Your "Google bans nauseam on Chrome" text appears on top of the time counter, thus unreadable, on FF mobile. "Read all about it" is only partially visible on smaller phones.
As someone whoms business largely relies on ad-revenue: please don't go out of your way to ruin advertising. It's a shitty system that is sometimes abused, but it's the best system we have as very few users actually want to open their wallet for their "free" content. Seriously, we have a single unobtrusive banner yet 85% of our users are adblocking; it's not an issue of 'bad ads' as so many like to argue.
EDIT: So the general consensus seems to be that one should not mention adblocking hurting small companies because these small companies should just: a) Invent their own advertising platform that can separate users from bots without any tracking or off-site processing, b) Invent a new payment method that appeals to everyone in the world, c) Make the content so exceptionally good that the users will literally throw money at their monitor, d) Look for investors that can shoulder the costs rather than the users, e) Just create additional sources of revenue so that adblocking users can still get their free content.
This may be a controversial opinion, but I'd rather people just said "I don't want to pay" rather than making up impossible criteria for why they shouldn't pay.
EDIT2: So there's a lot of replies basically saying: "just make content worth paying for". I do wonder, do you people stand around street-musicians for 45min and when they nudge their hat just say "fuck you, your content is not good enough to pay for; now shut up and continue playing"?
As someone else, I'd gladly ruin advertising and all businesses that rely on it; it's immoral (involuntary invasion of other people's minds) and a terrible business model and should die ASAP.
Edit: most ad-blockers don't actually block ads; they just block cross-domain, spying widgets. Nothing is preventing you from showing a self-hosted, untracked image that's actually an ad. The fact that you complain about adblockers implies that you don't do that, which implies that you're using bad practices (e.g. spying on users).
I dislike advertising too and would gladly see it and the related industry burn in a fire but it's neither immoral or a terrible business model.
Many business benefit greatly from some amount of advertisement and it's a practical way to monetise people's attention.
What is immoral is the cohort of brilliant minds who've made the optimisation of advertisement the quest of the century.
I love how you people always find new ways of wording shit to gain some moral superiority. Can't wait for the logical conclusion, "Netflix's servers are heating up the planet while processing my request; I DO NOT CONSENT TO THIS!! Thus my piracy is for the good of the land".
If sites warned that they will load trackers beforehand, your accusation would make sense: people could just not enter the site.
But as it stands, even if you're willing to forgo using such sites, you have to load trackers to know that the site uses them. So an adblocker/anti-tracker is a necessary protection.
Well so far I've lived fairly well, being "involuntarily invaded" by art for instance, so I'm not sure I see merit in the invasion argument.
On the the other hand if you're complaining about the shady manipulations going on behind the scenes to fuel the data driven marketing and advertising schemes then sure you have a point.
You consent to go to the website that has ads on it.
On the other hand, you don't consent to seeing a billboard whilst on public roads, so I don't think I'd object to people "defending themselves" (whatever that looks like) from billboards.
> Nothing is preventing you from showing a self-hosted, untracked image that's actually an ad.
Which is largely impossible for smaller sites. If you contact companies directly and ask if they'd like to advertise (or just have a contact page) they expect you to have millions of daily users. Not to mention that you have to build systems to track how many times the banner is shown to the users and have some way to verify this (e.g. that they are not bots/crawlers).
Saying; "just host your own ads" is a lot similar to "if you don't like the software, just make your own from scratch". It's not that easy for most people.
Most sites have tracking via GA as well, why not just show advertisers that, and let them buy e.g. 1/3 of the monthly traffic? AFAIK most ad-blockers don't block GA (though other plugins do).
Edit: Ah, I just checked, uBlock apparently blocks GA whereas AdBlock doesn't.
AdBlock now allows ads and trackers from companies that satisfy their proper ad criteria. One of the criteria is also a payment that depends on the size of your company.
this is the real shame. people don't block ads because they can't stand the site of them. it's because the whole ad infrastructure is so janky that it makes the browsing experience glitchy and unstable. nobody wants cookie stuffing popunder free download now buttons on their site but ad providers don't really give much in the way of being able to selectively filter those out.
We're doing exactly that at my startup Confiant [1], blocking bad ads in stream on behalf of publishers. High quality content websites don't want to ruin UX with bad ads.
cool startup! do you do anything about the infrastructure though? I mean a regular old banner image is OK, but the same image delivered via the series of scripts all tracking, sniffing, and profiling with all the cookie stuffing and who knows what else black magic bullshit is in those adtech js really screws with the browsing experience. uMatrix doesn't just hide ads - it blocks the ad tech entirely which ends up improving the whole experience by making the site load faster, use less ram, not spin up my fans and heat up the battery, etc.
yup, we detect and block most sleazy ad tech schemes through the daisy-chain of third parties. Agreed on UX improvement with ad blockers, we're doing this selectively on behalf of publishers.
there's a big difference between a tv commercial and a banner ad. one completely hijacks your attention for some period and the other is more like a billboard or poster - if you're not interested you don't have to pay attention to it.
I know some sites have taken to showing full screen overlays and that's a lot more like a tv commercial, which I agree people hate. but for the most part we're talking about banners and their corresponding infrastructure for tracking and targeting (which is more intrusive than the actual ad mist of the time).
This response will be lengthy, it's a complicated subject.
I disagree. Most banner ads are through some sort of service like AdSense. They don't fit the theme of the page they're on most of the time which harms the immersive experience for the end user.
People care about these details. AdBlockers are increasing in popularity every year and there are reasons for that, you can't simply disregard this fact.
There are rare sites where ads are less hated, a good example might be Penny Arcade where the ads are hand-picked by the site owners for their specific appeal to their targeted audience. Those kinds of ads are probably the least hated.
I've had this conversation dozens of times, and people are constantly insisting that advertising is going to live forever! But that's nonsense. People hate ads. Even the least intrusive ads, they hate them on principal because their lives have been ruled by ads for decades. And films like Minority Report have painted horrifying visions of the future where advertising has taken over everything. The savvy among us can see that "big data" trends are heading in that direction, and that isn't a future anyone wants. Except people who work in advertising.
What I am curious about is why people cling so desperately to this revenue model. Obviously those who rely on it for their bread and butter are going to wish it would live forever, but the other 90% of the population would realize a much better quality of life if advertisements were to die forever. Just imagine it.
The internet and digital technology is changing the world. Advertising is going to die. It's an exciting thing to bear witness to.
