• FartsWithAnAccent
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    3808 months ago

    This is 100% the fault of shitty advertisers spamming us with literal scams, malware, and spyware.

    • pachrist
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      1958 months ago

      I get that ads pay for a free internet. But that doesn’t mean that 60% of my screen needs to be malware to read a local news article.

      Until advertisers act in good faith, I block as much as possible.

      • @Zikeji@programming.dev
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        1068 months ago

        Or those scummy click bait ads disguised as related articles? They make my blood boil with how they prey on the vulnerable.

        • @7U5K3N@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          318 months ago

          That’s all Google discover is on my phone… Ai generated articles that are just click bait.

          is a new episode of RandomShow airing tonight?

          Star Trek 31 confirmed to feature major tng character (from today)

          blah.

          • @datavoid@lemmy.ml
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            308 months ago

            Google is so bad for this, plus the fact that they were the ones who started rewarding clickbait articles.

            In my mind though, MSN will never be dethroned from having the shittiest content.

            • @SnipingNinja@slrpnk.net
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              58 months ago

              It can’t, just check the windows thing which appears as a left sidebar in windows 11 or the edge default homepage

      • @Drusenija@lemmy.world
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        518 months ago

        I’ve been seeing clips from Ready Player One recently and this reminded me of the main bad guy’s philosophy on advertising in the OASIS.

        we estimate we can sell up to 80% of an individual’s visual field before inducing seizures

        Can’t help but feeling there’s some parallels there.

        • @skyspydude1@lemmy.world
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          508 months ago

          Seems unrealistic. In reality, they’d be asking how often the seizures occur and would figure out if the increased ad revenue from going to 90% would offset any potential lawsuits.

      • @BlemboTheThird@lemmy.ca
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        298 months ago

        Used to be if I found the site of a newspaper I thought I liked, I’d turn off my ad blocker to see how it goes.

        I don’t even try any more. Again and again and again, every time I turn it off the page gets so cluttered that following the article becomes a chore and takes up so many resources that even scrolling slows to a crawl. Ludicrous nonsense.

        • @damndotcommie@lemmy.basedcount.com
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          138 months ago

          The cluttered pages with “videos” running all over the place is what frustrates me the most. I go in and disable javascript and see how it goes. Javascript seems to be the herpes of the internet as far as I am concerned.

        • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I recently noticed a feature on iOS to open all new sites in Reader mode. It’s definitely more readable but mixed results when not everything is there

          There’s got to be some sort of Accessibility violation here: where’s the EU when you need someone to stand up for consumers rights

      • @Starkstruck@lemmy.world
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        138 months ago

        Fr. I legitimately wouldn’t mind just a few banner ads to pay for things, but as per usual, the corpos got too damn greedy. So congrats, now you get no ad viewage from me.

    • FenrirIII
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      928 months ago

      Don’t forget those annoying floating ads and the tiny X that doesn’t actually close the ad

      • @mrgreyeyes@feddit.nl
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        778 months ago

        And the fucking videos that auto play in the bottom corner with audio. I think the old people that recently found out about internet are trying to turn it into regular TV.

    • idunnololz
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      118 months ago

      I installed an ad blocker once I started getting unmuted video ads. I would be studying for an exam and suddenly start getting blasted with a super loud ad. This was in like 2015, before Chrome added the speaker icon next to the tab playing sound I had to look through every tab to find the source and mute it.

    • @lanolinoil@lemmy.world
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      118 months ago

      Plus they made the whole industry weird and obfuscated like bulk produce or something even though it didn’t need weird distribution models and dark unseen players in every corner of every ad bought and seen. Why is it this way? I honestly don’t know. How did advertisers willingly make it that way over just paying site owners or 1 aggregator or something… I guess Facebook has kind of become that now

    • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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      108 months ago

      This is 100% the fault of shitty advertisers spamming us with literal scams, malware, and spyware.

      And the shitty websites running those ads with just a shrug of their shoulders saying “oops, 3rd party. I can’t be expected to control what’s on my website.”

    • @Mango@lemmy.world
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      58 months ago

      Nah. While that obviously sucks, I personally don’t like people selling me shit. The ads are designed to occupy as much of my mental space as they can and that’s a serious breach of what’s most valuable to me.

