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Advertising Businesses IT Your Rights Online

Adblock Plus Can Now Be Rolled Out To Every Single Employee In a Company 127

New submitter Mickeycaskill writes: Adblock Plus adds large scale deployment (LSD) to version 1.9 of its software, allowing IT managers to block adverts on thousands of computers in one go, months after a German court ruled the practice was legal. The move is likely to concern online publishers who rely on advertising to generate revenue.
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Adblock Plus Can Now Be Rolled Out To Every Single Employee In a Company

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 18, 2015 @01:32PM (#49937923)

    but the fact that you smear them all over my face, and that I can't connect to just YOUR website, but I effectively connect to fifteen OTHER sites to download scripts, just to make YOUR website run correctly. I use Ghostery and Ad-Block not because I am against advertising, but because I want a leaner and more tolerable web.

    I understand the web is more complex today than a decade ago, but there MUST be a way to make today's websites better in these regards.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 18, 2015 @01:43PM (#49938003)
      Structure them in a way that they cannot be used as an attack vector and only then will I think about removing AdBlock. No Flash, no Java, and if you assault my eyes with flashing GIFs and CSS fly-overs, I'm taking my eyeballs and money elsewhere.
      • Yes that!

        Deliver ads as a set of pixels, and then, and only then, I might begin to trust advertisers enough to let their pixels on to my screen.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I've always wondered whether the extremely intrusive ads actually get more clicks (at least intentional ones).

      For me, at least, I go into "kill it with fire" mode whenever something intrusive pops up, or over, or starts playing sounds and I rarely even pay attention to what the ad is about. It is a knee-jerk "kill it!" response.

      Then you have the "Adwords" where they not only turn words in the page into hyperlinks, but cause popups on mouse over. These turn an article into an advertisement "mine-field" for y

    • Advertisers eventually ruin everything.

      I gave up on Cable TV. It is now less than 1/2 content and more than 1/2 ads. And then the ads intrude into the program you are trying to watch with stupid bugs and animated people walking on the bottom 1/4 of your screen. Sometimes they obscure something important in the content of the program. At the same time the content has deteriorated to the point that it is not even worth watching. And content not worth watching definitely means the ads are not worth wat
    • by vlad30 ( 44644 )
      If content providers had some sort of person in charge of which ads were on there sites like tv stations and newspapers had in the early days (yes there was a time they considered their reputations) but all they care about is revenue gained and rely on automated scripts to supply appropriate ads for there site from the ad network, this however doesn't work very well. Additionally Organisations like Advertising Standards Bureau (Australia) have no reach on the web and can't enforce ads from other countries t
  • by MobileTatsu-NJG ( 946591 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @01:38PM (#49937967)

    I'm not looking forward to this arms race. Close one door with advertisers, they open a new one that's more obnoxious.

    • Re:Ugh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Blue Stone ( 582566 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @02:11PM (#49938273) Homepage Journal

      Ad blocking was born in response to the arms race advertisers launched (and lets be fair here, also the websites that hosted them) where their ads became increasingly intolerable, obnoxious, disturbing and disruptive (to simple reading comprehension, never mind anything else). This behaviour *necessitated* a response; intitially simple pop-up blockers (now integrated into browsers AS STANDARD!) and gradually moving forward.

      If anything, we've seen a lull in hostilities for the past few years as ad blockers have proved very successful, limited only by their install base.

      The next round will probably involve websites refusing to show content until adblocking software is disabled (seen here and there already) and if/as this becomes more prevalent, ad blockers responding with stealthing mechanisms.

      Since users ultimately own the rendering device, I'm not certain the advertisers can ever win. And god knows, they lost the moral argument long, long ago.

      • The industry workaround for "owned rendering devices" is in licensing the use of the rendering device, but ownership will not be given, expressed or implied in the new EULA on your smartphone contract. Actually, I'm curious as to how that works out currently, with people effectively renting their devices from service providers, how much ownership of the device can you actually claim?
        • by Anonymous Coward

          I see you've just identified the need for free and open hardware. I agree. There is a lot money to be made giving consumers what they really want.

          The short term money is now obtained from fucking consumers at every turn. The long term money is giving customers what they really need.

  • by MSG ( 12810 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @01:40PM (#49937989)

    I wonder if AdBlock should refer people to alternative means of supporting web sites that publish useful content. I'd like to see something like Contributor gain widespread acceptance.

    https://www.google.com/contrib... [google.com]

    • by xenoc_1 ( 140817 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @02:32PM (#49938465)

      Seriously folks, pay some attention to the name of the product and what it means. It's stuff that matters.