Each site owner need not do it on his own . Perhaps there is an opportunity for an open source ad hosting solution which has all the features and connect to one or more central marketplaces where advertisers can place bids and also each ad can have be rated basis user responses and feedback and you can configure which marketplaces to list and restrict the quality of ads and the kind of tracking
I'm hearing this moralistic (and naive IMHO) argument a lot lately. Do you rather want to read targetted (advertisement-in-disguise and mass-scale political campaigning aka fake news) content instead? Please don't rant against "evil ads" like that; rather, think about an economically feasible model which allows content creation and the web to thrive.
The problem with ads, and the sole reason I'm personally using an ad blocker, is tracking. For me, mass surveillance isn't an adequate compromise to make for free content.
I don't have a problem at all with classic banner ads OTOH. By merely switching off JavaScript you used to able to switch off most tracking years ago. But today's web pretty much requires JavaScript for even the simplest interactivity. Thank you W3C and WHATWG and Google for HTML5's lameness.
One thing I wanted to do was to allow ads everywhere and only block ones with obtrusive ads. That is instead of whitelisting good ones, I would have to only blacklist bad ones. But could find out how to do that with uBlock. Maybe somebody here can help.
>I'm hearing this moralistic (and naive IMHO) argument a lot lately. Do you rather want to read targetted (advertisement-in-disguise and mass-scale political campaigning aka fake news) content instead?
We already have that buddy. One problem at a time.
I think the "do you want hidden ads instead?" is a bit naive as well, to be perfectly honest.
It misunderstands the nature of advertising and advertisers.
The kind of person/organisation who will target you with fake news and paid-for or ghost-written articles or books (which incidentally, is an increasingly large number of popular publications already these days) is not the kind of entity that says "oh, well i've got banner ads, best hold-back now in the interest of good-faith relations".
Advertising does not voluntarily stop. Advertisers do not hold back in the name of decency. It generally expands until it is either stopped (through legislative and societal bans, not having the rights to advertise in a particular place, or until it is cost-prohibitive to do so) or until the eyeballs stop looking (either because it has lost power or become so obtrusive that people either block it, turn to substitutes, turn off or push back).
The majority of our companies income comes from Amazon affiliate sales. We have our own widget, backend pulls the information from Amazon via their API, front end shows the products (we have a lot of structured data, so we know which products are actually relevant to show and don't have to rely on Amazon). No adblocker blocks this and it pulls no external resources besides the product image from amazon.
If the current generation of ad technologies ever get completely blocked, alternate technologies will emerge for companies to recreate a dark version of ad networks, sharing web server logs, etc.
Not only that, but like the "War on Drugs" is doomed to fail, so is the "war on Ads" - or any other market in which there is significant demand.
Companies need to advertise. If they don't sell their products, they go to die.
Here's some real world impact of Adblockers: Advertorials, Fake Reviews, increasily covert forum spam and Influencer Marketing. Not to mention increasing hard work of PR agencies chiseling away at reputable sources like Wikipedia. I basically can't trust anyone on the internet anymore - and this trend will only accelerate if companies can't reach interested prospects via clearly marked ad slots anymore.
All this advertising need and money isn't going away over night if banner ads are finally gotten rid of: it will simply go somewhere else.
Companies need to advertise. If they don't sell their products, they go to die.
Nonsense. If I or anyone NEEDS a product or service, we'll happily go out and buy it. Ads exist purely to drive unnecessary consumption-for-the-sake-of-consumption. It's telling that even a generally capitalist, free-market demographic like HN's thinks they are a sleazy way to make money. It's not a "war on drugs" its more like a war on some disease - and those are very winnable.
This is naive. How will you know what product to buy? And I mean this quite seriously. Where I work, there are initiatives to internally advertise tools and libraries that exist so people don't go reinventing them. For certain niches, it's not clear that a product exists unless you've seen it before.
This is naive. How will you know what product to buy?
This is naive. Advertisers aren't in the business of educating and informing the public. If they were most of them would say don't buy our product, you don't need it, it won't make you happy, the paid celebrity/model in our ad doesn't even use it, the people who make it don't even use it, because they know what's in it.
Like, do you think the executives at McDonalds feed their kids Happy Meals every day?
You're right in that the "War on Ads" is an unwinnable war. But I think its more analogous to cleaning your house, or good hygiene. Its true that its a just a matter of time until your house, or yourself, will become dirty again if you don't do anything. But I don't think that's really an argument against cleaning.
Rather, its just the reality that you're never going to get down to zero.
But maybe if we put up enough of our own barriers, then our families can live in an environment with 10% of advertising influence and exposure instead of 60% or 80%. And i think that's a fight worth fighting.
I might not be able to get rid of advertising, but I can block ads, I can stop billboards going up, I can stop them advertising cigarettes/alcohol or gambling in certain times and places, and I can never let the tv shows or ghost-written books into my house. And overall, I think we'll live in a better world overall if people make the effort. Its the good fight.
As for ad-blockers being responsible for advertorials, fake reviews, forum spam and influencer marketing...lets just say it takes a massive leap of logic to turn a problem solely due to the behaviours of advertisers and try to level that at the feet of people trying to stop them. Wow.
It doesn't take a leap of logic at all. All it requires is some fairly simple economics.
Someone has to pay for content. You don't view ads, and you don't buy subscriptions. You also never donate. What do you think will happen next?
Well, some businesses die, but most don't. At the Guardian, we had to rely on three things:
1. We had to make about three hundred people redundant. (This is the human cost of the problem - not that some fatcat makes marginally worse dividends, but that a print worker who's done this job since 16 is now being turned out at 42)
2. We had to diversify our revenue streams. One way became 'native advertising': content sponsored by companies, like an article on the history of whiskey with a Jack Daniels badge, etc. Editorial hated this. Oh, boy, they objected. They fought in every principle and at every point available. They relented when they realized they were next for redundancies.
3. Then there were us, in commercial. Firefighting bad ads coming via the network, trying to resist JS hogging full page experiences, writing ads in the highest performing fashion we could to make the best of a bad situation. No-one liked us.
I didn't stay for long. I'd like to say I left because I was disgusted with the seediness of the ad industry, but the real reason was that the job was boring and depressing. We weren't saving the newspaper and we weren't making ads better.
Personally I think the only solution is the paywall. That's how newspapers worked for 250 years: you gave your dollar and you got your daily edition. You could trust your paper because it was more beholden to you than to any other interest. Will people accept this, though?
> most ad-blockers don't actually block ads; they just block cross-domain, spying widgets. Nothing is preventing you from showing a self-hosted, untracked image that's actually an ad.
Most ad-blockers I know of use cosmetic filters, which can hide any element from a page, including self-hosted and non-tracking ads (see https://www.troyhunt.com/ad-blockers-are-part-of-the-problem...). Sadly, showing ads that are respectful to the user is not that easy...