    • stebo
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      378 months ago

      tbh it feels like most people I know use chrome or even edge without any extensions

          • BraveSirZaphod
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            378 months ago

            So Verizon gave you a phone for no upfront cost, and they’re shitty for making you pay for it if you decide to dash away early?

            Fascinating threshold for shitty behavior you have.

            • Neato
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              218 months ago

              I can’t believe people still do that. You aren’t saving money and you’re locked in 2 years. I guess if that’s that only kind of financing you can get.

              • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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                48 months ago

                I guess if that’s that only kind of financing you can get.

                That’s exactly what it is. Look up the statistics on how many people can’t afford an unexpected $500 bill. Most people simply don’t have the money to pay out of pocket for what smartphones actually cost, so they’re stuck with exploitation, or nothing.

                • @shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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                  38 months ago

                  As somebody who’s been purchasing my phones directly from the OEM at full price since 2016, I see this as being crazy. It’s made me realize for certain that I don’t need the absolute newest thing, and so I always go with mid-range devices. I feel like people who buy their devices outright don’t buy mini iPhones LOL. If they do, they hold on to them longer, treat them better, or buy them used. So some other fool takes the hit of depreciation.

                • Neato
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                  28 months ago

                  Seems odd because you can get fully functioning smartphones for like $200.

                • BraveSirZaphod
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                  68 months ago

                  If the phone costs $500, they simply increase your monthly bill by $500 / 24 months = $20 a month.

                  It’s a bit more complicated than this, and they’ll likely have some interest built in as well, but functionally, it’s no different than being given a loan to buy the phone and then paying the loan off over the two years. That’s why carriers often require a credit check before doing this.

          • GeekFTW
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            98 months ago

            Oh no Verizon is making you do the fucking shit you signed up and agreed to do oh no the horror!

              • GeekFTW
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                8 months ago

                Oh my heart is fantastic, Suzanne, but thanks for your concern.

                I just don’t go online and complain about the terms of legal contracts that I signed while blaming the company for being the bad guys for setting forth the terms that you, again, agreed to.

                🤦

                Edit: And your downvotes mean nothing either rofl.

        • Neato
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          68 months ago

          Can you use a blocker on Android or is per app the best we can do?

          • @shadshack@sh.itjust.works
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            148 months ago

            Tracker Control on Android works well for system-wide tracker and ad blocking, and you can configure custom blocking rules per-app. Works without root by using a VPN profile (but no data leaves your device via the VPN, it just routes the traffic through this app).

          • @Psythik@lemmy.world
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            Set your DNS servers to dns.adguard-dns.com (Settings > search for DNS). Also you should install the DDG app and enable App Tracking Protection. You don’t actually have to use the browser portion of the app for it to work. After doing these two things, ads and trackers will be blocked in every app.

      • @Fermion@feddit.nl
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        With an ad blocking dns.

        https://adguard-dns.io/en/public-dns.html

        Go down to the configure manually option and follow the instructions for iPhone.

        I think next guard is also supposed to be decent, but they won’t let you use it without an account.

        The nice thing about the dns approach is it works for more than just your web browser. There’s a bunch of Android games that are essentially unplayable without an adblocking dns.

        As a disclaimer, a bunch of sites are ramping up requiring enabling ads or they won’t let you load the content. I’m ok with just hitting back and not viewing those sites, but my MIL just asked for help removing the ad guard dns because her news sites wouldn’t let her in.

      • @smort@lemmy.world
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        208 months ago

        I use a Safari extension called Purify. It’s in the App Store. Works pretty well for me.

        (I also use a pi-hole at home)

        • @hemmes@lemmy.world
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          68 months ago

          Similar for me - 1Blocker and pi-hole at home. Then I also VPN to my home when outside to continue the pi-hole filter.

          I also use iCloud relay with non-precise location.

        • @Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          You answered better and thanks for the link. Is this a free service?

          I’m using adguard but I’ve heard the owners are possibly unscrupulous.

          • Franklin
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            38 months ago

            That is a free service and I really like it make sure you read their website basically when you sign up which requires no login it’ll give you a unique dns entry to use as your DNS

            The reason I like this one is it’s not just ad blocking it fixing a bunch of anti-tracking and other features

      • @neo@feddit.de
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        108 months ago

        Can you install Firefox?