      "AdBlock": A Chrome, and later other platform, ad blocking extension that has nothing whatsoever to do with "Adblock Plus" either in terms of codebase or project history.

      "Adblock Plus" (note no MixedCase): The increasingly-monetizing adblocker which is owned and marketed by for-profit company Eyeo, that Wladimir Palant created to make money with the open source adblocker he took over as maintainer years ago, but did not create. The one that takes money from advertisers to whitelist so-called "Acceptable Ads" and has that feature turned on by default, so most non-techies see ads from Eyeo customers.

      "adblock": Not a product at all but a generic term for an advertising, and sometimes also privacy, blocking extension for browsers. There are many competing products which might be generically called "adblock".

      "adblocker" A more obviously generic term for the set of "adblocker" products that include, among many others, AdBlock, Adblock Plus, Adblock Edge, Bluhell Firewall, uBlock, uBlock Origin.

      "Adblock" One of, if not the, earliest adblocking extensions for Firefox. Long obsolete, it was the inspiration for, and partially the codebase for the first version, of Adblock Plus. The maintainer of AdBlock (note the MixedCase) also claims Adblock is an inspiration for AdBlock but is no part of its codebase.

      The article is about only Adblock Plusâ from Eyeo Inc. Which has the most commercialized, most cooperative with advertisers, and some including me would say, most skeevy business model of any of the major adblocker. Though the drama around the creator of uBlock forking it to "uBlock Origin" and the massively overlarge donation-begging by the new uBlock owners are some evidence that new-uBlock is pretty skeevy too. Which is why this tablet has uBlock Origin running in Firefox.

      • The one that takes money from advertisers to whitelist so-called "Acceptable Ads" and has that feature turned on by default,

        And I say unto thee: wah. It's not difficult at all to turn off. Meanwhile Adblock Plus also makes ad-blocking easier on Android these days... and you can turn off acceptable ads there, too. And it provides a proxy service, so you don't have to see banner ads in apps either, for the most part.

        It's really hard to get people incensed about a checkbox. If he starts bundling the Ask.com toolbar, you'll see the revolt you're looking for.

  • Oh, so now it's possible to roll out Adblock Plus? I wonder what I've been doing by requiring the plug in via the Google administrative template in group policy.

    Though, it might be nice to suppress the initial run page, which seems to be what the article is actually praising.
  • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

    Block at the firewall/server.

    http://www.privoxy.org/ [privoxy.org]

  • Adblock Plus defaults to letting some ads pass. Can admins block those by default as well on a large scale deployment?

  • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @02:08PM (#49938243) Homepage

    The move is likely to concern online publishers who rely on advertising to generate revenue.

    Boo fucking hoo.

    If the ad industry is going to be a vector for malware, then too damned bad. Inside the corporate firewall, the integrity of the systems is all that matters, and your damned ad revenue isn't even relevant.

    Yes, your model says you'll make money from ads. But nobody is under any obligation to view your damned ads.

    Don't like people skipping your ads? Make it a subscription site with login required.

    Between the security risks, and the privacy implications, I will block any and all ads for as long as I have the technology to do so.

    There are 8 domains just on this page as I type this whose sole purpose for being embedded in this page is advertising revenue. And that's not my damned problem.

    I would love to see more corporate firewalls just straight up blocking ads. Corporations would probably have far less viruses and security problems.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Well, start small ... block ads, ignore sourceforge, disable Flash, block javascript.

        That probably covers a lot of it.

    • I would love to see more corporate firewalls just straight up blocking ads. Corporations would probably have far less viruses and security problems.

      Last time I checked, squid with ad-blocking was nowhere near as graceful about removing the content as Adblock plus. I have done the whole transparent squid proxy thing before though, and it's pretty cool. If I were running a corporate network today, I'd certainly do the same. It's simple enough to provide an unfiltered proxy port to the users who need unfettered access and can handle their own blocking.

  • I don't think I understand why IT managers would want to install software that blocks only a part of the ads of websites which don't pay the company behind Adblock to be whitelisted. If you do value the websites you visit and understand they need to get some revenue, do you want to have that website to have to pay pay the company behind Adblock a third of the revenue just to let their ads go through? Won't that just make the websites have to put up more ads? Do you trust Adblock enough not to fall for brib
    • Because blocking some of the ads is better than no blocking at all. For a supposedly evil whitelist, I have never once seen an ad show up with Adblock Plus.