It's unlikely that your users made an atomic decision to block ads on your site. They probably just block all ads (I certainly do) and don't know if your site has obtrusive blocks or how many you run.
it's literally the only vector left for viruses to enter home systems, so no, not gonna unblock even once. sorry for your loss, some shit player are ruining it for everyone else, but it's not the blockers. it's those that sell prime space to questionable publishers, they had a chance to clean themselves from within, but failed.
every now and then a new effort comes up with 'clean ads' or 'micro tips' but it's too late, you need to wait the next generation of techies to start not recommending adblockers in ten-twenty years, and it'll only happen if the industry as whole cleans
wouldn't say "support" but would say I wouldn't mind ads that are a passive image link; you could still track the source by referrals/url without an active payload using less intrusive standards.
the problem is twofold however:
1) I'm not managing my ad blocking list, that's too much of a task so I delegate it to list maintainers. list maintainers don't really want to have acceptable ads policies because at the first mishap they'd lose the hard earned trust completely. there was an attempt but they were white listing not just basic banners but active components, so thanks but no thanks.
2) as soon as you create a set of marchers/rules/something to allow certain ads trough, bad actors will try to exploit it, especially if the while policy does something like allowing scripts with the graphical payload. (also css can include fonts and fonts have been exploited multiple times, so there's also that - an acceptable ad is not something advertiser really like)
Exactly, and that's sort of the issue with the system right now. People like to argue that they are whitelisting the sites that they use regularly; e.g. Reddit and newssites. But in practice it seems like that's a minority going through with it. I've always likened it to how pirates used there being no good services around to justify their actions; yet after Steam and Netflix became popular the majority just found some new justification.
Meh, video streaming services are still pretty terrible.
Just let me download a DRM-free file. That way I can play it offline on my preferred media device. If I decide to rewatch it a few days later, I don't have to worry about wasting extra bandwidth.
I don't mind paying for content and services. I'm fully cognizant of the reality that things cost money. But when the content isn't being provided through a fair medium, or the service sucks... People will go through other means.
Since I enjoy anime, I have paid subscriptions for both Crunchyroll and Funimation. Despite paying for their services, I always find it more convenient to download and play regular files. It's still worth maintaining a subscription, since it funnels some of that money to the studios.
Surprisingly enough, this is something the porn industry gets right. AFAIK, most paid/premium porn websites let you download any movie. No bullshit.
I can see your side, but unfortunately the vast majority of these ads are tracking my webpages visits and selling them to third party for top dollars. So no, not going to happen.
> As someone whoms business largely relies on ad-revenue
It does not, it relies on selling user data to ad agencies that resell them via data brokers to .. well, not even you know, do you?
> please don't go out of your way to ruin advertising
I will go out of my way to ruin any business model that relies on tracking users.
Even if it is the "best system we have" it is still abyssal. Not so much the content of the ads themselves, but the data collected by ad agencies.
> very few users actually want to open their wallet for their "free" content
Then either the content is not worth enough (and would not be consumed anyway if it was paid) or payment options are unacceptable.
I regularly read between 2 (weekdays) and 5 newspapers (sunday) but I don't have any subscription. I buy them with cash in a shop, go to a cafe and have breakfast. None of the newspaper vendors ever followed me into the cafe for some up-selling, not one tried to trick me into a subscription, not one mailed me about "special offers". None of them ever tracked how much time I spent on which article.
What worries folks is the disproportionate power to influence afforded to private interests. Not just advertising or political campaigns but constant influence on daily choice.
It's an ethical question: should not the direction of society be determined through democratic means? Should we not vote, be equally informed and try to be good citizens? Does the control of information flow undermine this?
1. Pay for ads to drive customers to your business selling widgets.
2. Sell customer data to advertising networks.
The first is sustainable and is the foundation of all advertising. The second is only sustainable if it doesn't supplant the first. If it does so, it becomes a self-licking ice cream cone and the whole enterprise falls apart. Sadly, that's where we are today.
Most sites offer some form of subscription service. Ours is currently 3$ a month and less than 5% seems to be using it. Most of our users seems to view it as a donation service though, might be something for any psych-major to do a study on.
This works great until the owner decides to take money to do things like "sponsored content", or advertorials. Does this get shown to the people who payed to have ads removed?
People are not prepared to pay for your content, so you bemoan that when you give it to them for free (but in so doing destroy their privacy), they attempt to block that revenue stream.
I'd like to suggest advertising has become a crutch, preventing you from innovating: why not try and find a way to produce product content that people wish to pay for?
If you can't do that, you have two choices: continue as you are, but see it as a voluntary hobbyist project in which the content is given to the public domain and you do not monetise it; or, give up and let others decide.
The best thing that could happen to the Internet today is the destruction of the advertising industry.
Yes, it will change how Google and Facebook will need to make money. Some of these unicorns might struggle to survive and will die. It will cause a revolution down through the millions of smaller publishers as they have to think about how to make money without advertising: many will not be able to survive and will become nothing but memories on archive.org.
So be it. This, in the opinion of many people including myself, will be for the betterment of us all as a society.
So, respectively, I'm going to have to decline your request.
I'm installing AdNauseum and I sincerely hope that advertising industry is destroyed to the point that you have to find a new - better - revenue model.
> This, in the opinion of many people including myself, will be for the betterment of us all as a society.
If you achieve this, the result will be that the only people who can publish on the net are those with deep pockets and other interests. They may be companies (who write content as marketing), plutocrats (who will publish pro-business propaganda) or the state.
This is where we are heading: where the average citizen learns about their country from a Facebook feed, written by the Koch brothers.
This is going to have incredibly harmful effects on our society, and - I will not mince words - it seems to me the blame will rest with _people like you_.
That means YOU will be responsible for fake news and newspapers competing with the worst of the internet. That YOU will be responsible for advertisement disguised as news. All because you were too outraged to accept ads and too apathetic to pay a few dollars for paper news.
According to Firefox's Network Monitor, that's 2.47kB of data transfer. It's static HTML, so server load is minimal. One small donation could cover the costs for years.
This. I feel like a lot of the responses are along the lines of; "you can get a VPS for 2€ so your site will still be profitable if 99% of users adblock; stop whining".
>If you achieve this, the result will be that the only people who can publish on the net are those with deep pockets and other interests.
The web was specifically designed for that to not be the case. Despite all the garbage we've loaded on it since then, ultimately it's still an act of mere minutes for anyone with an internet connection to start a website and serve it to all comers.
Tools like IPFS and Bittorrent only enhance that ability. The future is rosy, and it does not need advertisers.