        In Firefox you should be able to install the add-on “uBlock origin”. No additional tweaking of settings required.

        With Firefox you can browse the web including pages like YouTube.

      • HeyListenWatchOut
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        Some VPNs like Mullvad actually have an option in their app to block ads, gambling stuff, etc.

        They don’t catch everything, but work pretty well.

      • @moitoi@feddit.de
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        78 months ago

        At least, you can change your DNS to one who blocks ads. It’s not as efficient as uBlock origin and system wide on Android. But, it’s better than nothing.

      • @glacier@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Definitely look into Next DNS. There are also some Safari extensions that can block ads.

        I also suggest buying refurbished unlocked phones in the future instead of going for the carrier freebies which you can see are scams designed to lock you into paying for their overpriced service each month for over a year.

      • LostXOR
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        48 months ago

        Back when I had an iPhone I used Orion. It’s not perfect, but it blocked the vast majority of ads for me.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        As a quick and easy alternative, you can set it to automatically open sites in reader mode. I’ve been trying that lately and it definitely helps although also mixed results where sites block part of their content from reader mode.

        With automatic reader mode, I click to hide reader much less often than I formerly clicked to enable it

      • @QuarterSwede@lemmy.world
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        18 months ago

        AdGuard still works well but there are other safari extensions. At home I use eero ad blocking which works well for a maintenance free blocker.

    • Flying Squid
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      38 months ago

      Unlike when your friends or parents might raw dog, you can put that adblock condom on their computers for them.

  • @SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works
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    1348 months ago

    The main problem is 3rd party advertising. If the New York Times ran ads on their website like they did with the physical newspaper, we would not have this problem.

    Publishers need to take direct responsibility for every ad on their platform.

    • @derpgon@programming.dev
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      348 months ago

      Plausible deniability. Oh, a mildly sexual ad has shown to you? Someone probably approved it on the third-party site. Oh, you didn’t want to see it? Sorry, we got nothing to do with it.

      Also scams and other grey-area shit.

  • @brsrklf@jlai.lu
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    1118 months ago

    I am surprised the reason for blocking ads doessn’t include making sites somewhat readable. I guess faster loading could be it? But generally it’s more of a layout problem than a bandwidth one.

    I tend to not use adblockers, or when I do it’s on a black list system for worst offenders rather than by default. However, I absolutely refuse tracking, and if it’s the only option I go to firefox reader mode immediately.

    The usual false dichotomy of “personalised ads or you’re killing us!” is not acceptable.

    • plz1
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      1098 months ago

      Ad tech IS the tracking, so if you’re not blocking ads, you’re not actually refusing said tracking. I think you might be conflating cookies with being tracking (they are), but that’s only a part of it.

      • @MyFairJulia@lemmy.world
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        338 months ago

        I wonder why ad tech can‘t be „Let‘s show ads that correspond to what‘s being talked about on that website.“ Kinda like what Google suggested with Topics but without following me through the internet.

        • @nous@programming.dev
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          388 months ago

          There is no real technical challenge in displaying ads that are based on the page content. But ads based on tracking users is much more profitable. Plus they can sell the data collected to anyone else that is interested.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          148 months ago

          Look, you need to understand that advertisers are Hell-bent on forcibly extracting as much money from you as possible. If they could strap you to a chair, hold your eyes open like in A Clockwork Orange, and then charge you for everything you so much as glanced at, they absolutely would.

          If that’s not how you want to live, then they are your enemy.

          • @MyFairJulia@lemmy.world
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            68 months ago

            You know i think i understand companies sometimes but then i keep being baffeld at how evil a company can be.

            Apple for example had me surprised with the reaction to the DMA and i previously thought that they couldn‘t possibly suck harder wirh alö their anti-repair stuff.

            I still have a bone to pick with Tim Cook himself for rendering my well working Mac Mini 2012 unusable for my app development job by simply not updating Xcode and introducing a breaking change that prevented me from adding support for new iOS versions to old Xcode.

        • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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          48 months ago

          I wonder why ad tech can‘t be „Let‘s show ads that correspond to what‘s being talked about on that website.“ Kinda like what Google suggested with Topics but without following me through the internet.

