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Only Thieves Block Pop-Ups

Posted by timothy on Sun Nov 24, 2002 05:34 PM
from the betting-pool-for-workaround dept.
aurelian writes "It's official: using browsing the web while blocking pop-up ads and other such exciting website enhancements is theft. Anti-leech.com are offering to protect your site from browsers blocking pop-ups (or 'theft tools' as they call them) - just try stealing from them with your favourite pop-up free browser. (I picked this up on the phoenix discussion forum...)"
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  • Just fine by me (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sjhwilkes (202568) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:37PM (#4745852)
    If a site doesn't want me then they can %^&* off. There's no shortage of sites that haven't resorted to pop ups.

    • Re:Just fine by me by Presence2 (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:58PM
      • Re:Just fine by me by Jedi Alec (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:21PM
        • Re:Just fine by me by martyn s (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:10PM
        • Re:Just fine by me (Score:4, Interesting)

          by spike hay (534165) <.blu_ice. .at. .violate.me.uk.> on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:17PM (#4747316) Homepage
          Non intrusive (like non animated gif or java) banners are a-ok by me. I recognize that sites do need to pay for their bandwidth with advertising.

          I do not tolerate annoying java ads and popups. I block those. No site should need to resort to popup ads, unless the webmaster is simply greedy.
          [ Parent ]
          • Re:Just fine by me (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Archie Steel (539670) on Sunday November 24 2002, @09:12PM (#4747714)
            I don't know about you guys, but I'm going to write them an e-mail saying that, when I see a pop-up, I am so annoyed that I actually make a point of not buying the product. Therefore, they are actually hurting sales (as far as I'm concerned) by forcing me to see those pop-ups. I'll also make sure to resend this letter to any web site dumb enough to use their product (and I'll tell them that, too!)
            [ Parent ]
            • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Archie Steel (539670) on Sunday November 24 2002, @09:19PM (#4747753)
              Here's the letter I sent. Please feel free to copy or adapt it and send it to:

              general@anti-leech.com [mailto]

              Whenever I used to see a pop-up ad, I was so annoyed that I actually made a point of not buying this product, and sometimes even went as far as to discourage those around me not to buy this product.

              Ever since I've been using a browser that block pop-up ads, I have probably been a better customer. Your product will once again cause misguided advertisers to lose my business. I'll make sure to point this out to any web site I come across that uses your product.

              Banner ads are the most that 95% of Web users will accept. Anything that "pops up" is found annoying by the great majority of Web users. The negative reinforcement can only be detrimental to business - you're only hurting those you want to help.

              Also consider that, if you keep wantonly calling people like me thieves, you're liable to get sued for libel.
              [ Parent ]
            • Re:Just fine by me by Captain_Adaquit (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:13PM
            • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
          • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Interesting)

            by jonadab (583620) <jonadab@bright.net> on Sunday November 24 2002, @10:17PM (#4748110) Homepage Journal
            > Non intrusive (like non animated gif or java) banners are a-ok

            Agreed. I have no problem with advertising per se. Ordinary banners
            I don't complain about; occasionally, I even follow one. (So far, on
            occasions that I've followed one, the ad has always been narrowly
            targeted for the specific content of the page I was viewing; e.g., an
            ad for shell accounts ("Panix" IIRC) on a website that provided
            information about using Unix. Ads like that I'm not unhappy about
            at all. Most of the ones on /. don't bother me too, although the
            squarish ones that get embedded in the story are mildly annoying
            because of the way they screw up the layout. But not annoying
            enough that I'd actually _do_ anything about it, like block them or anything.) If you want me to see your ads, just present them as
            regular ordinary ads. I have no problem with that.

            Popups, however, are totally unacceptable. Until Mozilla added
            dom.disable-open-during-load, I almost never surfed with Javascript
            turned on at all, and just skipped most sites that required it.
            I have other things to do with my time than close a bunch of extra
            windows all the time. Mozilla doesn't send anything back to the
            site when it ignores a popup, so they're obviously using some kind
            of chicanery to determine that; whatever it is, the message is a
            clear "we don't want you on your site", and believe me, with the
            size of the web being what it is, I can find another site that will
            be more hospitable in about the same amount of time it would take
            me to check the little "popups" checkbox on my prefs toolbar, give
            or take a couple of seconds. Guess which I'm more likely to do?

            This is not an issue of rights; it's an issue of practice. The
            site (assuming it's a private-sector site, which seems like a
            reasonable assumption if we're talking about ad revenue) of course
            has the right to refuse to serve me pages for any reason, even if
            it's "we don't like the list of languages your browser accepts" or
            "you are in the same subnet with a former employee, and we didn't
            like the colour of his trousers". Hey, you want to block me, block
            me; there's _lots_ of other content on the net.

            The thing is, there are two ways this can turn out, depending on
            how many people find out how to block unrequested windows (which,
            realistically, depends on whether any major browser ever ships with
            them blocked by default). If almost nobody blocks popups, then the
            resources a site expends checking everybody will dwarf the small
            amount of resources they are ostensibly saving by doing the blocking.
            That is the current situation. If a major browser (e.g., AOL) ever
            ships with unrequested popups off by default, then the sites that
            refuse to switch to other forms of advertising will be locking
            themselves out of that much traffic and ad revenue. Either way,
            sites that insist on popups are hurting themselves. And as far
            as I'm concerned, they're _only_ hurting themselves.

            There are other types of advertising I'm also unwilling to view,
            too. Blatantly fraudulent advertisements (such as the ones that
            try to pass themselves off as dialog boxes) are Distilled Evil, for
            example, and if I worked at the FTC I'd try to go after them. It's
            an offense worthy of jailtime, IMO. I'm not talking about mild
            marketing optimism, but the outright fraud.

            I'm also unwilling to view animations that don't stop. I allow
            animated GIFs to play through _once_, but no more. Under no
            circumstances am I willing to surf with Flash enabled.

            Sites that require any of these things, I just skip. This means
            perhaps one in a hundred sites that I was going to view I end up
            not viewing, but I always find equivalent content on another site
            (usually in short order) because the web is getting pretty big
            these days. I think pretty soon there might be more than a million
            sites, or something. (Ahem.)

            I don't see how this is a rights issue, just plain old stupidity.
            [ Parent ]
          • Re:Just fine by me by TA (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @10:06AM
          • Re:Just fine by me by mr. methane (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @09:05PM
          • Looking at ads cost me money by Captain_Chaos (Score:1) Thursday November 28 2002, @03:47AM
        • Re:Just fine by me by poiuyt23 (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:38PM
      • Re:Just fine by me (Score:4, Interesting)

        "On the pages that you want to protect you only need to insert a few lines of HTML code to your website. This will present the below button that will test the visitors to see if the use any sort of blocking software."

        I wonder if this special code can be cleaned before it reaches the browser by The Proxomitron [proxomitron.org] or your favourite page-scrubber proxy. It might be a little annoying to disable javascript every time I run into one of these. (Perhaps the mozilla crew will make a nice interface for per-site javascript blocking.)

        [ Parent ]
      • Re:Just fine by me by ultimaomega (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:49PM
      • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Funny)

        by fenix down (206580) on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:50PM (#4747147)
        I like the message. Especially the way the whole thing's in the URL [anti-leech.com]. I can just have hours of fun with that.

        I'm a fucker for pointing this out, but somebody would've figured it out anyway. look. [anti-leech.com]

        Be careful, kids. Get Phoenix and block images on a per-domain basis today!

        [ Parent ]
    • These folks are running a spam con (Score:5, Insightful)

      by 0x0d0a (568518) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:40PM (#4746556) Journal
      Take a look at how they purpose to "protect you from spam" here [anti-leech.com].

      "To use this method you will first have to create an Anti-Leech account and then enter the e-mail address that you want to protect into our database."

      No technical reason to create an account, of course. Unless they're selling your email address, and hence have a "good reason" to require you to have cookies enabled. Then they have multiple advertisers on their site, who, if they follow standard procedures, pay extra if they can get email address information associated with a cookie planted in your browser....
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Informative)

      by MattCohn.com (555899) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:43PM (#4746581) Homepage
      So true. And they arn't even good at what they do! It's really pathetic. I go through fine with Opera 6.05 set to block pop-ups. And the Anti-HTML source protector? My god, it's the most simplistic thing ever.
      Page 1:
      <script LANGUAGE=JavaScript SRC=antihtml.php?id=demo_pop&html=test>
      Alright... so lets enter antihtml.php?id=demo_pop&html=test into our browsers, shall we children?
      // This is the Anti-Leech HTML protection
      //
      // The HTML code on this site has been crypted using
      // advanced Anti-Leech technology.
      //
      // The reason is that the webmaster of this site doesn't
      // want to share this code with the public so please
      // respect this.
      var l = top.location;

      // Visit http://www.anti-leech.com for more info

      document.write("<SCR" + "IPT LANG" + "UAGE='Java" + "Script' SRC='http:/" + "/www.anti" + "-leech.com/ht" + "ml/load_cr" + "ypted.php?id=demo_pop&l=" + l + "&html=test'" + " TYPE='text/javasc" + "ript'><\/SCR" + "IPT>");
      REALLY advanced there. I love how they break it up in order to avoid detection. :rolls eyes:
      <SCRIPT LANGUAGE='JavaScript' SRC='http://www.anti-leech.com/html/load_crypted.p hp?id=demo_pop&l=" + top.location; + "&html=test' TYPE='text/javascript'><\/SCRIPT>
      They will be gone within the year.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Funny)

        by broken (1648) on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:23PM (#4746950)
        Dear MATTCOHN.COM,

        you just published a way to circunvent their protection mechanism, which falls under the DMCA. Expect a letter from our lawyers soon.