Just like people need money to write songs or play sports. No money, no sports... oh, wait, that’s not how it works.
People with something to say will find a way to say it, money or no.
The way this works for sports and music is you produce for free because you love it and are good at it, until you are scouted or discovered or get an agent, and ‘go pro’.
Used to work the same for writing. Can’t see why it shouldn’t just because a few written word performers prefer busking.
And how are they to 'go pro' if there is no business model to be a professional journalist / researcher / reporter / documentarian?
I think you believe we can get all our content from local, interested bloggers. We can't. There is no filtering and no curation. There are no stakes in telling the truth because no one has a business to defend. Pulling information together and filtering out the rubbish is long and arduous and it's work. That's what journalism actually entails, not the writing part, which is fairly trivial.
But yours seems to be a typical HN response. "People feel this is important to do without being paid, therefore we should not support them as a society". It is an attitude I cannot comprehend. Something is important to our civil society - why not make doing it a viable living?
Even at the risk of coming off as an arsehole: I'm sorry, but you are collateral damage.
Adblockers have become the norm because large enough a fraction of ad pushers have no morals. And because the ad industry tends to be concentrated, the blockers (rightly) target the observed ways used to push the ads.
So if you use any of the blacklisted firehoses or their observed methods, you can expect to be blocked.
> Seriously, we have a single unobtrusive banner yet 85% of our users are adblocking; it's not an issue of 'bad ads' as so many like to argue.
If 85% of your users have decided to use adblockers, I would take that a clear signal that the resources you use for serving ads have been deemed obnoxious in the extreme.
YOU may not be shoveling unripened-manure-quality-ads to your users, but other parties in the business who use the same services obviously do. And before we go to the concept of whitelisting certain sites, please realise that there are still two major factors working against you.
1: An ad served will mean successful tracking. Sophisticated users refuse to give in here.
2: The moment some whitelisting method becomes easy, useful and accepted, the ad networks will do everything they can to abuse that to bypass blockers. This follows from human nature and ruthless business practises.
And finally, I'm going to throw something I wrote nearly two years ago here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10521930 - that's my list of things that would qualify an ad as non-intrusive.
> Even at the risk of coming off as an arsehole: I'm sorry, but you are collateral damage.
If the small site owners are only collateral damage for you then you also welcome a internet which is dominated by big companies and people with enough money to push their agenda.
This seems to be the current 'ad-positive' argument de jour. But I don't buy it. There is plenty and always has been plenty of free content on the web. It is very cheap to publish.
But advertising has led to the collapse of the small business or hobby website. Realistically nobody will ever see your content unless you advertise heavily, or post on a platform that uses your content to sell its ads.
Advertising, as far as I can see, has had a negative impact on the democracy of the web. And lead to an increase in the domination of big platform holders and brands.
>please allow the user to search for ads that have been displayed to them
This is a good point, and the fact that advertisers don't allow it is evidence that they're doing something immoral. If adverts were really about informing people to help them make their own reasoned choices, advert search would be very useful. But if adverts are an attempt to emotionally manipulate people, then allowing search would be counterproductive. It would give the audience time to think, which makes psychological trickery less effective. Advertisers choosing to make adverts appear and disappear unpredictably is telling.
> This is a good point, and the fact that advertisers don't allow it is evidence that they're doing something immoral.
I don't think it's that deep. The advertiser, the ad buyer (some digital agency), the ad deliverer (some exchange or third-party network) and the publisher (the site where the ad was displayed) are all distinct entities with budgets fired up and ready to go at that specific moment.
The advertiser would surely love for you to search for their ad again (and again, and again). The buyer wouldn't mind, if only to show that their placement has increased reach. But the deliverer or the publisher won't see any additional revenues off of this, therefore there's zero incentive for them to support it.
I don't think I've ever met someone who enjoys being advertised to. Instead of being butthurt about your bad business model (selling stuff nobody wants) how about selling things people actually want to buy?
Perhaps if you don't want people consuming your content, maybe you shouldn't have put it up on a web server that freely takes and communicates to their requests.
Its like people forget (or just don't care about) history.
The web started off advertising free.
THEN people moved in because they thought they could use the communication medium for a business opportunity.
NOW you're telling people not to consume from the medium that YOU moved in on.
The web started off as a very limited network funded by universities and the military. You did not have to pay to host anything for the first several years.
Okay I won't. Please give me the link to your website, so that I can blacklist it completely on my hosts file.
And to be extra nice for you, I'll go ahead and do the same on all my friends devices too, since every last one of them uses adblockers. You wouldn't want them stealing your ad supported content would you?
I'll even block your website on every firewall I get my hands on, because believe me, there are no ads going through those firewalls.
> how about selling things people actually want to buy?
The idea that people will find about the products they like without any avertising or marketing is naive at best.
It's the "build it and they will come" fallacy over again.
For the small business advertising might be necessary because not everyone can fight in the content marketing game.
I consider all forms of advertising that distract me from the content I'm looking for bad for me. I don't want flashy colored banners telling me what I should buy. There's already plenty, plenty of distractions already, and advertising is one of the poorest forms of it. I don't think I'd mind if advertising, in its current form, died.
I run a side project that entirely relies on ad revenue, and I run AdNauseum. Online advertising has become a horrible horrible thing and I want to see it die.
That won't stop me from milking the cash cow while I can, but I'm not going to moralise to others about how they should help me keep the cow alive.
> I do wonder, do you people stand around street-musicians for 45min and when they nudge their hat just say "fuck you, your content is not good enough to pay for; now shut up and continue playing"?
No, but if they follow me around, keep track of what I do, sell this information, or hand it over to a/the government, and occasionally accidentally sneeze in my face as they follow me, causing me to fall ill... well, I'd find it hard to resist kicking their hat as far as I could.
I think the privacy issues kind of render all arguments in favor of (current-day) advertisements moot. I suspect many of us would happily have a few ads on a page if they weren't so obnoxious, privacy-invading, and occasionally downright dangerous.
Furthermore, while I do sympathize with your situation, assuming that your ad is both unobtrusive and non-privacy-invading, surely you can see how guilt-by-association is not entirely unjustified in this case? How can we tell that your ads are the good kind?
(FWIW I try turn off uMatrix/uBlock on sites that I like, but unfortunately it's just not worth the trouble unless I'm a repeat visitor. And even then I often turn it right back on when I see how much the experience degrades as a result!)
Look into better ad performs like The Deck, or self-host the ads and sell ad space by how long the ad is there for (that way you don't need to track clicks, etc). Try and find local/small businesses, they're the most likely to accept such a deal and then it's a win-win for everyone.