          They could be. Sites could talk directly to advertisers, and put the ad directly into the page itself instead of asking the ad server for a random ad. Most ad blockers probably wouldn’t notice it because it’s part of the actual page.

          But then they’d lose out on the tracking data and would be responsible to make sure the ad doesn’t annoy the shit out of you, so they’re not going to do that.

    • @TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      228 months ago

      I use them on my personal systems but not my work laptop. I have to use an ad blocker on my phone because so many sites, including “respected” news organizations, are an absolute mess when ads are enabled.

      It’s bad when you go to one of the top news company’s websites in the US and there’s a pile of content covered by advertisements. I guess I didn’t need to read those sentences anyway.

    • @gt24@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      I guess faster loading could be it? But generally it’s more of a layout problem than a bandwidth one.

      There was a website which I allowed ads on to help support them. One day, I went to that site in my browser and my laptop fans spun up at that time. Turns out that ads on that site caused my processor usage to spike near 100%. A reload fixed the issue. Once that same thing happened 2 to 3 more times, I just blocked all ads on that site from then on.

      There are times that people can’t throw the resources of an Intel i5 processor towards rendering the advertisements on one website. I would think that is more common these days with Chromebooks running the modern equivalent of a Celeron processor. Phones also don’t have much processing power to give and will warm up and drain batteries all towards the all important goal of “render those advertisements”.

      I think people tend to allow advertising until it becomes a major problem that needs resolved (such as if the site is bogging down your computer or if the advertising makes the site unable to be read easily). Since those people would then need to fix the issue and hopefully fix it for good, it is easy and efficient to just block out all advertising forever.

  • @ConstipatedWatson@lemmy.world
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    998 months ago

    I dislike the fact that “ads” can also include crapware being injected into my computer (viruses, tracking cookies, mysterious scripts, etc).

    • @dan1101@lemm.ee
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      And there are so many scam ads that look like UI buttons and such. I can see why people get fooled sometimes. Those sort of ads should automatically be rejected by af networks and the sites that host them. But $$$

    • @lucid@programming.dev
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      18 months ago

      Is this still really a thing? I remember getting some viruses from ads in the very early days of the internet, like late 90s / early 2000s, but can’t remember getting anything in at least the last ten years.

      • @ConstipatedWatson@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        It’s currently late and I am on my phone, so I can’t research this too well, but for example this thread and official Microsoft link discusses th Adrozek malware which injects you with unwanted ads and information directly from your browser.

        Sure, it’s not a virus in the older sense of the term where someone either burns your drive or takes over your computer and locks you out asking for a ransom, but it’s still piloting you unsuspectingly and you don’t want it.

  • Schwim Dandy
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    838 months ago

    I don’t think I could use the internet if I didn’t have an adblocker. Ads genuinely anger me. I think it’s just from the early days with pop-overs and unders, blinking, non-collapsible and the like holding content hostage. Intrusive or not, I’ll do everything I can to not see an ad.

  • @doggle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    788 months ago

    Many parts of the Internet has become functionally unusable without one. And given online advertising’s history as a vector for malware, as blockers are just the sensible choice.

      • @slouching_employer
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        218 months ago

        Pihole will also block non-browser traffic (e.g. your OS phoning home). Adblocking extensions are typically restricted to just blocking traffic of the browser it’s installed on.

        It also operates on your entire home network, so it can block junk traffic on devices that can’t run adblockers.

    • Notorious
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      uBlock Origin at a minimum. But I would suggest a privacy focused browser. Librewolf, Mulvad or even Brave. Browsers leak so much information about you it is easy for sites to fingerprint and track you even with an ad blocker.

      https://privacytests.org/

      I know Librewolf is working on their DNS leakage (last section on privacytests.org), but they also allow you to select a privacy focused DNS server which is nice when you’re not on a network you own, so you can’t run PiHole.

  • @shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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    588 months ago

    I’ve been using an ad blocking DNS for years and would not consider using the internet without it. Since it’s a DNS it works everywhere on mobile or Wi-Fi. I just figured that an ad blocker of some sort is basically a digital condom and must be used. When I see people who don’t use one, I think they are crazy.

    • @dai@lemmy.world
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      108 months ago

      Had my boss trying to grab a pdf (crosswords, colouring pages, printed for kids in a pub) while using Chrome without any adblock extensions.