        Sincerely,
        Antileech.com :)
        [ Parent ]
        • it really is.. wow. (Score:4, Interesting)

          by VValdo (10446) on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:52PM (#4747154)
          Seriously, this system really is a method of copyright protection, isn't it? It's "a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work" the web page or whatever).

          As lame as it is, any discussion about circumventing the protection scheme could conceivably be prosecuted under the DMCA [eff.org].

          The law says:

          No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that--

          `(A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title;


          It looks like a circumvention method was just "offered to the public" for the purpose of circumventing a protection measure.

          Wow.
          [ Parent ]
        • Re:Just fine by me by NoMercy (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:11PM
        • Re:Just fine by me - Sue me too. by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:14PM
        • Re:Just fine by me by Profe55or Booty (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:16AM
        • Re:Just fine by me by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @02:10AM
        • 5 replies beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Just fine by me by hypnotik (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:31PM
      • Almost there. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:32PM (#4747021)
        let's fetch http://www.anti-leech.com/html/load_crypted.php?id =demo_pop&l=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.anti-leech.com%2Fthef t_example.html&html=test

        Sorry for cutting out stuff folks, the lameness filter is turned up high today.

        // This is the Anti-Leech HTML protection

        blah blah blah

        egenskaper="toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no, status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes, width=496,height=65";
        url="http://new.anti-leech. com/ad_popup.php";

        window.open(url,'antihtml',egenskaper);

        //Disable right mouse click Script
        //By Maximus (maximus@nsimail.com)

        great stuff, someone else's right-mouse button javascript. I love it. now here comes the fun bit.

        // Printing out protected HTML code

        document.write(unescape("%3Cfont%20size%3D3%20fa c ...


        Argh, the fearsome document.write(unescape()). So that gives us:

        <font size=3 face=verdana>
        This HTML code is protected by Anti-Leech.com<br;><br>
        With help of the Anti-Html system you can protect both parts of your page or all source code. We can even protect java scripts.<br;><br>
        Take a look in the source code of this page for a better view of how good the protection actually is.
        </font>
        <br><br>


        I must say I'm impressed. I didn't know anyone who could write s/[^A-Za-z0-9\.,]/'%'.hex(chr($1))/eg' in perl. That's really SUPER UNCRACKABLE CODE.

        [ Parent ]
      • lynx beats their image protection by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:01PM
      • Re:Just fine by me by essdodson (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:05PM
      • Re:Just fine by me (Score:4, Funny)

        by deego (587575) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:08PM (#4747238) Homepage
        >Alright... so lets enter >antihtml.php?id=demo_pop&html=test into our >browsers, shall we children?

        In other news

        Antileech.com wins a patent for advanced anti-leech protection of content by breaking up the content into a smaller chunks separated by signs like +.

        Anti-leech has also indicated that the patent applies to a wide variety of content-separation situations and is a result of advanced research and hard labor on their part. The auto-fill-mode of the emacs OS distribution moves to non-us servers.
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:Just fine by me by PFAK (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:10PM
      • Re:Just fine by me by valmont (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:44PM
      • Re:Just fine by me by nutsy (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:59PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Just fine by me by MattCohn.com (Score:1) Saturday December 07 2002, @04:21PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Just fine by me by BubbaTheBarbarian (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:35PM
    • Re:Just fine by me by tacocat (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:39PM
    • Re:Just fine by me by ninewands (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:32PM
    • Broken Links by Martin S. (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @05:12AM
    • Re:Just fine by me by perlyking (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @05:23AM
    • I say block them just to spite da bastards by Peterus7 (Score:1) Tuesday November 26 2002, @01:05AM
    • Re:Just fine by me by ScrewMaster (Score:1) Tuesday November 26 2002, @10:26AM
    • Re:Just fine by me (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Goldberg's Pants (139800) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:13PM (#4746284) Journal
      So rather than change an offensive, annoying practice that pisses EVERY web user off, some idiots are now making it so you HAVE to see the damn things... *sigh* Of course, it was recently declared that fast forwarding through commercials on your Tivo or VCR was theft as well... Some of these shitheads need to look up the word "theft" in the dictionary.

      Dictionary.com defines theft as:

      1. The act or an instance of stealing; larceny.
      2. Obsolete. Something stolen.

      Hmmm....

      Remember when the web was actually about content?

      Guess I need another list to go with the "Sites that insist I use IE" for sites that can go fuck themselves.
      [ Parent ]
    • 7 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • how familiar (Score:5, Funny)

    by Dolly_Llama (267016) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745858) Homepage
    "...you can easily CHOSE..."

    Taco...how could you??

    • Re:how familiar by Rothfuss (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:03PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Hey! I got that label on Slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745859)
    A long while back, in a little debate here on Slashdot, someone called me a thief for blocking pop-ups ads. If I recall, I think I stumped them by asking if Lynx users were thieves since their browser didn't support pop-ups.

    Anyway, I didn't sign any contract to view pop-ups, and there is no guarantee I will support any soft of technology when I browse the web, so they take a chance in using it knowing it may not work. Same with Flash, other javascript, or even images.
  • Good! (Score:5, Funny)

    by fobbman (131816) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745865) Homepage
    This will spur on the programmers to make sure that they create more effective pop-up stoppers, which should be completed in 5...4...3...2...

    • Completed ages back, actually by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:43PM
    • Chimera by punkmanandy (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM
    • I Already Figured it Out... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Mister Transistor (259842) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:59PM (#4746133) Journal
      I went to the test page, got the blocked message (I'm using mozilla with selective image blocking) and just went back there and hit the stop button before it redirected me. How hard was that?!?!?

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Good! by Temporal (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:43PM
      • Re:Good! by AsparagusChallenge (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:03PM
    • Re:Good! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:47PM (#4746639)
      The only way they can tell you are blocking ads or popups is because your browser stops requesting them, right? The easy solution is for browsers to go ahead and request those images, go ahead and request the source for the popup pages, as if the broswer was going to display everything, but just don't display it. On the server side, everything will appear to be exactly as if you were not blocking anything. Am I missing something?
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Good! by SwissCheese (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:34PM
      • Re:Good! (Score:5, Informative)

        by d_i_r_t_y (156112) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:23PM (#4747370) Homepage Journal

        The easy solution is for browsers to go ahead and request those images, go ahead and request the source for the popup pages, as if the broswer was going to display everything, but just don't display it.


        this is my current solution. for mozilla, stick the following into your /chrome/userContent.css file -- it makes most ads 90% transparent, and doesn't show flash ads at all.

        it's everyone's right not to be subjected to advertising.

        matt

        /* makes ads almost invisible
        * - taken from http://archivist.incutio.com/css-discuss/?id=13557
        */

        [src*="ads."], [src*="ads/"],
        [src*="doubleclick"],
        [href*="dou bleclick."] *,
        [href*="rd.yahoo.com"] [src*="yimg.com"],
        [width="60"][height="468"],
        [ width="468"][height="60"],
        [width="120"][height=" 600"]
        {
        -moz-outline: medium dotted red;
        -moz-opacity: 10%;
        }

        /* i find this a bit much, but someone might like it.

        [src*="ads."]:hover, [src*="ads/"]:hover,
        [src*="doubleclick"]:hover,
        [href*=".doubleclick."] *:hover,
        [href*="rd.yahoo.com"] [src*="yimg.com"]:hover,
        [width="60"][height="468 "]:hover,
        [width="468"][height="60"]:hover,
        [wid th="120"][height="600"]:hover
        {
        -moz-outline: medium dashed red;
        -moz-opacity: 100%;
        }
        */

        [type="application/x-shockwave-flash"]
        {
        display: none !important;
        }

        [ Parent ]
        • Re:Good! by No_Weak_Heart (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:11AM
      • Re:Good! by istartedi (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @01:48AM
      • Re:Good! by dvoosten (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:04AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Good! by Samari711 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:05PM
    • BannerFilter by Phroggy (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:04PM
    • Weeks ahead of you by perttu (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:10PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by jedie (546466) <jedie.pandora@be> on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745869) Homepage
    changing the channel when a commercial break starts is a major fellony too!
  • Just maybe... (Score:5, Funny)

    by unterderbrucke (628741) <unterderbrucke@yahoo.com> on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745872)
    ...we'll all slashdot the site, and we won't have to worry about idiots like them anymore.
  • can't believe this (Score:5, Insightful)

    by greenerx (598149) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745874) Homepage Journal
    bandwidth theft?.. they're stealing OUR bandwidth by polluting our pakets with junk
  • Bad Business Model to begin with (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:38PM (#4745875)
    Telling me not to block pop-ups because the website needs the pop-up income is bad motivation.

    No website is worth wading through hundreds of pop-ups.

    If their only source of income is pop-ups, they aren't long for the web anyway.

    Pop-up income is a bad way to "earn" money, and everyone knows it. (except classmates.com)
    • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by imr (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:43PM
    • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by SourceFrog (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:59PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Moonshadow (84117) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM (#4746257) Homepage
        Anyway, back to my question though, how SHOULD people make money from their websites? Or should thousands of people in the world just work their butts off to give YOU stuff for free?

        Anyone who has ever tried to produce something worthwhile, such as a website, in their spare time, in addition to having a full-time job, will probably understand these sentiments.


        Note: reading my preview, this post sounds quite holier-than-thou - not intended at all. This isn't an attack, just the perceptions of a web developer. Now, on to the content!

        I'm a pro web developer, and put up sites all over in my spare time just for the heck of it - not little pansy Frontpage sites, PHP/SQL sites that I've sunk a lot of time and effort into.

        I have yet to ever put a single banner, popup, or paid button ad on any site of mine. Honestly, $10 or $12/month is quite negligible, and it gives you a presence on the web. If you don't like it, then get off. The way to make money on the web is ot through advertising, but by offering a service that people find useful, and charging them for it. If you expect banners and popups to pay for your site, let alone your next meal, unless you're generating thousands and thousands of hits a day, you're going to be disappointed.