Hate to say i but that ship sailed a long time ago. A couple of years back I tried being nice to sites that asked me to unblock them and found pretty much all of them running tracking, malware and worse yet enough javascript to make the sites totally unusable with the small n2806 celeron/2gb system I use. Not any better on the other 2955u 2gb system either. With adblockers these 2 systems work just fine on the internet.
It's too late.
This advertisement terror has gone too long. Now we have a quite good infrastructure to block ads and the advertisement industry will have to come up with something really fantastic to get us back.
The methods people who rely on ads put up to counter that, will just hurt them because pointing the finger at the user of ad-blocking software is the wrong direction entirely.
should we also keep using COBOL such that those poor COBOL programmers aren't ending up unemployed?
I know this is a contrived illustration ... but you get my point.
it's good if bad bad bad infrastructure is teared down mercilessly. especially if the worst case consequences are first world problems. you're not going to die or starve.
i work in ad industry and it's utterly mesmerising how zombiesque many people do their job ... best thing that could happen to poor schmucks making money by configuring ad network setups is to lose their job and be forced to think about the life and if there is maybe something more worthwhile.
> we have a single unobtrusive banner yet 85% of our users are adblocking; it's not an issue of 'bad ads' as so many like to argue.
Well. I had an idea to fork µblock and add a function to white-list sites that are OK, not flooding me with ads and popups, don't have 4 trackers and have max. 3 social buttons. Whitelist would be made by a community, so you could add your domain, people would visit it and vote to whitelist or not.
Maybe ask gorhill if he would like to have this feature in the actual uBlock Origin? Users could be asked to installation if they want to block all ads, or use the community-maintained whitelist.
I sympathise with your need to earn a living, and struggling to do that without advertising revenue, but asking people not to block advertising on the web is asking them to run their systems without a crucial component of their malware protection.
However eloquent your case, I will not disable my anti-virus for your sake. If your site makes an effort to prevent my visit as a result of my security choices, I will respect it, otherwise I am ignorant of who runs third-party code on their site that has proven time and time again to be unsafe.
The demise of online advertising will force the emergence of micropayments. Bitcoin is the our best bet at getting there. But low or near-zero fees are needed for that.
but I'd rather people just said "I don't want to pay" rather than making up impossible criteria for why they shouldn't pay
But there is a market for content. E.g., a relatively small German newspaper (Taz) has a 'voluntary paywall' (which you can basically click through without paying) [1] and still they earned approximately 0.5 million Euro so far this year:
This is besides regular subscriptions and a system where you can buy shares in a 'cooperative'.
Another, more well-known example in these confines is Linux Weekly News, which besides relatively non-obtrusive ads, offers subscriptions [2] to see new content immediately (rather than after a week).
From the creator side, the internet sidesteps the need for the huge investments needed by all other content-delivery systems. No need to print thousands or millions of books. No need to set up a TV or radio station, or a movie or recording studio, or convince someone who owns that infrastructure to publish your stuff.
From the consumer side, the only investment is an Internet connection and the equipment needed to access it. More expensive than a single book or a movie ticket, but practically limitless once you have it.
So yeah, no one wants to pay. I'm surprised that anyone pretends to be surprised by that.
Advertisers are parasites. They need a host to survive. Almost no one cares if they don't survive, including the content creators and the companies with products to be advertised, if they can figure out how to make money without them. There's the rub.
Your busker analogy is actually perfect, by the way. The content is freely available because the busker chose to make it so in an effort to get an audience. Then the busker is outraged when someone doesn't pay? Under what theory of justice is the busker outraged when people take him up on his offer of free content?
I'd agree, but luckely it's not the consumers responsibility for a company to turn in a profit - and I see no reason whatsoever to care about other companies by helping them invade the privacy of so many people. After all, they wouldn't care about me (or anyone else for that matter) either.
I feel for you, I really do. Unfortunately, I can't risk the integrity of my privacy or machines by allowing all ads and taking the bad with the good.
People have replied (not very politely, unfortunately) with some suggestions though. Self-hosting ads, using a banner asking people whitelist you, or just straight up using Patron might help.
Again, I'm sorry you're in a situation like this, it really sucks :/
>do you people stand around street-musicians for 45min and when they nudge their hat just say "fuck you, your content is not good enough to pay for; now shut up and continue playing"?
I ignore that guy and move along hoping that he would fuck off and that I won't see him again tomorrow.
You've posted a smart post, but it goes against tech religion which (contrary to science) holds that advertising is inherently evil because it is "brain hacking" or some such.
If there is a need for small businesses, and advertising dies, small businesses will survive because someone will come along to solve the problem of income for small businesses.
https://flattr.com/ has been around for a while, but they're doing an overhaul of their model now, together with the company behind Adblock Plus. Here's the latest related post:
I'm a business owner and I rely on advertising, and I would still ruin advertising.
1. Advertising gives advantages to the largest richest corporations and stifles competition from superior small businesses.
2. It makes people stupid, they don't take the time to investigate products before buying, because they are literally brainwashed from hearing the same bullshit every day from advertisers.
3. It wastes our time. It is 2017, it is the information era, if you want a product you open a web search and look for it. Advertising is no longer necessary or relevant, and it is stealing moments from people.
There are more reasons.
Advertising is already dead, and if your business operates solely on advertising then your business is in real trouble. I started telling people this a year ago and they laughed at me. Get off that flaming wreck now while you still can, or sink and burn with the rest of them. The smart people are already looking for new revenue models. Adapting to new conditions is a critical part of survival skills, and if you can't do it you won't survive.
Just as a quick response to your EDIT2, Twitch runs such a model where gamers and creative people have lots of people paying for otherwise free content. And it works really well.
I think it'd be really cool if you dropped some of the defensiveness and used your position to help offer some suggestions to the problem. I know it's hard to see it from other angles that may not directly benefit you, but it'll help extend a resource that might disappear if people disagree with it hard enough en masse.
"There’s an emerging movement in the online ad industry to use sites that don’t track you. We collaborated with our friends at the Electronic Frontier Foundation to make exceptions for ads on these sites. So in the rare event you see an ad while using AdNauseam, cherish it as it is probably being served by one of the good guys.”
EHHHHHH i mean i'd like to agree 99% of the time with this, but since were being moralist and absolutist here....
why not just have absolutely no loopholes, and let the "good guys" do HTML text ads, or just a good ol image file?
I hate the idea of AdNauseam clicking ads, like another thread says the big ad-covered sites will have the resources to protect against this. This just punishes the random bloggers who have slapped adsense on their site.
Allowing loopholes though - Isn't that how Adblock Plus first introduced their pay to win system? My bet would be these guys are going to start taking payments for whitelisting.