      The volume of ads, trick links, and shite on that one website in particular was outstanding. She asked me if a link was OK to click. Promptly pointed out she should use Firefox (which has unlock and other extensions added) instead of chrome as the link she had clicked was for some sketchy software and not a crossword.

      I can’t imagine the internet without ad blockers. Ublock is a great addition, removing elements from pages is a huge advantage. So many sites sling rubbish wherever they can.

    • qaz
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      38 months ago

      Do you only use a DNS ad-blocker or also a client-side ad-blocker?

      • @shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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        Both, I use a DNS level ad blocker on my entire network and use UBlock origin on my browser. That way most ads are killed outside of the browsers as well and it keeps my system from contacting malware servers by domain name at least.

        Edit: Mind you, most of my apps are open source and have no ads to begin with, but for the few that are closed source. That’s what the blockers are for.

  • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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    558 months ago

    I used to not run an ad block. I figured the ads didn’t bother me so why bother?

    Then I encountered a banner ad that screamed “HELLOOOOOOOOOO” anytime the mouse went over it and I couldn’t download an ad blocker fast enough.

    Advertising companies will do anything they can to annoy the shit out of you, then act like people running ad blockers are the problem.

    • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      138 months ago

      I was fine with unobtrusive ads, I was fine with a minute of ads before a YouTube video. But it got so bad it was constantly interrupting everything. Also want to know what’s extremely unpleasant? Political ads calling for a moral panic against you or taking bigotry against you as a general assumption. I’m not watching that bullshit. My life is better without ads

    • @Specal@lemmy.world
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      88 months ago

      I once watched a 60 minute ad because I wondered (what would a 60min ad even be about) and I can’t remember

      • @Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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        28 months ago

        That shitty Epoch Times used to do that. I was watching a bunch of satire videos and one of their commercials was on, and I legitimately thought it was part of the skit because of how stupid it was.

        Then it hit me it is a real ad. And real people are watching it. And that’s how I got radicalized even more.

  • @ximtor@lemm.ee
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    518 months ago

    Does anyone ever actually click on an ad? Like “hey thats cool I wanna check it out/buy it right here right now”?

    I have adblockers active everywhere and only disable then somtimes for specific sites that really don’t work otherwise, but even if the unlikely case would come up that something is interesting I would just look it up separately? Mostly I just turn a blind eye on them anyway, but just wondering, some people gotta really click/buy from these ads? It just seems so surreal to me…

    • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      The only obvious ad I’ve ever clicked on was for a “free” IQ test. I figured I’d never done one cause they’re fake, but I had time to kill, so I clicked through. After 20 mins or so answering questions, it ended on a transaction page. The only way to see your “results” was by paying $20. I obviously didn’t pay, and instead tried to report the ad, only to discover that Google Ads has zero mechanism to even report scams to Google. After some research, it turned out that this blatant bait and switch scam had been operating via Google Ads for like 5 or 7 years. Google doesn’t give a fuck if scammers use it’s ad tech to scam your grandma or inject your system with malware, as long as they get paid for the privilege.

      I’ve always used an ad blocker, but the whole experience reinforced how anti-consumer and pro-criminal surveillance capitalism is. Permanent absolute ad block — without exceptions — is how everyone should operate, because none of these companies deserve any trust whatsoever. Even if you trust the site you’re visiting, you can’t trust any ad company they utilize.

      • @nehal3m@sh.itjust.works
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        408 months ago

        The only obvious ad I’ve ever clicked on was for a “free” IQ test. I figured I’d never done one cause they’re fake, but I had time to kill, so I clicked through.

        That click should have lead you to a page that says ‘you failed’. 😂

      • lemmyvore
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        78 months ago

        The EU is currently testing a new payment framework that would make payments faster and easier and also enable very small payments.

        This could finally enable micropayments in browsers (well, in Firefox and maybe Safari) which would eliminate intermediaries like Google and all the scummy ad companies and enable websites to work out deals directly with visitors on the spot (pay a very small amount like a cent or a fraction of a cent to read this article).

        Obviously, Google will need to be dragged kicking and screaming into this.