        The web is not there to serve pop-ups. It does not exist solely for people to make money from. I run my sites out of love, and a desire to sharpen my skills. If you dislike it, or it's costing you too much, stop doing it. If you're going bankrupt, set up a donation system, and if people truly think your site is worthwhile, they'll dontate.

        Example: a lot of web comics. They develop large followings, and then start to be run into a hole. Their fans take up the slack, because they don't want to see it die. A high traffic forum I participate in recently lost webhosting due to bandwidth and space concerns. The members of the forum pooled together some $1200 to buy a co-lo'ed server, and things are plugging along. They get nothing substantial out of it, but they enjoy it enough that they're willing to take a financial hit to keep it running.

        If you have something people truly care about, they'll pay for it. If you have nothing but average, run-of-the-mill stuff that they can get elsewhere, they won't. It's as simple as that. Donations, subscriptions, etc. are the way to go, because if you're serving quality content, people will pay for it.
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by SourceFrog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:27PM
          • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Moonshadow (84117) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:44PM (#4746598) Homepage
            Well, let's de-gray-ify it a bit.

            Any legal site that is doing enough traffic to put a dent in the owner's wallet is obviously quite appreciated. People will pay to use it. The little small sites? Of course no one is going to pay. No one goes to them. However, they also cost almost zero to run. I can get free webspace at any of the bazillion providers out there to put up a page about my dog. If I want to do something dynamic, I can pay phpwebhosting.com $10/month for all the tools I need, and a dynamic website is probably going to generate a bit more traffic than your stadnard Frontpage hack job. If you actually have a job, $10/month isn't going to be a big problem. I'm a college student making $15/hr at my day job. In one 8-hour work day, I will have made enough money to run my site for a year, assuming bandwidth costs are negligible.

            If it bothers you that people don't vigorously shake you hand for creating a site, then you need to reevaluate your approach to the web. Unless you manage to create the next Yahoo or something, people don't really care. Are they at fault for not sending you mail thanking you for your wonderful site? I'd hardly say so. Do strangers waking by your house stop by to say "Nice job on the lawn! That's really something! You must have put a lot of work into it!"? I've never experienced anything like that.

            I have a girlfriend, a social life, school, a family of 5 other people to interact with, and I still manage to work 30 hours a week at the office and develop websites on the side. The "no time" is really not an issue. Take an notebook with you for a week, and write down everything you do with the times you spent doing it. At the end of the week, tally the gaps. I -guarantee- you there will be a lot. If my father, who works to provide for a family of six, maintains relationships with friends, practices and plays in the church band, and goes hiking for 4 hours every Saturday can find time to study for an MBA, then chances are most people can find extra time for the things they want to do, too.

            If you want money from people, charge them for something. The idea that popups are the only way to make money on the web is faulty at best.
            [ Parent ]
        • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by inode_buddha (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:36PM
        • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by m1a1 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:59PM
        • I want those forum users! by Corvaith (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:03PM
        • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by timster (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:39PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by Lordfly (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by markbthomas (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:16PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by SourceFrog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:18PM
      • websites by zogger (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:19PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by taliver (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:24PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by meta-monkey (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:26PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by Goldberg's Pants (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:31PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by damiam (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:58PM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by prockcore (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:48AM
      • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by quintessent (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @04:42AM
    • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by H1r0Pr0tag0n1st (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
    • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by georgerajor (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:03PM
    • Re:Bad Business Model to begin with by ultimaomega (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:56AM
  • Opera and ZoneAlarm by Lemmeoutada Collecti (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:39PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Tech fix (Score:5, Funny)

    by Henry V .009 (518000) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:39PM (#4745883) Journal
    Oh my. We're going to have to improve pop-up stoppers to defeat this technology.

    Well, I'd better free up 45-50 minutes for coding sometime in the next week.
    • Re:Tech fix by Moonshadow (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:59PM
    • Re:Tech fix by Error27 (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:03PM
      • Re:Tech fix by entrylevel (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:16PM
        • Re:Tech fix by Jedi Alec (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Tech fix by Moonshadow (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:20PM
        • Re:Tech fix by Error27 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:08PM
          • Re:Tech fix by Moonshadow (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:13PM
            • Re:Tech fix by -homb- (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:50PM
      • here here! by Ayanami Rei (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM
      • people exist for the computers by chocolatetrumpet (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:17PM
      • Re:Tech fix by DickBreath (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:53PM
        • Re:Tech fix by Glonoinha (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:58PM
      • Re:Tech fix by perttu (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:59PM
    • Re:Something like that ... by Ex Machina (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:41PM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • so... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by HillBilly (120575) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM (#4745893)
    What can I do on the internet that isn't illegal these days?

    Soon there will be warning messages when connecting to the internet: "You have connected to the internet. This is in violation of blah blah blah. Disconnect now"
    • I think.. by jedie (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:46PM
      • Re:I think.. by miu (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
    • Re:so... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Smidge204 (605297) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM (#4746001)
      What can I do on the internet that isn't illegal these days? ...log off?

      Seriously, though. There are a bijillion little ways to get around crap like this. I disabled javascript and Netscape 7 went right in with no problem (and no popup). IE 5 didn't, though... Oh well! One more reason to swap from IE to Moz!

      =Smidge=
      [ Parent ]
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:so... by fname (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:19PM
  • Standards incompliance == theft? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Pflipp (130638) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM (#4745896)
    Aside from the semi-FP issue (I bet I'll be post # 104 or so by the time I finished writing :-), I don't really see how this differs from M$ browsers (and Netscape 4.x) refusing to render my site correctly. So there.
  • So? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by haukex (229058) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM (#4745897)

    What are they going to do if browsers just *hide* the popup windows/banners, still loading the ads in the background?

  • What about theft from me? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by solostring (620535) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM (#4745901) Homepage
    I've never worked out how much bandwidth popup ads have sucked out of me over the years, but until recently, I had to pay for 'x' amount of MB's over my monthly limit (crap monopolistic ISP).

    The people that block popup ads are the same people who would *NEVER* click on a popup ad and purchase something, so I'm sorry, but I can't really see what their problem is. Surely we are saving THEM bandwidth?
  • This works well... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Binestar (28861) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM (#4745902) Homepage
    Click here to bypass thier test [anti-leech.com].

    Kinda funny, This browser had failed the test and been blocked from using the site. Found a direct link past the tester and was able to load up thier page.

    Just goes to show you, everything is just a measure that is able to be bypassed.
  • Just stealing? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:40PM
    • Re:Just stealing? by Goldberg's Pants (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:40PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • TiVo... by AEther141 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:41PM
    • Re:TiVo... by xenode (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:37PM
  • Last time I checked... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by TWX_the_Linux_Zealot (227666) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:41PM (#4745910) Journal
    ... the Internet was based on an open set of standards, and the only fee requirement for use is that which it costs to physically connect/route to it. I wonder if this will ever become a court issue, and if so, if this point will be made...

    I'd like to see the look on the faces of those suing because we are 'stealing' when the judge asks them where they get off attempting to impose requirements and fees upon a system that is designed to be open.
  • Mozilla by prestomation (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:41PM
  • New scheme by DoctorPhish (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:41PM
  • by NakedShavedPussyGuy (628948) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:42PM (#4745917) Homepage Journal
    showing pictures of naked, shaved pussy. [virtually.net]
  • They don't tolerate stealing of their bandwidth... by dennism (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:42PM
  • doh! by chamenos (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:42PM
    • Re:doh! by stevejsmith (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:46PM
      • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:42PM
        • Re:doh! by stevejsmith (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:22PM
        • Re:doh! by rodgerd (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:35PM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:doh! by SomeGuyFromCA (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM
      • Re:doh! by Goldberg's Pants (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:46PM
    • Re:doh! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Sancho (17056) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM (#4745992) Homepage
      There has been no contact or agreement on my part to view ads in order to view the content of the site. Much like television commercials. Your entire argument is completely invalid for a number of reasons, but instead of listing them, let me ask you one question: how far am I, as a web site viewer, obligated to go? Many ad sites don't pay out unless the link is actually clicked. Should I click the link? If I don't, am I "stealing" content? Should I be required to buy something from the site? Am I stealing if I don't?
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:01PM
        • Re:doh! by OeLeWaPpErKe (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:08PM
          • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:14PM
          • Re:doh! by flossie (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:00PM
        • Re:doh! by mindstrm (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM
          • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:33PM
            • Re:doh! by mindstrm (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @08:33PM
            • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
        • Re:doh! by joshki (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:36PM
          • Re:doh! by BollocksToThis (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:27PM
        • Re:doh! by squiggleslash (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:37PM
        • Re:doh! by Sancho (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:19PM
        • Re:doh! by pdboddy (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:54PM
        • Re:doh! by madcow_ucsb (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:38AM
        • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM
          • Re:doh! by Pathwalker (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:49PM
            • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:57PM
              • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
            • Re:doh! by WWWWolf (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @06:40AM
          • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:49PM
            • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:18PM
            • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
          • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
        • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:doh! by Fjord (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:12PM
        • Re:doh! by ninewands (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:24AM
        • Re:doh! by Sancho (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:35AM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:doh! by WinkyN (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM
      • Re:doh! by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
      • Re:doh! by SourceFrog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:20PM
    • Re:doh! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Mnemia (218659) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM (#4746107)

      No, I'm not stealing from them. There is no agreement saying I have to view the website the way they say I have to, and the Web was explictly designed so that publishers could not impose layout decisions upon browsers. I hate all sites that use popups and would never click on a single one out of principle even if I was interested in what they were selling. So I'm saving them bandwidth costs by not loading their ads which I would ignore anyway.