I am absolutely inclined to agree and will never forgive Adblock Plus for such a busted and hypocritical business model!
Fortunately for us, we have uBlock, which is open source and is also the basis for AdNauseum.
If it really is futile to spam the spammers, then small blogs indeed will be the sole losers here.
What is worse though, is that the internet is already a terrible place in aggregate for intelligent content to make money.
It's basically given away for free, or sold to very specific buyers (usually people who are purchasing consulting or are hiring smart people for full time).
So, not many people make ad money off of high quality content, for two reasons: too much bad content is drowning them out, and too much good content being given away for free
This is a very genuine question. To those what despise ads and want to see everyone who uses them destroyed and the ad industry destroyed.
How do you currently make a living? Is it all through donation?
If you work for an employer. Do they sell products or services? So, they must advertise right?
If you work for google? Well, that's how they make their profits each year.
If you work for a non-profit. How do the people who donate, earn their living? Can you be sure they also live from donations only?
Bottom line is, if advertising goes away. How do you expect to make a living, if no one knows about products and is not buying?
Advertising has been around far longer than a large portion of the audience of this website. The thinking that advertising can be changed to a tipping system is naive at best.
-------------------
I'd love to hear what the stone throwers think. How do we replace this industry that must be destroyed at all costs. How will someone from the future, market their product without advertising of any kind. Must new products sit on the shelf or be used by a very few because any form of communication about a product IS ITSELF AN ADVERTISEMENT and must be STOPPED!
As someone who now has a banner advert embedded in the menu of my TV, good. The advertising industry is awful and intrusive. Yes, businesses will have to adjust or rethink, and that's a good thing.
Currently I use the TV for YouTube, Amazon Prime and normal TV (through Sky).
I could go the Amazon Fire route (Chromecast still won't play Amazon Prime) and disconnect the TV, but it's annoying because apart from the ad, the TV is great.
The worst thing is that the ads weren't there when I bought the TV, they came (undocumented) in a software update that I can't roll back.
Through advertising alone? No. From a purely business perspective, it's shit. But we subsidize it through our other ventures because we want the users to have access to the content.
> and stop using the ad-blocker, what will change?
The site would become less of a burden on our company. It would still not be profitable, but there's quite a difference between losing 100$ a month and losing 80$ a month to provide users content they've come to expect.
Ad blocking(edit: or obfuscation like this, obviously) technology that can be installed directly on the router, to protect everybody on my network.. Now that would be a thing! Does a usable option of that kind of tool exist?
AdNauseam is just not a good approach to malware/ads/surveillance blocking.
The creators clearly haven't been on both side of the ads spectrum: As content creators and intrusive ads blockers
They don't know the inside of this market enough, they don't know what happens when a website get it's ads clickbombed
Some websites really have no other way to finance themselves other then using ads, and use not intrusive ads network and AdNauseam will just get them banned
AdNauseam is just about wrecking avok publishers revenues by getting them banned from ads networks, so like always, it's the small publishers that will get punished, and not the big shit ads companies.
Buzzfeed-like companies will find a way to counter AdNauseam,they have the ressources for it, but not the smaller tech blogger that you like reading
Something like that ran through my mind before I clicked on the install button. It's the small publishers and individual content creators who suffer from AdNauseam, not the big media companies. It just kills the small players and helps big companies grow bigger.
It seems obvious that since this would damage Google, Google will defend themselves by detecting and blocking this kind of traffic. Optionally they may also suspend accounts.
As someone who runs a business relying on driving customers via google adwords, I'd say use it.
Right now, google adwords are the best way to get my products in front of people. It works and is worth it. I'd love for that not to be the case. Ads are intrusive. Conversion rates are low but the math still makes sense.
As an aside, my business recently started more aggressively running email campaigns for previous (ecommerce) customers to get them back. We saw a huge return for emailing our customers multiple times in a month rather than once a month.
This is awful, as the conversion rate from email to purchase is something like 0.5%. It's still worth it. All those people are opening email after email. So much wasted time. But in the end, email marketing works and is cheap.
0.5% conversion on email? Wow.. you are doing something wrong. My clients have like a 15-21% conversion via email but it probably depends on what you're selling. So, what are you selling?
I would like to see how this compares in speed with uBlock Origin. I'm also not convinced you gain more privacy using AdNauseam than just blocking the ads. See this other discussion:
No money = no normies on the Internet.
Imagine a world where people actually pay for Internet services without ads again. That would blow social media plankton out of the water.
Until recently I basically lived of Adsense. But i never use the Internet without adblocker myself. Even on my phone and I help all my friends to get ad free as well.
The crazy thing for me is that I still did depend on ads to keep my free content alive. On the cheapest hosting option one of my sites would run into around $40 worth of hosting a month plus endless hours of moderation and 'fixing'.
I did experiment with self hosted ads. Sorrily this is a pain in itself because for whatever reason a lot of adblockers block anything that appears like a obvious ad. Even self hosted images if they may are in a subdirectory called ads or have a id therelike. So I called everything 'meow' instead of ads. A month later a popular ad block list included a filter for my ads... (~3 million sessions/month) and my self hosted, non evil, non JS ads were blocked again.
Not to mention that the income was not even a 10th.
I still am undecided on the topic. But i want people to understand that especially Adsense is indeed important for small publishers.
End of the story is i sold the site because Adsense started to pay less and less for more traffic and now a ad company is milking my back then only Adsense site with about 5 more trackers and ad networks...
I really hate to see HN's general attitude towards ads. As another poster said, ads are a shitty system and its abused, but it really is the only way some people can provide free content.
When I started my first tech blog back in 2009, I was 18yo, living in Nepal. I had no means whatsoever to make money online but it was super easy to setup adsense account and in no time I was generating some revenue.
I agree, the ad system is broken, but this is not a solution. This tool will do nothing but harm publishers, possibly get their adsense account banned for click fraud, and eventually cause them to shut down their website.
Ad industry is huge and there ought to be better way to fix the problems than straight out blocking the ads, or tools like these which gets so much kudos on HN that it makes me sick. It is the same bunch of crowd who call themselves entrepreneurs and then they cheer for anti-entrepreneur tools like these.
The ugly fact is we don't have a better system in place than what we have now, and tools like these don't make the situation any better.
183 comments
[ 279 ms ] story [ 4065 ms ] threadEDIT: So the general consensus seems to be that one should not mention adblocking hurting small companies because these small companies should just: a) Invent their own advertising platform that can separate users from bots without any tracking or off-site processing, b) Invent a new payment method that appeals to everyone in the world, c) Make the content so exceptionally good that the users will literally throw money at their monitor, d) Look for investors that can shoulder the costs rather than the users, e) Just create additional sources of revenue so that adblocking users can still get their free content. This may be a controversial opinion, but I'd rather people just said "I don't want to pay" rather than making up impossible criteria for why they shouldn't pay.