        • @jkrtn@lemmy.ml
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          98 months ago

          I’m still not paying a fraction of a cent for the obviously LLM-generated bullshit that has flooded the internet.

          • @reinei@lemmy.world
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            58 months ago

            And yet for content I can be reasonably sure is actually human generated (read: niche enough to not have been flooded to the point I no longer can trust the “usual”/“big” sites) I might consider paying for server costs a little.

      • Flying Squid
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        38 months ago

        If you’re walking around somewhere and you see a person or people offering a “free personality test,” do not take them up on their offer. They’re Scientologists. They once refused to let my mother leave back in the 70s until she said she would start screaming “rape.”

    • TragicNotCute
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      178 months ago

      People definitely do. CTR (click through rate) is generally pretty low, even before the majority of Americans were using ad blocks. But it’s not 0

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      158 months ago

      I’ve personally clicked on Instagram ads and made purchases from them. This has pretty much always been for various events, and I don’t really have any regrets there. I’ve seen some cool plays and gone to parties that I’d never have known about otherwise.

      I can’t imagine what would ever drive someone to click on a random banner ad though.

    • @Sc00ter@lemm.ee
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      98 months ago

      My wife does. But she’s a sucker for “a good deal”

      I dont ever click on them myself, but if I start searching for something I need/want, and I see a brand I’m familiar with thru advertising, I’m more likely to explore their product, at least. Simply just because, “of I’ve heard of this before”

      • @ximtor@lemm.ee
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        38 months ago

        But these are never real deals are they? At least I saw maaaaaaany bullshit fake deals, cant remember anything legit ever…

        I also found my mum buying crap of instagram a while ago, but i kinda got to her to be a bit more mindful what she clicks on.

    • @guy@lemmy.world
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      58 months ago

      I have ad blockers everywhere, except native mobile apps. I’ve clicked on an Instagram ad for shirts. I bought the shirts. People keep complimenting me on the shirts. No regrets there

      • @ximtor@lemm.ee
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        18 months ago

        I guess that sounds reasonable. I sometimes miss seeing some of the cool stuff on instagram

    • ZephrC
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      48 months ago

      I know ad rates and metrics are heavily based around click through, but does it even actually matter? I mean, TV ads are big money expensive, and nobody has ever clicked on those. I guess if you’re advertising a shitty mobile game or something then it matters, but does McDonalds or whatever even want you to buy a hamburger before you watch a YouTube video? That doesn’t really make a lot of sense.

      • @higgsboson@dubvee.org
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        68 months ago

        As you’ve noticed, there are different types of ads. Not all have clicks as their goal. Some are just there to make you think about their brand, for example.

    • Flying Squid
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      38 months ago

      Not only did my late father-in-law click on ads, he also clicked on spam emails. Yes, his computer was super slow and I regularly had to clean off the malware.

    • @Brown5500@sh.itjust.works
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      18 months ago

      Sometimes the sponsored links at the top of a Google search are exactly what I was looking for. I just need to quickly disable AdAway so that I can follow the link.

  • 4grams
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    498 months ago

    I’ve always thought that the ad supported internet is something people will eventually get sick of and the financial foundation would evolve over time to find models that don’t rely on infinite spam. Instead efforts are focussed on forcing us to view them. At this point I’m expecting the next version of Chrome to require the Ludovico technique while browsing.

    • @IndefiniteBen@leminal.space
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      168 months ago

      I mean, many (several?) sites tried optional subscriptions where you pay to get rid of ads, but that doesn’t seem to have worked. Judging by the fact that most sites that have subscriptions instead of ads use pay walls.

      People have come to expect free access, so if you can easily use an ad blocker, why would you choose to pay to remove the ads that a blocker removes for free.

      • @SwampYankee@mander.xyz
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        298 months ago

        Let’s just take NYT for example. Subscription costs $325/year. Why would I ever pay that much? It’s not 1954. I’m not sitting down with my morning coffee and reading the damn thing front to back. I’m reading maybe one article a week from 15 different sources. Am I supposed to pay $5000/year just to cover my bases?

        As with everything else in [CURRENT YEAR] the value proposition is so absurdly out of step with reality that fixing it basically relies on rolling out the guillotines.