      The more advertisers try to saturate our lives with forced advertising, the stronger the backlash will become. What has effectively happened is that due to the sheer number of ads the impact of each individual one has been reduced to near zero. They're really shooting themselves in the foot by using these invasive techniques.

      Using Mozilla is not stealing; I see it more as a start to forcing sites to use more reasonable advertising methods by undermining the market for their invasive techniques.

      [ Parent ]
      • Re:doh! by SourceFrog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:13PM
        • Re:doh! by Mnemia (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:44PM
          • Re:doh! by delstar dotstar (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:21PM
      • Re:Advertisers take note... by Technician (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @07:51AM
      • Re:doh! by LinearBob (Score:1) Tuesday November 26 2002, @01:53AM
      • Re:doh! by Mnemia (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @03:32AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:doh! by retards (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM
    • Re:doh! by iie1195 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:00PM
    • Re:doh! (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Murdock037 (469526) <tristranthorn&hotmail,com> on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:01PM (#4746150)
      The stuff you browse on the web isn't exactly completely free of charge. There're bandwidth costs to be paid, servers... etc.

      If they didn't want to pay bandwidth costs, they wouldn't have placed their site online. That is an assumed cost of operating.

      Yes, we browse their sites for free, and it's perfectly within their rights to send us pop-up ads. But I agreed to no terms of service when I typed in their address.

      If they're going to recoup their costs, they're going to have to do it smarter. Salon [salon.com], for example, won't let you access their premium content unless you pay, and that's fair. They've implemented a system that doesn't make assumptions. It doesn't really work [newsmax.com], but it's still fair.

      ...all they're asking in return is for you to do your part and look at those ads... is it that big of an inconvenience?

      Whether or not it's a big inconvenience is a matter of opinion, a moot point, and not worth discussing. The issue is whether or not I'm allowed to block their pop-ups altogether.

      Wait, scratch that. That's how they want us to think. The issue is whether or not they are allowed to force me to see what they want me to see.

      I say no.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:doh! by CFBMoo1 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:06PM
    • Re:doh! by DJayC (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:09PM
    • Ads and ADS by jedie (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:09PM
      • Re:Ads and ADS by chamenos (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:24PM
      • Re:Ads and ADS by Jucius Maximus (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:53PM
    • Re:doh! by sinan (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
    • Re:doh! by jdreed1024 (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
      • Re:doh! by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:47PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:doh! by lahi (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:15PM
    • Re:doh! by Ctrl-Z (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
    • Sorry pal. by mindstrm (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:26PM
    • Re:doh! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by barc0001 (173002) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:34PM (#4746484)
      "there're bandwidth costs to be paid, servers to be bought and maintained, and some of the information you read doesn't just appear there; someone had to do research and type it out."

      OK. So, by that logic try this one on for size. Every time you walk into a store at the mall to browse and maybe talk to a sales clerk about this item or that, do you give them a quarter? After all, there's rent to be paid, a staff to hire, electricity, inventory costs, etc. These things aren't cheap, and if you're just going in there to look, you're wasting their time and energy. You're a THIEF!

      Didn't think so.

      [ Parent ]
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:doh NOT! by drpatt (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:47PM
      • Re:doh NOT! by Sir_Dill (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:35AM
    • Re:doh! by AdrianG (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:59PM
    • Re:doh! by SparkyMartin (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:35PM
    • Bullshit! by Matrix2110 (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:30AM
    • 12 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Whatever (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kris_J (10111) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:42PM (#4745923) Homepage Journal
    Since we've also recently been told that going to the loo when the ads are on is theft, this latest mob can go screw themselves. If a site doesn't let me view it through Proximitron (will test when I'm on my own PC) then there are plenty of other things I can be doing with my time.
    • Re:Whatever by fferreres (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:36PM
  • They should get their shit together by atheos (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:43PM
  • Sorry guys, by ShieldW0lf (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:43PM
    • Re:Sorry guys, by kriploskman (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:11PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • it's your duty to block ads (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:43PM (#4745936)
    You must block ads, or avoid those sites entirely.

    If companies and individuals go out of business because of blocking ads, that will lead to fewer, higher-quality companies like google that can come up with ways to make ads *work*, or sites that actually .. wait for it .. CHARGE MONEY.

    I would rather pay money to visit a handful of web sites, then to put up with this bullshit pop-up ad crap all over the place. In fact these days I don't even bother visiting more than about 5-6 web sites, since I'll just drown in ads anyway. And I paid for a /. subscription.

    Don't take over my computer with your ads and javascript nonesense, and I won't hack into yours. Deal?

    Remember folks: Advertising is not a god-given right. It just happens to work for TV and magazines. If they don't want me ad blocking, they should take down their sites.

    Is it theft to get up from a TV commercial? To skip the big ad section in your magazine? No. Ads are priced by the eyeballs after the fact, you don't try and force the eyeballs to match your expectations.
  • Best Solution (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:44PM (#4745942)
    Why don't we just replace the outdated WWW with X clients, and make eveyone run X servers? That way, web sites can draw whatever they want on your display. It would really eliminate all this slow javscript and HTML which requires a huge browser to interpret and render. Isn't mark-up just a kludge (tell a browser how to render pages), when you can simply render the pages directly? X is a much cleaner solution, IMHO.
    • Re:Best Solution by PunchMonkey (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:16PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • So?? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:44PM
    • Re:So?? by Balorn (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
      • Re:So?? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:57PM
      • Re:So?? by actiondan (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @03:37AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • another article on it by larry bagina (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:44PM
  • Forum (Score:5, Informative)

    by vicviper (140480) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:44PM (#4745951)
    The test URL refrenced is here. [mozillazine.org]

    BTW the site works with no blockage in lynx :)
    • Re:Forum by SDrifter (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:01PM
  • such a shame... by Fuzzums (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:45PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • What about TV comercials by Foredecker (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:45PM
  • Gamespy by new_breed (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:45PM
    • Re:Gamespy by hector13 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Gamespy by Matrix2110 (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:43AM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • LOL! by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:46PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Official? Wah? by targo (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:46PM
    • News? by gowmc (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:13AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Stupid argument by Pedrito (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:46PM
  • Where are the pop-unders? by Sexy Commando (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM
  • The word stealing (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anik315 (585913) <.sameul.haque. .at. .gmail.com.> on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM (#4745982) Homepage
    It finally happened. The word stealing has lost all meaning. Stealing used to mean physical theft, as in you stole my calculator. You stole my book. You stole my videogame. You stole my song. You stole my TV show. You stole my internet site. You stole my cable. You stole my bandwidth. Stealing = made me mad
  • Theft? Offensive! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Gary Franczyk (7387) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM (#4745985)
    Theft? That is insulting and offensive.

    I guess you can consider these other things theft also:

    Using the Lynx web browser
    Any TV using Tivo or ReplayTV
    Going to the bathroom during commercial breaks.
    Coming to the movies a bit late for the commercials.

    • Re:Theft? Offensive! by TeknoHog (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
    • Re:Theft? Offensive! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by fferreres (525414) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:56PM (#4746714) Homepage
      Theft? That is insulting and offensive.

      I guess you can consider these other things theft also:

      * Using the Lynx web browser
      Lynx is 100% fine. It works perfectly and is not blocked for a reason.

      * Any TV using Tivo or ReplayTV
      The day everyone has TIVO, you'll see that the advertizements start to get buried INSIDE the show, or that that show you loved in no longer supported. All you can access for free will be propaganda supported stuff or pay-per-views. I'm nt looking worward to that day :)

      Going to the bathroom during commercial breaks.
      Nobody requires you to look at the screen when they display an add last time I checked. Not even to stay on the channel. Most websites are not asking people to click the banners nor asking you to pay carefull attention to all the banners.

      * Coming to the movies a bit late for the commercials.
      They couldn't care less, the fact is some people enjoy those commercials, and for the movie you have already payed a ticket wich is the way you supports the creation of movies.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Theft? Offensive! by serutan (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:11AM
  • by FearUncertaintyDoubt (578295) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM (#4745988)
    If they want to block people who are blocking ads, fine. Just come out and say that you want people to see the ads. Don't call me a thief. Don't say I'm leeching. I'd have a lot more respect for these guys if they would just admit they are trying to force people to watch ads and leave it at that, rather than accusing me of being a criminal.

    When sites put banners and say, please click on these links because it helps us fund the site, I usually do. Why? Because it shows respect, it's honest, and it doesn't treat me like a "leech" that needs to have measures taken against me.

  • There's a simple way around this (Score:3, Informative)

    by autopr0n (534291) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM (#4745989) Homepage Journal
    If you're writing a browser, just change the behavior of the popup-blocker from actually stopping popups, to having the window open without displaying it, IE it doesn't show up on the taskbar and can't be seen. It's the same effect as not opening, really.

    Of course, this probably wont work with an add-on popup blocker to IE. It's to bad M$ doesn't have the guts to put a popup blocker in IE.

    I've found a simple way to prevent popups is to put frequently-visited sites (salon, the onion) that do have popup's in the restricted sites list.

    Also these people are crazy. The kinds of people who would actually put this software on their pages probably aren't making pages worth visiting anyway.
  • I like this message better. (Score:5, Funny)

    by banal avenger (585337) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:47PM (#4745990)
    I think it would be more effective if the message it gave was this [anti-leech.com].
  • Site? by _ph1ux_ (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Hosts file. by jericho4.0 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM
  • Who's the theif? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by xchino (591175) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:48PM (#4746007)
    It seems to me that popping up unsolicited browser windows is both theft of bandwidth and theft of system resources. I've actualy been DoS'd by multitudes of pop ups each spawning it's own pop up children. Although I don't see what their test sight was supposed to do, I didn't get any pop ups and my pop up blocker didn't do anything out of the ordinary..
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Can't you just.. by poity (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:49PM
  • Better than the DMCA by Jah-Wren Ryel (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:49PM
  • Hahahah... by shepd (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:49PM
  • Advertising is ok, and so is stealing by brejc8 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:50PM
  • by Rob Kaper (5960) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:51PM (#4746033) Homepage
    Except for using the phrase theft, which could be considered libel, I see no problem with this.

