case it is the ability to display and earn revenue off of banner advertising.
Kenneth Barbalace
Creator of EnvironmentalChemistry.com
How to Disable Ad Blocking Software
There are scores programs and services on the market that offer banner ad blocking abilities. As such we will only focus on a few of the most common programs.
Symantec Norton Internet Security: If you are using Symantec's "Norton Internet Security" software, banner blocking may have been turned on without your knowledge. You can turn off ad blocking in Symantec NIS by opening Norton Internet Security. In the main window, double-click Ad Blocking and then uncheck "Ad Blocking".
ZoneAlarm Pro firewall: If you are using the firewall ZoneAlarm pro, you can turn off ad blocking under the tab "Privacy" and then slide the "Ad Blocking" control to the off position.
AdSubtract: If you ar using AdSubtract, right mouse click on the AdSubtract icon in your task tray (looks like an orange circle with a plus and minus sign) and select "Disable AdSubtract".
WebWasher: If you are using WebWasher, right mouse click on the WebWasher icon in your task tray (looks like a blue circle with a white "W" and then select "Deactivate standard filter".
Related Resources TechTV - Rage Against the Ad-Blocking Machines [environmen...mistry.com]
"Ask SlashDot" article [environmen...mistry.com]
Steal this Site" [environmen...mistry.com]
Customized HOSTS vs. "Blocked sites" (Score:3, Interesting)
I wish there was something similiar in Firefox [mozilla.org]! My employeer's virus scanner (McAfee [mcafee.com]) can restrict sites by IP address or URL.
A problem is that these days, some web sites (SlickDeals.net [slickdeals.net]) are doing some things that causes valid pages to fail to load because of my "blocked sites". I usually get a "Cannot find server or DNS Error" because I've blocked various ad sites.
Timothy, thanks for linking to my blog, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Collateral damage from all these "blockers" (Score:5, Interesting)
With each measure people take to block the popups and other types of advertisement, they also end up blocking content and applications that they need.
Once, people thought the browser will become the "application environment". The latest W3C inventions makes that more viable every day. But, now look what we've _removed_ from the environment:
1) Dialog Boxes: Gone. You can usually still use a javascript alert, but you can't prompt the user with a dialog box anymore, a primitive UI component.
2) Random things broken: "Adblock" css and stuff like that, which blocks images and iframes when the relative path to those things starts with "ad"? So, if slashdot's preferences were called "adjustments", that would get killed.
Sure, people can sometimes turn these things off, but more and more often, people are having these things installed without even knowing they're there (like millions will when XP SP 2 comes out).
This whole situation is rapidly making the web a much less hospitable environment for applications.
Re:Collateral damage from all these "blockers" (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem is the mentality that "by Jove, I have a sacred _right_ to make a profit. No matter who or what gets killed in the process."
In the early days of the web you'd have one banner per site. A simple
It went downhill from there because of greedy fucks on _both_ sites. Greedy fucks as site owners trying to shaft the ad providers, and greedy fucks as ad providers trying to shaft everyone else. People who thought they have a sacred right to make money, no matter what collateral damage they cause. People who treated the web like the 16'th century buccaneers treated the shipping lanes: not as a useful infrastructure for everyone, but as something to plunder and rape for your own benefit.
And again, I'm not blaming just the ad providers. The site owners are as guilty, if not more. The whole dot-com crap was _based_ on the idea that "ooh, look how much they pay per ad. Let's make a site with 20+ ads per page, and rake in the big dough." Guess what, Einstein? Those rates were not calculated for that.
The plan ammounted to no less than "let's cheat the ad provider out of some money we don't deserve, and then cheat the VCs out of even more money we don't deserve." But that's ok. Only a moron would think of morals, when lining one's pcokets is at stake, right?
And from there it's been a downwards spiral of death and destruction. A race to shaft each other. A race where the site owners became more and more desperate to get money for nothing, no matter how imoral the means, and where the ad providers became more and more obnoxious to actually sell something for those money.
They thought they had a _right_ to make a sale, even if they have to kill you for it. Pop-ups, pop-unders, 500k flash animations, etc. Nothing was too much, if it could make a buck.
And noone thought of the collateral damage they're causing to the internet or to the people using it. Well, now those people are just trying to defend themselves from this crap barrage. And it seems supremely hypocritical to now blame the collateral damage on them, instead of on the greedy fucks who made popup blockers needed in the first place.
LMHOSTS (Score:3, Informative)
Since mozilla displays its connection errors in modal windows instead of showing error placeholders like IE, i can't use a modified lmhosts.
Please vote for bug 28586 [mozilla.org] to get this fixed
I have no problem with this. (Score:4, Insightful)
A popup ad requires you to first, close the window to see the web page, or for that matter ANYTHING that may have been underneath it on your desktop. These can also appear in such rapid succession that you have no access to your computer for several seconds as you frustratingly try to close them all.
However, a transparent pop-up embedded in the webpage itself is not as much of a problem. It is contained within the browser window, so there is a clear seperation between the website, and anything else on your computer's desktop.
If you don't like website's that use advertising that's fine. Avoid them, or find some Mozilla tool to block them. For most people however, this is much less obtrusive than standard IE popups.
another great hosts file (Score:5, Informative)
So, did they miss the big hint? (Score:3, Insightful)
DMCA Invocation (Score:4, Funny)
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3, Informative)
Banner Ad Blocking [everythingisnt.com]
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't touch the Hosts file.
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:5, Informative)
It's only a hog because of the "DNS client" service on win2k and winXP. If you disable the DNS client, everything goes back to normal. The DNS client service caches DNS requests to DNS servers. Win2k and winXP work fine without it.
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3, Funny)
What surprised me is that Slashdot, on it's front page, advertized a host file that specifically blocks the ads on slashdot. (ads.osdn.com, etc.)
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3)
I contemplated blocking the ads initially, but after a while I noticed that the ads were of interest to me and I actually went and got stuff through the click-throughs.
And now, am a subscriber - but even so, I have a minimal amount of ads disabled simply because I like the ads, and they are useful to me.
The folks at Slashdot know this too, and the way they see it is that if they provided good, rele
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:5, Interesting)
Rather than messing with hosts, use a custom style sheet. I know Safari on OS X supports this. I'm guess most modern browsers do as well (maybe not MSIE).
Here's mine.
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, it can. It depends what you put on your customized stylesheet.
Some people want to get a completely ad free web experience. Others, feel guilty about it, and don't want to get rid of the ads to show their support to the site, but want to make them less annoying.
iframe[width="468"][height="60"], a img[width="468"][height="60"]
{ -moz-outline: medium dashed red; -moz-opacity: 10%; }
468x80 images and iframes are downloaded and displayed, but they are 90% translucent and are outlined by a big red dash.
iframe[width="468"][height="60"], a img[width="468"][height="60"]
{ visibility: hidden !important; }
Banners & iframes are downloaded but not displayed.
iframe[width="468"][height="60"], a img[width="468"][height="60"]
{ display: none !important; }
Banners and iframes are neither downloaded nor displayed.
This site [aagh.net] provides a sample antibanner stylesheet, as well as instructions on how to use it with opera, mozilla and others.
Re:HOSTS link? (Score:3, Informative)
Try it out. Change everything in your custom stylesheet to
body {display: none}
You'll get a blank page, but I bet the status bar will reflect that images and the page are being downloaded.