      • 4grams
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        278 months ago

        IMHO the problem is the same one as everywhere. Companies are no longer interested in creating products, they are only interested in creating revenue streams. I’ve been working on my finances lately and it’s incredible how many ‘products’ have become subscriptions over time.

        I’d love to be able to buy a day’s access, or access to an article. If I want to share it, I’m willing to pay a small fee to show it to certain folks. I feel like there could be a market there but in the current financial climate it would never get any interest or backing because it wouldn’t be a method to capture people into a reoccurring billing cycle.

        • TheMonkeyLord
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          68 months ago

          Something I think is interesting is that, in order for companies to adopt these better non ad reliant models, they would have to dramatically scale down.

          In a climate where ad and clicks = revenue, your solution is to scale as large as you can and pump out content to maximize views. But that wouldn’t work under normal models

          • 4grams
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            78 months ago

            if I ran the world, these tech companies would get the ma bell treatment, heck the current phone companies need a round 2.

      • @Randelung@lemmy.world
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        138 months ago

        I’m not visiting any of those sites regularly. I’m not subscribing to any outlet without sampling their content, either. So that was always going to fail.

        In the before times you were able to purchase one edition of a paper and be done with it. Now it’s subscription only, so they won’t see a dime from me.

      • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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        38 months ago

        Not only do people expect free access, they feel entitled to endless free content.

        God forbid YouTube charge a subscription fee to help pay creators or show ads. No no, we all gotta jump on whatever app makes it free of ads and denies anyone a single cent for the content consumed.

        Even if YouTube is the actual devil, other platforms exist that do a better job of paying creators but we don’t talk about Nebula, we just talk about getting around the ads at YouTube without letting YouTube ever see a cent. As if having millions of videos available at the touch of a finger to anyone with an Internet connection is somehow free.

        • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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          138 months ago

          The problem with YouTube is they will keep adding more ads until people stop tolerating it.

          It used to be a single ad at the start of the video you could skip after 5 seconds. Now it’s multiple unskippable ads before the video starts. Often you don’t know if this is the video you want anyway, and if it’s not you spent more time on the ads than the video itself.

          Once you do find the video you want you get random interruptions mid sentence for more unskippable ads. If people just shrug and say “they have to pay for it somehow” then YouTube rubs their hands together and puts more ads in until they find the point where more ads = less viewership.

          If the single “skip after 5s” ad was untenable long term then they shouldn’t have started with a service they couldn’t actually provide. I’m sick of these companies purposely running an unprofitable business just to get users, and then when they change the model to try to become profitable act like it’s the users fault that the company sold them on something they can’t maintain.

          If you want to support a creator do it through Patreon. The amount they get from YouTube is garbage. If I didn’t have a way to block YouTube ads I just wouldn’t watch YouTube anymore, so they aren’t losing any money from me running an AdBlock.

    • Atemu
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      38 months ago

      Security knowledge and ethical concerns are two separate things. Whether we like it or not, we pay online creators through private data we must give to entities who will use it against our best interests.

      • @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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        348 months ago

        Uh the safest thing you can do for your PC is an ad-blocker. Advertising companies don’t even pretend to not put malware up as legitimate ads.

        It isn’t an ethical concern and hasn’t been since the 90s. It is a security concern to allow ads as an attack vector.

        • @reinei@lemmy.world
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          118 months ago

          Whaat‽ You mean auto downloading and executing foreign JavaScript in a users webpage from some server/CDN I might not even know myself as an ad company could be an attack vector? Never!

          (This mostly for those people who may not know that some [most? Dunno don’t have a source for this] ad networks literally allow advertisers to inject small chunks of html into pages for “more interactive/better ads”!!)

          • @_dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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            38 months ago

            executing foreign JavaScript

            This is a great point I try to convey to my less-technical friends and family. Looking at a webpage is not like changing the channel on a tv of old. Looking at a webpage pulls code from who knows where and executes it on your local machine.

            These advertisers expect that I should blindly trust them to execute code on my cpu, in my memory, on my machine? Yeah fuck that, it’s a privilege. I don’t invite every hobo walking by to come into my house and take a shit in my toilet.

            If they don’t like that not everyone executes their syphilis-ridden javascript, then they should put their shit behind a paywall. But they won’t, since they know they don’t have a product worth paying for.