    So I won't see the site.. not my loss but ultimately theirs as I can't/won't recommend it to anyone else. And sites might not show up in Google either using this kind of technology.

    The idea of the Internet is that ultimately someone will build a better site.. anyone can publish something. If there's no useful site on a topic, some freak will stand up and make one that is better and more user-friendly. I know I have done so and I bet many others with me.

    Or some browser developer might find a way to show the content after all. Not that I actually see people pay for this stuff to put it on their sites.
  • Pathetic! by mehfu (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:51PM
  • by jimsingh (314245) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:52PM (#4746041)
    Despite what it may feel like, pop-up ads account for less than 5% of the total advertisements on todays websites. Further, AOL (see this [nytimes.com] NYT article posted on ./ several weeks ago) has confirmed that pop-ups are a huge source of dissatisfaction from web users - thus making them in-effective. Rather than use "anti-leech" technology, wouldn't advertisers be better served by simply employing technology that would be more palatable to their readers?
  • Won't work by TyrranzzX (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:52PM
  • by mcwop (31034) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:52PM (#4746044) Homepage
    I have Comcast digital cable. I tried to order a movie last night, but it would not order. I called and got the "we will send a tech out in a week" crap. I asked the rep why I should pay $80 a month for digital cable when the movie ordering system never works. Well the woman on the other end of the line said I don't pay for the movie unless I order it. I had to explain to her that I do pay for digital cable so I have the ability to order a movie when I want.

    Needless to say the attitude of many companies these days is all wrong. Making you view popup ads. Trying to blame product shortcomings on the consumer etc. Well, I am cancelling my Digital cable, and I will not visit sites with obnoxious popup strategies.

    If you want to do well in business, don't piss on your cutomers or potential customers.

  • by Zergwyn (514693) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:52PM (#4746050)
    I guess that there are multiple sides to any story, though in the end I find the efforts of sites like anti-leech both amusing and somewhat dangerous. On the one hand, I do understand that serving a website can be expensive, and that as the recession continues many people are becomming more and more desperate to avoid going under. However, anti-leech is bad for at least two major reasons, one economic, and one societal.

    1. Alienating your customers rarely makes for a solid business plan: As the RIAA and countless other harsh regimes(both in business and government) have learned, the more you clamp down, the more people squirm to escape your grasp. Companies forget that one of the whole points of the WWW is choice- and that includes the choice to go to another website if this one is treating me badly. I don't think I need to point out that long term business is built on repeat customers, but then again maybe I do. Repeat customers are ideal, because they are likely to spend more, and have a far lower cost of acquisition. You generally get repeat customers by building loyalty, a positive feeling towards the company. Loyalty does not generally follow from pissing people off.

    2. Even more so then with programming, many people start learning their HTML by looking out how another site has done it. I now do a lot of website development, but I got my start when I was younger in part through liberal copying/tinkering with already built stuff until I figured it out well enough to do myself. This makes me concerned about their 'anti-view-source' offerings. While I suspect much of their stuff can be circumvented, the very people who might benefit most from looking at code are new to the web and thus might not know how to get around stuff. If such things became widespread, it could have a somewhat chilling effect on the learning that goes on for the general, casual designer, who might never have the chance to get bit by the bug and learn more(/me looks over at large pile of Mt. Dew bottles, not totally sure this would be bad ;).

    Any how, I hope that the concept embodied by antileech gets thoroughly trounced. Heh, and I haven't even touched on the whole rediculousness of the 'theft' thing, but I'm sure that will get pretty well gone over by others.
  • I like their anti-image leech method by MiTEG (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:52PM
  • by dacetone (177878) <acetone&technojunkie,org> on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:53PM (#4746054) Homepage Journal
    This [anti-leech.com] was quite a shocker for me...
  • Cool. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Wakko Warner (324) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:53PM (#4746055) Homepage Journal
    Now there is something that will alert me when a website is no longer worth visiting. Thank you, Anti-Leech Dot Com! I am sure your IPO will net you hundreds of dollars.

    - A.P.
  • WARNING by ActiveSX (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:53PM
  • How about the other way? by vadim_t (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:53PM
  • contact these idiots by _ph1ux_ (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:54PM
  • I am not obligated to view their ads (Score:3, Insightful)

    by chunkwhite86 (593696) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:54PM (#4746067) Homepage
    I am not morally or legally bound to view the advertisements of others.

    If pop-up blocking in browsers is "theft", is it then also theft when your Tivo skips the commercials??

    This is incredibly silly, and I wouldn't frequent a web site, or give business to a corporation that would ban be based on my browser or browser settings.
  • Visual Pollution by spanky555 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:54PM
  • by smoondog (85133) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:55PM (#4746083)
    You know this is silly. I bet that advertisers are pretty happy with this. People who block ads (I bet) are much more likely *not* to buy products related to those ads (if they saw them, of course). So advertisers are getting better views for their money. In reality, however, maybe the website providers should go after the advertisers, not the blockers.

    That said, providers have a right to block access to people not requesting their pop-ups. I also have a right to avoid their page....

    -Sean
  • by oakbox (414095) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:56PM (#4746089) Homepage
    When I read the 'denial' message here [anti-leech.com], I was pretty shocked. I can't believe that they think this kind of thing makes people want to come back to their site.

    And how about foolishly allowing people to alter the URL and change the message? How stupid is that?

    Oakbox

  • Analogy... by Libor Vanek (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:56PM
    • Re:Analogy... by timerider (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:07PM
  • by corrosiv (116029) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM (#4746105) Homepage

    http://smartin-designs.com/

    This guy is maintaining an /etc/hosts file specifically tailored to blocking ads. Alias everything to 127.0.0.1 and voila - banners are now broken images. I haven't installed it yet - I've been getting by with this list which I started before I discovered that guy (sorry Slashdot):

    # hosts
    127.0.0.1 ad.doubleclick.net ad.ca.doubleclick.net
    doubleclick.net a.tribalfusion.com doubleclick.com ssads.osdn.com
    ads.x10.com us.a1.yimg.com ar.atwola.com ads3.zdnet.com ads2.zdnet.com
    ads1.zdnet.com ads.zdnet.com www.burstnet.com adfarm.mediaplex.com
    altfarm.mediaplex.com s0b.bluestreak.com images2.slashdot.org
    images.slashdot.org a.r.tv.com popup.msn.com sportsmed.starwave.com
    advertising.com servedby.advertising.com ad.trafficmp.com fmads.osdn.com
    media.fastclick.net popuptraffic.com www.popuptraffic.com log.go.com
    games.espn.go.com sportsmed.starwave.com ehg-espn.hitbox.com
    amch.questionmarket.com ads.forbes.com ads.enliven.com adj9.thruport.com
    oas-central.realmedia.com ad.trafficmp.com click.atdmt.com
    view.atdmt.com a1356.g.akamai.net
  • Interesting background by FeatureBug (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM
  • Umm... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jpt.d (444929) <abfall&rogers,com> on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:57PM (#4746114)
    "Close your browser window, uninstall your pop up blocker and come back here to visit us."

    How about I go to another site and forget about yours.
    • Re:Umm... by zurab (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:46PM
  • Internet Explorer is STEALING!! by miketang16 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:58PM
  • This really doesn't seem so bad (Score:3, Insightful)

    by joe52 (74496) on Sunday November 24 2002, @05:58PM (#4746124) Homepage
    I don't see what's wrong with this. I'd rather have them attempt a technological solution than buy some congressmen and have them make popup blocking illegal.
  • Time to start a "Blocked by Anti-Leech" page... by TrentC (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:59PM
  • On futher examination... by Pedrito (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @05:59PM
  • Some high quality coding right there. by Zenithal (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:00PM
  • Guys... by GreyWolf3000 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:00PM
  • Lamers by _ph1ux_ (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:01PM
  • Theft? How? by Czernobog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:01PM
  • Unsolicited advertisements... by vga_init (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:02PM
  • Doesn't matter to me... by GimmeFuel (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:02PM
  • Insane Setup? by suwain_2 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:03PM
  • Spam by storem (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:03PM
  • Workaround (Score:3, Informative)

    by ErfC (127418) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:05PM (#4746198) Homepage
    The test site does nothing interesting if you turn off Javascript. I've blocked their cookies and everything, but without Javascript their code never gets the chance to check anything, apparently.

    Aren't there browsers that can block Javascript on a site-by-site basis? That would be nice...

    • Re:Workaround by ErfC (Score:3) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:12PM
      • Re:Workaround (Score:4, Interesting)

        by netsharc (195805) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM (#4746434)
        I wonder if Proxomitron can fix it. Yahoo! Mail doesn't work properly on Opera, it recognizes Opera as an "other" browser and displays the screen with ugly 14 and 19 pt fonts, instead of 10 and 12 pt like in IE and Mozilla. So I wrote a Proxomitron script to change the JS variable "isMozilla" to "true", and this worked: the Javascript got fooled into giving Opera the nicer Style Sheet. I wonder if the sort of thing can be applied to this stupid trick. If the script asks "Did that window load?", then we can easily say "Sure it loaded"... well if I have more time I'll work out a hack.
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:Workaround by fraxas (Score:1) Wednesday November 27 2002, @10:05AM
      • Turning off javascript worked fine for me in Moz by Rhys (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:08PM
  • Mozilla Problems?!?! by QQ2 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:06PM
  • Mozilla's stance on this issue... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by theBrownfury (570265) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:06PM (#4746205)
    Have a look at bug 181035 on Mozilla's Bugzilla [mozilla.org]. There is some good discussion on how to handle this. A pop-up window can't merely be hidden from view, because invisible windows are considered a security hazard. Maybe the sandbox idea will take off allowing pop-ups to have temporary play room.

