• @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    12 months ago

    You are trying to put the onus on end users, while also simultainously pursuing some weird guilt based appeal to emotion.

    And still refuse to address the core issue, which is the lack of moderation and policing of content creating the essential need for adblockers in the first place.

    Ad companies don’t get create this toxic hellscape, then blame end users with wrung hands and empty “Won’t someone thing of the poor content creators” appeals to emotion to try and handwave the responsibility away.

    Why won’t they think of the content creators? Why wont they do something to reduce the actual necessity for adblock in the interest of the poor, downtrodden content creators?

    Especially in a world where far better alternatives (like merch and patreon type sites) exists to give them money, directly, without having to deal with advertising hellscapes.

    • @papertowels
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      2 months ago

      And still refuse to address the core issue, which is the lack of moderation and policing of content creating the essential need for adblockers in the first place.

      You are voluntarily consuming content that the content creators agreed to have the ads for. You can just not consume that content.

      Why won’t they think of the content creators?

      For the upteenth time, they probably are thinking of them because the content creators agreed to have them as a revenue stream.

      You’re acting like content creators are completely removed from this. guess who pays them? generally speaking, not you. It’s the big bad ad companies. Why? BECAUSE THEY HAVE AN AGREEMENT.

      Especially in a world where far better alternatives (like merch and patreon type sites) exists to give them money, directly, without having to deal with advertising hellscapes.

      Great! Consume your content from those places! I’m in the patreons for a few podcasts myself for the ad-free versions.

      Be smart, use an ad blocker for your sanity, but at least acknowledge that you are likely at least a tiny bit cutting into a revenue stream that the creators utilize. Again, no guilt trip here, I’ve ran pi hole instances myself. In fact some folks definitely encourage their base to use ad blockers on their content, I believe Louis Rossman is one of them. But I don’t delude myself into thinking this is their fault. That is truly some “LOOK AT WHAT YOU MADE ME DO!” reasoning.

      After all of this, do you see why it can be comparable to piracy? Because content creators agreed to have it as part of their revenue stream to be served alongside the content, so having it blocked cuts into that revenue stream.

      I’m not asking you to change behaviors. It just feels like I’m talking to a wall. Do you disagree with anything the previous paragraph?

      After all of this, do you see why it can be comparable to piracy? Because content creators agreed to have it as part of their revenue stream to be served alongside the content, so having it blocked cuts into that revenue stream.

      EDIT: so optimistically, it takes two parties to have poor communication. So I’m going to try and clear things up.

      I am NOT arguing that users have to be subjected to ads.

      I am arguing that content providers serve ads as a revenue stream, and blocking that cuts into that revenue stream. Boo hoo, I’ll do it anyways and probably support them in other ways, like subscribing to them, buying their merch, sharing their articles or songs, etc.

      But I’m saying I understand why, from a content provider/creators standpoint, being deprived of that revenue stream that I intended to be served alongside my content, is comparable to piracy. Because as the content creator I agreed to financially benefit from ads being served alongside my content, and instead content is being consumed without that financial kickback.