  • The only reason you work is because most people don't use you. Success is the shortest path to failure, because websites *will* find another way to serve ads, whether it's through an EULA or randomizing/obfuscating the references to ads, or even serving the pages as images. Please stop trying to become more popular.

    • websites *will* find another way to serve ads, whether it's through an EULA or randomizing/obfuscating the references to ads, or even serving the pages as images.

      I would be happy about an ad strategy that doesn't break the pages I want to browse. If they come up with an alternative to current ad strategies that doesn't result in accidental malware attacks and autoplay videos and flash animations, I will be too lazy to block it.

      Adblock plus is pretty much the most effective antivirus on the market, even though that isn't even their intent, and that is the primary reason I use it.

  • by dltaylor ( 7510 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @02:29PM (#49938433)

    When I switched to DuckDuckGo, I was prompted, very politely, to allow their advertising. I whitelisted that site ONLY, and, so far, have not been burned by them (reasonably well-targeted ads, clearly identified, without visual or audible noise, and, AFAICT, no malware).

    You want a site whitelisted? Treat me with respect.

  • by lazarus ( 2879 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @02:34PM (#49938493) Journal

    I don't care what happens to websites that rely on advertising revenue to stay alive. I preferred the "web" when the content was provided by enthusiasts, not corporate clowns. And yes, that definitely includes this web site.

    I don't feel even the slightest bit of shame for blocking ads. You use technology against me. I'll use it against you.

    • I preferred the "web" when the content was provided by enthusiasts, not corporate clowns.

      You mean the tiny web with less content which was more difficult to find and for the most part had a lack of common content aggregation beyond (and I'm throwing up in my mouth as I type this) web rings?

      No thanks. I'll take today's web with a basic adblocker any day. The internet was orders of magnitude less useful when run by enthusiasts because quite frankly a lot of people don't share things for free.

  • You know, I was willing to accept a few ads on a website because I understood the need to generate revenue. But I finally had to resort to installing AdBlock because it seems many websites forgot about actual content in favor of revenue. It got to the point of absolute ridiculousness, there were pages with maybe one or two paragraphs of content buried under tons of zooming, flashing, auto-playing, screen-covering crap that it just wasn't worth the bother, so I would just click away. It also doesn't help t
  • Question how do we keep sites from scanning our PCs to see if we have an ad blocker installed? what can be done if anything to stop them from doing that. If they can scan for an ad blocker im guessing they are scanning for everything we have installed.
    • by orient ( 535927 )

      Question how do we keep sites from scanning our PCs to see if we have an ad blocker installed? what can be done if anything to stop them from doing that. If they can scan for an ad blocker im guessing they are scanning for everything we have installed.

      They do not scan your computer. Their scripts running in your browser just check for a cookie or a session parameter that should have been set by the ad-showing script. If that's missing, you have an ad blocker.

    • by Scoth ( 879800 )

      This gets into the arms race thing again. Right now some sites/ad networks are doing things like setting cookies, parameters, checking logs, etc to make sure that you've hit the ad server. Alternatively, sometimes they'll use annoying NOSCRIPT code (or just rely on ad scripts to do something to the main page content) to blow up the website somehow if the ad scripts aren't loaded. There are any number of ways to detect whether adblockers are running or not.

      Right now, most websites are still feeling like bad

  • I've already dumped Adblock Plus and moved on to uBlock Origin, which I trust a bit more to do the right thing.

  • Seriously WHY would you want to deploy a plugin to 100s of users when you can be far more effective and far more secure at the gateway??? Run a proxy, filter at the proxy. Your individual machines should not be getting direct access to the internet anyway.

  • As I know from my job experience large scale IT deployments inside their WAN networks can filter whatever the fuck they want. Sudden appearance of ADP as an enterprise deployable package - who the fuck cares? We are right now black/white listing all the stuff we need. Who needs to introduce something like ADP that probably can mess with loads of internal services and need to be tested if you could just not use it? if an user has a problem with advertisements he/she is probably far away of what he/she should

  • The move is likely to concern online publishers who rely on advertising to generate revenue.

    Choose a phrase composed from the following words in any descending alphabetical order : "shit" ; "tough."

    If loss of advertising revenue means that I have to choose which websites to pay for my news, mail service, etc, then that's just dandy and fine. Oddly, when I go to the cinema to watch a movie, I choose which one I want to watch then pay (and annoyingly still get some adverts, but by turning up 20 minutes late

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