    However as of now its an open issue at Mozilla with no clear solution in sight. This is going to be an arms race no doubt.
  • A Better Warning Message by Brent_DS (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:07PM
  • too easy by Simon Garlick (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:07PM
  • Better Link by chrismcc@netus.com (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:07PM
  • Something for nothing (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Badger (1280) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:08PM (#4746226)
    Ok, so calling ad-blockers "thiefs" is stupid, and the odds of this thing taking off is something around zero. Some points, though:

    1. There's nothing wrong with a site requiring you to view ads before viewing it. This isn't the best way to do it, mind you, but it's a reasonable theory.

    2. Everyone is better off if websites know what advertising works. Pretending to view ads hurts everyone in the long run.

    3. What we really need, at the end of the day, is better statistics on Internet ads. Radio and TV people can factor in bathroom breaks and channel surfing into their ad rates, but we're only beginning to get those stats for the Internet.

    4. Somewhere deep inside of me, I suspect that people who refuse to look at (any) ads are the first ones to yell when their favorite sites go to a subscription model. Actions do have consequences, and your ISP fee doesn't subsidize the sites you visit.
  • by Hnice (60994) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:10PM (#4746242) Homepage
    Hi,

    You offer a much-needed service. As a future enhancement, you might consider simply releasing a list of your clients, so i can avoid attemtpting to view their pages altogether. I'd be more than willing to wwork on things on the server side to redirect free-loading http requests from a popup-blocker to a similar site which does not block access via your service.

    Please let me know if you would like to collaborate, I'm offering my services for free, and I'll be sure to forward this same offer to any of your clients I come across, to prevent them from having to handle unneccessary traffic. In fact, it would probably be worthwhile for me to start collecting a list of your clients myself and making them available, along with lists of alternate sites with similar content. Please let me know if you'd like to help, as it should make your job a lot easier. If we can redirect all traffic from your client sites, you shouldn't have to worry much at all about blocking free-loaders. Thanks,

    Henry Quinn
    Brooklyn NY
  • I love privoxy... by johnraphone (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:10PM
  • No stealing involved by jbrandon (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
  • It's my right... by SaturnTim (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
  • Logic of the corps strikes again. by TENTH SHOW JAM (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:11PM
  • Better Link by chrismcc@netus.com (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:13PM
  • Cool! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by MrP- (45616) <rob@noSPam.elitemrp.net> on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:14PM (#4746288) Homepage
    Cool, now I can easily tell which sites I'll never go to again, and actively block and tell friends to block them also. Thanks! I can't wait till sites start using this, it'll really help narrow the web down to just the good sites (slashdot better not try this anti-theft tech!)
  • all well and good. by farnsworth (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:14PM
  • How many internet beats left... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
  • interestingly not working by jonathanbearak (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • ha ha by SQLz (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
  • Great ! by InrdZQdxdqn (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:17PM
  • Gator by h0mi (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:18PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • lynx for life... by Myuu (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:18PM
  • Turn away customers fast by t_allardyce (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:18PM
  • Yay Privoxy by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:19PM
  • Gee... great software he's got there *gag* by mhore (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:20PM
  • too bad by elmegil (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:20PM
  • This should be their guarantee: by dameron (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:21PM
  • Example website by fire-eyes (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:21PM
  • Is Wired doing something like this? by Tuckdogg (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:21PM
  • Omniweb seems immune (Score:3, Informative)

    by Huge Pi Removal (188591) <oliver+slashdot@watershed.co.uk> on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:23PM (#4746385) Homepage
    I waited, and waited, and waited. No button appeared. I think that Omniweb's slightly flawed Javascript implementation confounds it. Fine by me, most sites that have Javascript I need to use work just fine with it.

    • Omniweb rocks by Slur (Score:3) Monday November 25 2002, @12:01AM
  • Internet Marketing by Ace905 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:25PM
  • TV Watching by spanky555 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:25PM
  • Does their site have popups? by 56 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:26PM
  • Hey, it works... by Kjella (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:27PM
  • Schweet! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EchoMirage (29419) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM (#4746427)
    I'm an avid user of Phoenix [mozilla.org], which of course blocks pop-ups, and this is great news to me! Websites that use this will now immediately inform me, "We don't want you to give us (or our advertisers) your money." This is a big time-saving feature from having to wade through a webpage for a while to determine whether or not it's crap. Now I know from the outset. Thanks, webmasters!
  • Just disable javascript by signe (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:28PM
  • um, Proxomitron seems to work just fine. by kuroth (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:30PM
  • I Hit refresh a few times.... by azimir (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:30PM
  • Time Warner by lrslrslrs (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:31PM
  • so..... by Mark19960 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:32PM
  • javascript a subset of HTML? by Flamesplash (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:34PM
  • Anti-HTML by topace (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:34PM
    • Re:Anti-HTML by sg_oneill (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @03:11AM
  • So what you are saying by mindstrm (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
  • Make it obvious in their logs by BandwidthHog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
  • popup ads by Capt. Beyond (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
  • Another sign of a slowing dot com economy by zaqattack911 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
  • It blocked me incorrectly by snapfrozen (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:37PM
  • It all depends by ToasterTester (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:38PM
  • Give them some credit by b1ffster (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:38PM
  • What about ads that require software? by C_To (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:38PM
  • This is why I love Opera. by Belisarivs (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:41PM
  • Anti-leech.com Bussiness Plan by Grelli (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:41PM
  • anti-leech.com LAFF by Superfarstucker (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:42PM
  • Analog X POW by black88 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:42PM
  • Just use IE? by di0s (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:43PM
  • hypocrits? not us (Score:5, Funny)

    by fbg111 (529550) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:44PM (#4746603) Homepage
    I was curious enough to try anti-leech.com, with an unexpected yet illuminating result.

    Load the page in Mozilla with "Open Unrequested Windows" disabled, and get a short message saying I'm not allowed to view the page b/c I'm using a pop-up blocker.

    I disable Mozilla's popup blocker and load the page again. This time I get the anti-leech.com home page, along with the expected pop-up ad. Lo and behold, the popup ad is advertising Cable TV Descramblers.

    So let me get this straight. They want me to stop stealing from them by using a popup blocker so they can try to sell me a way to steal from cable companies using a descrambler.

    uhmmm, riiiiight. If you're going to be a hypocrit, at least try to be clever about it.
  • Would be dirt cheap.... by tgrotvedt (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:45PM
  • Well... by Squidgee (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:46PM
  • by PotatoHead (12771) <doug&opengeek,org> on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:46PM (#4746631) Homepage Journal
    I hate delayed content even more. Some hoser posted a good point followed by a lame link, so this reply really can't be under their thread.

    They mentioned the salon system where you are basically forced to look at an ad for a time before getting the content.

    The way I see it, broadband of any kind is a premium service. Why pay for it if the crap from the marketing folks reduces the quality of the experience to that of dialup? Think about it for a moment, if you use free Juno or something, what do you get? Ads --too many of them to make it worthwhile, so you upgrade service, but why? For a better experience of course! So, if the actions of the marketing people degrade this, does this not devalue the very service you pay extra for? Duh!

    Personally, I like the ads that are intermixed in with the content. Most of the benefit of broadband is preserved, and the ads get eyeballs.

    I can somewhat agree that browsing with popup support disabled somehow can be thought of as stealing, but what about malicious pages and such? How are users supposed to secure their machines without the freedom to reasonably define what their machine will and won't do for them?

    Battling the customer for their attention is never going to work. It costs more money and generates more bad PR than good impressions, so why do it? You would think these types of all people would know this cold.

    This sort of thing just limits the usefulness of the Internet just a little more for nothing but the profit of the losers selling this service.

    Salon is going the wrong direction by holding content until the ad is viewed. These folks are just as bad. How are the people who place ads in a reasonable way doing? For that matter, how about the /. ad system? Google? Are these working? I do not mind either one bit because I get to choose the nature of the experience. Seems to me the most valuable impressions are those where a user CHOSE, not was tricked or forced, to follow through that particular ad. In that small moment, you have the holy grail, you have a potential buyer actually interested in your product seeking more information.

    To everyone considering foolish schemes like this:

    How the hell are you going to get this by forcing the issue? Really, tell me how, I want to know!

    Know also, I don't have to get the content.

    This means more than you would think. We are all being attacked more and more in this new age of information. This will backfire and when it does, where will you be then? Consider your answer again after you remember also that everyone gets to talk about it --a lot and for a long time.

    Right now, there is more content presented than I can reasonably view. When I seek to meter my Internet time, guess who won't get the attention?

    Remember that when your stats go down as interested visitors don't come back after being treated like criminals. Our time is valuable too, why not create an experience that rewards participation rather than the opposite? It can be done though it takes work. Isn't that what we are supposed to be doing to make money. Isn't money made by adding value where you realistically can?

    Maybe there is some hope left though. If we feedback (which is what they really want anyway) our negative experiences, marketing people will begin to seek those who are actually working at providing an experience that people will come back for.

    Tell 'em what you think people, it is the only thing that actually matters in the end.

  • Don't want me to read it? by bbtom (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:46PM
  • This should be about a three-line fix in Moz by Kjella (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:47PM
  • Stoopid Anti HTML by ttjervaag (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:48PM
  • Faster and cleaner by westphalia999 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:50PM
  • 15%? by BandwidthHog (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:51PM
  • Pot calling the kettle black (Score:3, Insightful)

    by StormReaver (59959) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:53PM (#4746689)
    I don't think these people understand who the real thieves are. Sites that serve unwanted popups, banners, etc. without my consent are stealing the bandwidth that I paid for. If they want to use my bandwidth, they can damn well pay me for it at the prices I set. If they don't want to pay my prices, then they shouldn't be able to use my bandwidth. By the same token, if they don't want me to use their bandwidth, they're perfectly within their rights to deny me access to their sites.