        • Atemu
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          18 months ago

          What a great argument! You didn’t even read the first sentence…

          It isn’t an ethical concern and hasn’t been since the 90s.

          You’ll have to explain to me how not compensating someone for their work has been ethical since the 90s.

          • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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            68 months ago

            You’ll have to explain to me how not compensating someone for their work has been ethical since the 90s.

            Opening my computer up to Malware is not worth the fraction of a penny that the person who did the work will receive from my click.

            • Atemu
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              18 months ago

              To the person receiving the money, it is worth it. Else they wouldn’t be doing it.

              • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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                8 months ago

                I’m glad to hear they are willing to sacrifice the safety of my system for their fraction of a penny.

          • @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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            8 months ago

            https://www.statista.com/chart/29626/ads-blocked-removed-by-google-by-enforced-policy/

            Deceptive Ads & Malware Make Up Bulk of Blocked Google Ads

            5.2 Billion Bad Ads removed in 2022. 1.8 Billion more than in 2021.

            Were they removed? Yes. Did they show up prior to removal to real human beings? Also yes.

            https://www.comparitech.com/blog/information-security/malvertising-statistics/

            in the first half of 2023 alone, with phishing URLs leading the charge with a 140.7% increase.

            Security Gladiators reports that on average, of every 100 ads that are published, at least 1 contains malicious code.

            A report by Confiant found that in Q3 of 2021, 1 of every 108 ad impressions was highly disruptive or dangerous.

            Safety Detectives’ malvertising report showed that the global cost of malware was $500 billion per year in 2015, but in 2021 that figure cost an average of $500 billion per month.

            • Atemu
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              18 months ago

              Cool story bro but you clearly still didn’t even read the first sentence of what I wrote.

              • @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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                8 months ago

                I don’t give a shit how they get paid because the method they chose violates my personal safety.

                I’m done arguing with an obvious troll.

                • Atemu
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                  18 months ago

                  Yes and that’s precisely the point. You can make the decision not to pay and there are good reasons to do so (I do so too) but you must recognise that someone is still not getting paid for their work.

      • @Holyginz@lemmy.world
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        78 months ago

        Fuck that. We don’t have to give them anything. They need to show they actually have put in the effort to protect their viewers. Until then, I refuse to do anything less than use everything available to me to block their ads. The days of whitelisting websites is over.

  • kbal
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    8 months ago

    The surprise is that apparently 28 percent of “experienced programmers” don’t have an ad blocker. I’m not sure how they got the data, but I wonder if their methods are up to the task of sorting out any possible inverse correlation between blocking ads and being willing to respond to polls.

    • @Boxtifer@lemmy.world
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      178 months ago

      There’s a surprising amount of programmers that don’t know basics of various parts of an operating system. I know people that know several languages, but get lost on installing a mod pack for a game or installing an app from within another app like a browser.

      • @LordCrom@lemmy.world
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        68 months ago

        True. 100% Even today I had to screen share with our lead DB developer to show him how to create a key and ssh to a host.

        Also worked with a guy who would design custom circuit boards for devices, but his windows skill was less than my mother’s (which is terrible)

    • @Specal@lemmy.world
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      118 months ago

      “experienced programmers” in would have web developers fall under that umbrella, I’d guess web developers are less likely to adopt adblockers if their livelihood depends on them

    • @jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      108 months ago

      The engineer who sat next to me at my old job didn’t use an adblocker. She also would just ignore anything on the screen that wasn’t directly related to her task. There’d be “please update” OS popups or “do you want to install a plugin for markdown?” ide prompts on her screen for days. When I’d roll over to work on something at her desk I’d be like “how do you work like this?” she was like “like what?”

      She was pretty good at engineering and generally smart. I don’t know how she did it.

      • @mrmanager@lemmy.today
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        8 months ago

        I’m wondering about her reason for not using one too. What is the advantage?

        She thinks the web can’t exist without ads? It can, because it did once.

    • @HowManyNimons@lemmy.world
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      78 months ago

      20 years pro experience here: I run several different browsers in various states of blockedness for various reasons. But when I’m off the clock, of course, it’s firefox with ublock.

    • @iopq@lemmy.world
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      28 months ago

      My mom, in her 60s, is an experienced programmer. She programmed before she had the internet