EDIT2: So there's a lot of replies basically saying: "just make content worth paying for". I do wonder, do you people stand around street-musicians for 45min and when they nudge their hat just say "fuck you, your content is not good enough to pay for; now shut up and continue playing"?
Edit: most ad-blockers don't actually block ads; they just block cross-domain, spying widgets. Nothing is preventing you from showing a self-hosted, untracked image that's actually an ad. The fact that you complain about adblockers implies that you don't do that, which implies that you're using bad practices (e.g. spying on users).
Many business benefit greatly from some amount of advertisement and it's a practical way to monetise people's attention. What is immoral is the cohort of brilliant minds who've made the optimisation of advertisement the quest of the century.
But as it stands, even if you're willing to forgo using such sites, you have to load trackers to know that the site uses them. So an adblocker/anti-tracker is a necessary protection.
The head of the first French TV channel himself bragged that "his job was to sell available brain time".
On the the other hand if you're complaining about the shady manipulations going on behind the scenes to fuel the data driven marketing and advertising schemes then sure you have a point.
On the other hand, you don't consent to seeing a billboard whilst on public roads, so I don't think I'd object to people "defending themselves" (whatever that looks like) from billboards.
Which is largely impossible for smaller sites. If you contact companies directly and ask if they'd like to advertise (or just have a contact page) they expect you to have millions of daily users. Not to mention that you have to build systems to track how many times the banner is shown to the users and have some way to verify this (e.g. that they are not bots/crawlers).
Saying; "just host your own ads" is a lot similar to "if you don't like the software, just make your own from scratch". It's not that easy for most people.
Edit: Ah, I just checked, uBlock apparently blocks GA whereas AdBlock doesn't.
That's cute :-)
[1] https://www.confiant.com
Oh yeah? Where do you get your research from?
I guarantee people are blocking ads because they hate ads and everything else is secondary.
You want some proof? TIVO sold millions of devices because of the ability to skip ads. People hate ads.
I know some sites have taken to showing full screen overlays and that's a lot more like a tv commercial, which I agree people hate. but for the most part we're talking about banners and their corresponding infrastructure for tracking and targeting (which is more intrusive than the actual ad mist of the time).
I disagree. Most banner ads are through some sort of service like AdSense. They don't fit the theme of the page they're on most of the time which harms the immersive experience for the end user.
People care about these details. AdBlockers are increasing in popularity every year and there are reasons for that, you can't simply disregard this fact.
There are rare sites where ads are less hated, a good example might be Penny Arcade where the ads are hand-picked by the site owners for their specific appeal to their targeted audience. Those kinds of ads are probably the least hated.
I've had this conversation dozens of times, and people are constantly insisting that advertising is going to live forever! But that's nonsense. People hate ads. Even the least intrusive ads, they hate them on principal because their lives have been ruled by ads for decades. And films like Minority Report have painted horrifying visions of the future where advertising has taken over everything. The savvy among us can see that "big data" trends are heading in that direction, and that isn't a future anyone wants. Except people who work in advertising.
What I am curious about is why people cling so desperately to this revenue model. Obviously those who rely on it for their bread and butter are going to wish it would live forever, but the other 90% of the population would realize a much better quality of life if advertisements were to die forever. Just imagine it.
The internet and digital technology is changing the world. Advertising is going to die. It's an exciting thing to bear witness to.
The problem with ads, and the sole reason I'm personally using an ad blocker, is tracking. For me, mass surveillance isn't an adequate compromise to make for free content.
I don't have a problem at all with classic banner ads OTOH. By merely switching off JavaScript you used to able to switch off most tracking years ago. But today's web pretty much requires JavaScript for even the simplest interactivity. Thank you W3C and WHATWG and Google for HTML5's lameness.
As if we didn't have that already?
We already have that buddy. One problem at a time.
It misunderstands the nature of advertising and advertisers.
The kind of person/organisation who will target you with fake news and paid-for or ghost-written articles or books (which incidentally, is an increasingly large number of popular publications already these days) is not the kind of entity that says "oh, well i've got banner ads, best hold-back now in the interest of good-faith relations".
Advertising does not voluntarily stop. Advertisers do not hold back in the name of decency. It generally expands until it is either stopped (through legislative and societal bans, not having the rights to advertise in a particular place, or until it is cost-prohibitive to do so) or until the eyeballs stop looking (either because it has lost power or become so obtrusive that people either block it, turn to substitutes, turn off or push back).
Is HTML5 lame, or are web developers just too lazy to learn to use it properly?
Companies need to advertise. If they don't sell their products, they go to die.
Here's some real world impact of Adblockers: Advertorials, Fake Reviews, increasily covert forum spam and Influencer Marketing. Not to mention increasing hard work of PR agencies chiseling away at reputable sources like Wikipedia. I basically can't trust anyone on the internet anymore - and this trend will only accelerate if companies can't reach interested prospects via clearly marked ad slots anymore.
All this advertising need and money isn't going away over night if banner ads are finally gotten rid of: it will simply go somewhere else.
Nonsense. If I or anyone NEEDS a product or service, we'll happily go out and buy it. Ads exist purely to drive unnecessary consumption-for-the-sake-of-consumption. It's telling that even a generally capitalist, free-market demographic like HN's thinks they are a sleazy way to make money. It's not a "war on drugs" its more like a war on some disease - and those are very winnable.
This is naive. Advertisers aren't in the business of educating and informing the public. If they were most of them would say don't buy our product, you don't need it, it won't make you happy, the paid celebrity/model in our ad doesn't even use it, the people who make it don't even use it, because they know what's in it.
Like, do you think the executives at McDonalds feed their kids Happy Meals every day?
This has existed before ad-blockers and would continue to exist even if all ad-blockers disappeared overnight.
Being immoral pays more, it has nothing to do with ad-blocking.
> All this advertising need and money isn't going away over night
They could reroute that money into the products themselves. Cheaper prices, more quality, it's their choices.
Rather, its just the reality that you're never going to get down to zero.
But maybe if we put up enough of our own barriers, then our families can live in an environment with 10% of advertising influence and exposure instead of 60% or 80%. And i think that's a fight worth fighting.
I might not be able to get rid of advertising, but I can block ads, I can stop billboards going up, I can stop them advertising cigarettes/alcohol or gambling in certain times and places, and I can never let the tv shows or ghost-written books into my house. And overall, I think we'll live in a better world overall if people make the effort. Its the good fight.