    These bandwidth looters are trying to set the tone of the game by portraying those of us who are trying to preserve our bandwidth usage as something dirty. I am paying for my bandwidth, and I will be the one to determine when it gets used.
  • Images are fine; pop-ups suck. by creep (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:53PM
  • Resisting My Popup Killer is Futile! by NeuroManson (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:56PM
  • HOSTS file? by setzman (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:57PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Irony by shams42 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:57PM
  • For a good laugh (Score:3, Funny)

    by emkman (467368) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:58PM (#4746743)
    Run the Anti-Leech security tester [anti-leech.com] on "your site" - www.anti-leech.com
    then see all the source and links that are visible, and howly poorly written "your site" is.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Earthlink? by Zapdos (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:59PM
  • This basically means Non-IE users are thieves by J_DarkElf (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:01PM
  • This site is just out to make money by anball (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:05PM
  • So Mozilla is a theft tool? by Rai (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:06PM
  • Defeat anti-leech.com by... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Burning*Cent (579896) <baker DOT 921 AT osu DOT edu> on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:06PM (#4746818)
    ... disabling javascript. It's funny how impotent the anti-leech system is when something that simple nullifies it.

    What the phoenix and mozilla projects should add is a javascript manager, similar to the cookie and image managers. That way you can let specific sites run javascripts and block all others or block specific sites' scripts and run ones from sites that haven't been added to "the list".

    They should also add an animation/flash manager. I really hate flash ads.
  • More websites need to use the Google model. by Jeriki (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:07PM
  • Whu? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Safety Cap (253500) on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:07PM (#4746821) Homepage Journal
    I checked out their site, and notice that they boast "anti-theft" technology [anti-leech.com]. Supposedly, they can prevent you thugs from stealing webpage source code and images.

    So I ran their example, and checked it out. Sure enough, they block right-click, shift-f10, and the right-click key on the keyboard. Next stop, my browser's cache. Whoops! All the files and images are in there. Do'o!!

    • Right click and Mozilla sort of works... by WiredOni (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:31PM
    • Re:Whu? by Arcturax (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:59PM
    • Re:Whu? by lirkbald (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:48AM
    • Re:Whu? by WWWWolf (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @05:32AM
      • Re:Whu? by loopkin (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:31PM
    • Not on a Mac by Draoi (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @06:07AM
    • Re:Whu? by SoCalChris (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @01:54PM
      • Re:Whu? by SoCalChris (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @01:58PM
    • Re:Whu? by inkfox (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @08:52PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • disable javascript ... by malaba (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:09PM
  • follow the source code. by xj9000 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:10PM
  • Just another example... by sigsegv (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:12PM
  • Another idea... by iie1195 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:14PM
  • A great idea - I support it!!! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Registered Coward v2 (447531) on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:14PM (#4746878)
    A web site has every right to decide wether or not they allow a particular browser configuration to access their site. Of course, the more people block pop-up ads, the fewer people that will be able to visit anti-blocking enabled sites, the less cash they'll get for ads, and eventually they'll die a natural death from lack of money.

    A free market cure for stupid business models. one that I will totally support by continuing to use pop-up blockers - and encourage friends to do likewise.
  • double-theft by kalou (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:16PM
  • need a new business model for the net by cdn-programmer (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:18PM
  • See also PrivNet, IFF, and 'The Scissors Defense' by kriegsman (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:18PM
  • Website access denied (Score:5, Funny)

    by Phroggy (441) <slashdot3@p[ ]ggy.com ['hro' in gap]> on Sunday November 24 2002, @07:19PM (#4746927) Homepage
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • epiphany by lrslrslrs (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:24PM
  • Popups have been around since dinosaurs (sic) by Snork Asaurus (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:28PM
  • What if I'm blind? by miguel_at_menino.com (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:30PM
  • Alternative sites... by Jugalator (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:31PM
  • Hell... by gt25500 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:31PM
  • You are the ones who are the thieves. by ubernostrum (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:32PM
  • They show ads on their own site, let's advertise. by stienman (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:32PM
  • In Soviet Russia... by AntiNorm (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:33PM
  • Theft of TV signal by Spazmania (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:34PM
  • This could be a good thing... by Cloud K (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:35PM
  • This is ludicrous!! Protect your rights. by borgheron (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:35PM
  • Blocking messages can be altered by users. by Boogaroo (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:36PM
  • Ad on their website by MavEtJu (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:40PM
  • whatever by RyLaN (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:45PM
  • Umm... by Hi_2k (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:46PM
  • I could be out of line here but if I run a website by myowntrueself (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:46PM
  • Javascript by loconet (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:47PM
    • Re:Javascript by loconet (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:57PM
  • This is great! by pyrote (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:53PM
  • Theft? by nihilvt (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:53PM
  • What if I blocked them at the gateway?? by marcushnk (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:54PM
  • So that's the end.. by Cloud K (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:56PM
  • just a late April Fool's joke by VehementPetal (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:59PM
  • secure and no popup by Erno_Rubaiyat (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:02PM
  • Um. anyone here *without* a knee-jerk reaction? by dandelion_wine (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:05PM
  • Uh huh by DigitalDad (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:09PM
  • The 'protected' HTML... by paj1234 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:12PM
  • Nonsense... popups are not necessary by sapgau (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:12PM
  • Anyone wanna start a pool? by theLOUDroom (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:13PM
  • I've got a novel idea by Triple Helix (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:15PM
  • Double edged sword... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by doormat (63648) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:16PM (#4747304) Journal
    On one side, the client can block popups. Its perfectly legal/morally right.

    On the other side, when I request a HTML document from a website, they are no way obligated to send it to me. Calling blockers thieves is bullshit, but they are in no way obligated to serve me data if I block popups. And if IE ever implements popup blocking, the sites that block users who block popups could find themselves with no audience.
  • anti-traffic by kraksmoka (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:18PM
  • Bullheaded Stuborn Stupidity by sonofepson (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:20PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Can you remember when (if) you last clicked an ad? by Groganz (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:25PM
  • Pop-up Schmop-up (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jdkane (588293) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:25PM (#4747391)
    The pop-up window was never designed for advertising purposes. However because of the flexibility of the JavaScript language, you can easily create a program to display advertising in a pop-up. And so the pop-up window has become an annoyance because 99% of the time it's related to in-your-face advertising (99% unwanted).

    Popups can be used for other reasons. Maybe I'm blocking pop-ups for a totally different reason than advertising. The fact that Anti-leech.com thinks that blocking pop-ups == blocking advertising, is wrong because many more applications exist for the standard pop-up window (like games, application notices, cool effects, temporary data store, etc. -- whatever the programmer can imagine).

    On the flip side, there are other ways to make advertising annoying without popups. For example, some sites now use a DHTML layer that floats across the content to get your attention. Now that's annoying, but it's not a pop-up, which proves pop-ups aren't needed, so why protect pop-up advertising? I don't see a reason, but maybe somebody else (an advertiser) can shed some light on this. I would like to hear perspectives from advertisers on that point. DHTML layers are a good idea from the advertiser's perspective because layers can't easily be suppressed, unless JavaScript is turned off completely, which most people are not likely to do [thecounter.com]. Sorry about giving out such "evil" pointers but it's nothing new that people don't already know about.

    Excluding anti-pop-up browsers will make most potential clients angry. Instead, the advertisers (and Anti-leech.com) should better spend their time creating alternate methods for delivery of advertising (like the DHTML layer) intsead of blocking the defunct pop-up. It's easy to see that protecting pop-up advertising is short-sighted because popups are not the only delivery method available for advertising. These companies must not be technically savvy. Whoever buys into this foolish logic will end up annoying their potential clientel, and therefore alienating them. Are you gonna' buy from someone who calls you a thief and then forces you to see pop-ups that you've already decided you don't want? Notice the accusing intonations of the text that the anti-popup detector displays -- very rude indeed -- any descent advertiser or sales outlet wouldn't use it, unless they are convinced they have to deal out punishment to their potential clients as a parent might to a child. Very demeaning to say the least. We're all grown-ups here.

    Why do so many browsers allow you to block pop-ups? Because the people have spoken, and the people do not want pop-up advertising! For any advertiser to now force-feed pop-ups and call clients thieves -- especially at this point in history -- it goes against every ethical and smart business practice.

    I don't mind advertising being displayed to me, because I am so accustomed to it. However I do despise it being pushed to me in pop-up windows or any other annoying fashion that blocks the primary purpose of my visit to the website. If they have to yell that loud about their product, then I would say the product most likely sucks. For example, you probably won't see the Segway HT [amazon.com] in a pop-up window anytime soon because the product speaks for itself. Quality, value, and purpose.

    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Primitive by Elitist Snob (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:26PM
  • The irony by loconet (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:28PM
  • Hadden Industries by Vaystrem (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:29PM
  • Kazaa Lite hates ad-blockers by 706GL (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:32PM
  • I haven't seen web ads in years... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:32PM
  • Evil bastards (Score:3, Interesting)

    by be-fan (61476) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:34PM (#4747449)
    What bugs me is not so much the pop-up issue, but the fact that the "access denied" page is one of those irritating Javascript jobs that you can't Back-button out of.
  • Good idea (Score:3, Insightful)

    by dissy (172727) on Sunday November 24 2002, @08:35PM (#4747461)
    So if blocking popups is stealing, does this mean that when their site is unavailable they are obligated to compensate us for the downtime their site was unavailable?

    So many times ive been upset because a site i needed to get to was down.. At long last justification for getting money for my loss!

    After all, im not paying my ISP for bandwidth just to have these sites be down stealing information from me.
  • Have at them by macdaddy357 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:39PM
  • What about those non-North Americans among us? by SofaMan (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:44PM
  • Two points by Tjp($)pjT (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:56PM
  • Dear Anti-Leech by omnipotentnewbie (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @08:57PM
  • What is "Stealing"...? by eselgroth (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:00PM
  • HA! by m1a1 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:02PM
  • Lesson from Television by shiflett (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:04PM
  • this'll piss em off by johno.ie (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:05PM
  • It doesn't work. by Animats (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:15PM
  • Did anyone else get this? by madcoder47 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:16PM
  • For those who like to use IE, use Avant Browser by SirDaShadow (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:17PM
  • Anti-Leech's Skewed Logic by madcoder47 (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:24PM
  • DONT DO THIS by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:26PM
  • Funny thing about this... by frostman (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:26PM
  • Panicware by neverpsyked (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:28PM
  • Simple solution by Azi Dahaka (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:29PM
  • Proxomitron uber alles! + fun with their script by Call Me Black Cloud (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:30PM
  • Server error at t he site by jlrowe (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:38PM
  • Web Site On This Topic by pclinger (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:39PM
  • HA! by vonsneerderhooten (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:41PM
  • A really simplistic question. by nkuzmik (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:43PM
  • It's funny....reading this only made me... by MattGWU (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @09:55PM
  • WTF with Lynx by jeepee (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:02PM
  • Me Not Give Shit by adb (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:19PM
  • Popup?!? I don't need no stinkin Popups! by SyOpReigm (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:25PM
  • That's strange... by wmspringer (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:45PM
  • Only thieves block popups...?!?! by pdboddy (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:46PM
  • What's truly amusing by Rykard (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:47PM
  • This just in... by Xeth (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:51PM
  • Oh the hypocrisy of it all.... by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:58PM
  • not viewing your ads is theft?! by matt_beall (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:01PM
  • Goofy script by Alehandro (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:06PM
  • The feature google should have. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by GiMP (10923) on Sunday November 24 2002, @11:07PM (#4748435) Homepage
    Google should have a feature to exclude sites with popups... now, that would be neat.. much more useful than their catalog search :)
  • Oooo..so hard to get around.. by Jerdie (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:09PM
  • My reply: by Arctech (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:15PM
  • It's *MY* Bandwidth by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:30PM
  • Have a look at this by geekindustries (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:34PM
  • More www.anti-leech.com/at_block.php FUN by Alehandro (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:44PM
  • Pop-Ups by AvitarX (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:54PM
  • I'd send them mail, but... by Todd Knarr (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:55PM
  • I can see it now... by siliconwafer (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @11:57PM
  • No javascript, no blocking :) by Loopy (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:00AM
  • Am I missing something? by Ironfist.cmg (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:01AM
  • Its theft if you dont read this post. by bxbaser (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:32AM
  • reality bites by florescent_beige (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:34AM
  • this is annoying by nonweasel (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:39AM
  • my own experience by 2MuchC0ffeeMan (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @12:47AM
  • Not to mention... by nonweasel (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:52AM
  • Here is a list by too_bad (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:54AM
  • TOO SIMPLE by too_bad (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:06AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • That's right... by mtec (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:10AM
  • Am I the only one that finds it Ironic... by kgarcia (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:15AM
  • my computer is not yours. by jeepee (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:19AM
  • Bandwidth Stealing - How? by ibcmax (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:28AM
  • antileach.com is a thief. by Zapdos (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @01:33AM
  • Just shooting themselves in the foot ... by wayne606 (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:37AM
  • and users will not go to sites using this.. by EMR (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @01:44AM
  • Following the MPAA and RIAA's lead by Jafafa Hots (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @02:07AM
  • So what? Good for them! by eatenn (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:07AM
  • almost as bad as.... by Tablizer (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:24AM
  • by upper (373) on Monday November 25 2002, @02:26AM (#4749404)

    Web interactions can be described at two levels. The first, and the only one nontechnical folks know about, is the human level. Here interactions are described as they are perceived by a human using standard tools. That is, when I click a link I'm asking for a page as rendered by default configuration Netscape or IE -- a bundle of content which you're offering as a bundle and which I see only as a bundle. If this is the way you understand web interactions, then accusations of theft make sense. But it's an abstraction that doesn't reflect what's really going on.


    The truth is at another level, which is network level. Under HTTP, I request a chunk of data and, your server may or may not send it to me. That's it. The protocol says nothing about what I do with the data once I have it -- my computer is my agent, not yours. In particular, it says nothing about whether or not I will follow any suggestions to request other chunks of data. The protocol says nothing about what whether or not I'm using the standard tools. (It does suggest that I tell you, but I see that as a detail of the request -- "I want the version you've prepared for IE5".) Those are the real terms of use. If you're server sends out data on those conditions, you've implicitly agreed to them

    (This doesn't give me license to violate copyright law or commit identity theft. Those are illegal independently of any protocol.)


    If you want to make sure I download your ads, use a protocol (or server configuration) which is a better fit for your abstraction. You can:

    • Configure your server to deny content requests until the ads has been downloaded. E.g. don't serve me part 2 unless I've downloaded the ads in part 1 (tale.com does this), or put the content I want in a frame that I have to load last. [But there's no way to tell whether or not I've displayed the ads.]
    • Use a protocol in which the whole page -- text, images, and all -- are transfered in a single bundle, like a zipfile or tarball. The protocol makes it clear that the ads and the content are a package. [There's no way to tell whether or not I've displayed them here, either].
    • Require me to use code you trust. It could be a signed version of a standard app or your own applet. [But the only way you can require it is by serving the content only to machines that have proven that they know some secret. With fully programmable computers -- i.e. not crippled by "trusted computing" hardware -- the secret will be be DeCSSed.]
    In other words, you can readily force me to download the ads, but forcing me to display them is just another DRM use case. Or maybe it's a DMCA issue.

    The protocol is the law. Or at least it should be -- reality may differ.

  • Lol - Javascript... by grishnav (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:35AM
  • Well they said sorry by skinfitz (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @02:48AM
  • Simple lock by JemyM (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:54AM
  • Stooooopid! by cgreuter (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @03:01AM
  • Who is the thief? by yelims (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @03:09AM
  • Anti image by dvoosten (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @03:36AM
  • How to hack this sh... by mindflow (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @03:52AM
  • Thieves? by Simon Kongshoj (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @03:58AM
  • Slashdot is using Anti-Leech!! by wiho (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:15AM
  • The Bottom Line by toby360 (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:16AM
  • They don't get it by sverrehu (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:19AM
  • Pop-ups are evil by quintessent (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @04:21AM
  • Better idea. by exitzero (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:24AM
  • Ted? Ted Turner? by Niet3sche (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:49AM
  • Anti-Leech Security Testing by hunt_the_wumpus (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:57AM
  • The thing to remember... by NFNNMIDATA (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @05:16AM
  • Alternate Browsers by Martin S. (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @05:27AM
  • Frustrations vented at wrong people by rolfwind (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @05:30AM
  • Speaking of bandwidth theft... by Flwyd (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @06:08AM
  • Be Careful by EmagGeek (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @06:38AM
  • Successful Theft by Gallenod (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @07:58AM
  • Makes me sick.... by jbrelie (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @08:17AM
  • In related news... by anarkhos (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @08:18AM
  • Blocking javascript too? by Bert64 (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @08:35AM
  • Popups VS TV Ads by Like2Byte (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @09:08AM
  • Theft by whom? by surprise_audit (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @09:35AM
  • Their Image protector is pointless by McFly69 (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @10:01AM
  • DMCA on our side in this case? by NetRanger (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @10:07AM
  • uh, image protection funny haw haw work around. by prplxian (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @11:07AM
  • I guess I'm also a thief when ... by sjmgaut (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @11:19AM
  • Blockers are not Thieves (Score:3, Insightful)

    by McFly69 (603543) on Monday November 25 2002, @11:43AM (#4751931) Homepage
    Only Thieves Block Pop-Ups

    I do not think so. Company who gives Pop-ups ads are Thieves. They use up our bandwidth and cpu, when most users clearly do not wish it. Is it fair, for a person, who pays months for a set bandwidth (let's say 1 gig a month) and some of that bandwidth is wasted for these ads? I do not thinks so!
  • Am I the only one who noticed this? by Zero_Satisfaction (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @12:42PM
  • How friggin useless by malachid69 (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:19PM
  • It's simple by mirabilos (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @02:20PM
  • I killed ads on my PC easily... by CokoBWare (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @04:39PM
  • No, mine still blocks them just fine. by Xaroth (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @05:10PM
  • Apparently, I wasn't the only one... by stinky wizzleteats (Score:2) Tuesday November 26 2002, @02:31PM
  • Re:hmmm (Score:5, Funny)

    by seizer (16950) on Sunday November 24 2002, @06:06PM (#4746206) Homepage
    No, something more like this [anti-leech.com] :-)
    [ Parent ]
    • Re:hmmm by Goldberg's Pants (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @06:35PM
    • Re:hmmm by SoupIsGoodFood_42 (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:20PM
    • Re:hmmm by Jeff DeMaagd (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:22PM
    • Re:hmmm by Jugalator (Score:2) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:25PM
    • Re:hmmm That was funny! by olddoc (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @07:29PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Re:FP by rodolfo.borges (Score:1) Sunday November 24 2002, @10:06PM
  • Re:No need for popup stoppers... by Tablizer (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:28AM
  • Re:can anyone guess what this does? by grishnav (Score:1) Monday November 25 2002, @02:54AM
  • Re:70 working passwords. by G27 Radio (Score:2) Monday November 25 2002, @03:12AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • 84 replies beneath your current threshold.
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