As for ad-blockers being responsible for advertorials, fake reviews, forum spam and influencer marketing...lets just say it takes a massive leap of logic to turn a problem solely due to the behaviours of advertisers and try to level that at the feet of people trying to stop them. Wow.
Someone has to pay for content. You don't view ads, and you don't buy subscriptions. You also never donate. What do you think will happen next?
Well, some businesses die, but most don't. At the Guardian, we had to rely on three things:
1. We had to make about three hundred people redundant. (This is the human cost of the problem - not that some fatcat makes marginally worse dividends, but that a print worker who's done this job since 16 is now being turned out at 42)
2. We had to diversify our revenue streams. One way became 'native advertising': content sponsored by companies, like an article on the history of whiskey with a Jack Daniels badge, etc. Editorial hated this. Oh, boy, they objected. They fought in every principle and at every point available. They relented when they realized they were next for redundancies.
3. Then there were us, in commercial. Firefighting bad ads coming via the network, trying to resist JS hogging full page experiences, writing ads in the highest performing fashion we could to make the best of a bad situation. No-one liked us.
I didn't stay for long. I'd like to say I left because I was disgusted with the seediness of the ad industry, but the real reason was that the job was boring and depressing. We weren't saving the newspaper and we weren't making ads better.
Personally I think the only solution is the paywall. That's how newspapers worked for 250 years: you gave your dollar and you got your daily edition. You could trust your paper because it was more beholden to you than to any other interest. Will people accept this, though?
Most ad-blockers I know of use cosmetic filters, which can hide any element from a page, including self-hosted and non-tracking ads (see https://www.troyhunt.com/ad-blockers-are-part-of-the-problem...). Sadly, showing ads that are respectful to the user is not that easy...
What initiatives have you implemented and how effective have they been in combatting what I presume to be a large decrease in revenue?
every now and then a new effort comes up with 'clean ads' or 'micro tips' but it's too late, you need to wait the next generation of techies to start not recommending adblockers in ten-twenty years, and it'll only happen if the industry as whole cleans
the problem is twofold however:
1) I'm not managing my ad blocking list, that's too much of a task so I delegate it to list maintainers. list maintainers don't really want to have acceptable ads policies because at the first mishap they'd lose the hard earned trust completely. there was an attempt but they were white listing not just basic banners but active components, so thanks but no thanks.
2) as soon as you create a set of marchers/rules/something to allow certain ads trough, bad actors will try to exploit it, especially if the while policy does something like allowing scripts with the graphical payload. (also css can include fonts and fonts have been exploited multiple times, so there's also that - an acceptable ad is not something advertiser really like)
I've stopped pirating music though - Spotify became good enough for me to be worth it.
So no, I bet a majority of your "pirates" will stop pirating if there was a decent legal alternative.
Just let me download a DRM-free file. That way I can play it offline on my preferred media device. If I decide to rewatch it a few days later, I don't have to worry about wasting extra bandwidth.
I don't mind paying for content and services. I'm fully cognizant of the reality that things cost money. But when the content isn't being provided through a fair medium, or the service sucks... People will go through other means.
Since I enjoy anime, I have paid subscriptions for both Crunchyroll and Funimation. Despite paying for their services, I always find it more convenient to download and play regular files. It's still worth maintaining a subscription, since it funnels some of that money to the studios.
Surprisingly enough, this is something the porn industry gets right. AFAIK, most paid/premium porn websites let you download any movie. No bullshit.
It does not, it relies on selling user data to ad agencies that resell them via data brokers to .. well, not even you know, do you?
> please don't go out of your way to ruin advertising
I will go out of my way to ruin any business model that relies on tracking users.
Even if it is the "best system we have" it is still abyssal. Not so much the content of the ads themselves, but the data collected by ad agencies.
> very few users actually want to open their wallet for their "free" content
Then either the content is not worth enough (and would not be consumed anyway if it was paid) or payment options are unacceptable.
I regularly read between 2 (weekdays) and 5 newspapers (sunday) but I don't have any subscription. I buy them with cash in a shop, go to a cafe and have breakfast. None of the newspaper vendors ever followed me into the cafe for some up-selling, not one tried to trick me into a subscription, not one mailed me about "special offers". None of them ever tracked how much time I spent on which article.
http://www.wordstream.com/blog/ws/2016/06/27/facebook-ad-tar...
What worries folks is the disproportionate power to influence afforded to private interests. Not just advertising or political campaigns but constant influence on daily choice.
It's an ethical question: should not the direction of society be determined through democratic means? Should we not vote, be equally informed and try to be good citizens? Does the control of information flow undermine this?
1. Pay for ads to drive customers to your business selling widgets.
2. Sell customer data to advertising networks.
The first is sustainable and is the foundation of all advertising. The second is only sustainable if it doesn't supplant the first. If it does so, it becomes a self-licking ice cream cone and the whole enterprise falls apart. Sadly, that's where we are today.
Ars Technica recently ran into this, with a major backlash against a Chevy advertorial which wasn't explicitly marked as such. Read the pages and pages of angry subscribers: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2017/07/why-did-chevy-bring-its...
I'd like to suggest advertising has become a crutch, preventing you from innovating: why not try and find a way to produce product content that people wish to pay for?
If you can't do that, you have two choices: continue as you are, but see it as a voluntary hobbyist project in which the content is given to the public domain and you do not monetise it; or, give up and let others decide.
The best thing that could happen to the Internet today is the destruction of the advertising industry.
Yes, it will change how Google and Facebook will need to make money. Some of these unicorns might struggle to survive and will die. It will cause a revolution down through the millions of smaller publishers as they have to think about how to make money without advertising: many will not be able to survive and will become nothing but memories on archive.org.
So be it. This, in the opinion of many people including myself, will be for the betterment of us all as a society.
So, respectively, I'm going to have to decline your request.
I'm installing AdNauseum and I sincerely hope that advertising industry is destroyed to the point that you have to find a new - better - revenue model.
Good luck.
If you achieve this, the result will be that the only people who can publish on the net are those with deep pockets and other interests. They may be companies (who write content as marketing), plutocrats (who will publish pro-business propaganda) or the state.
This is where we are heading: where the average citizen learns about their country from a Facebook feed, written by the Koch brothers.
This is going to have incredibly harmful effects on our society, and - I will not mince words - it seems to me the blame will rest with _people like you_.
That means YOU will be responsible for fake news and newspapers competing with the worst of the internet. That YOU will be responsible for advertisement disguised as news. All because you were too outraged to accept ads and too apathetic to pay a few dollars for paper news.
Here's a beautiful and informative website: https://bestmotherfucking.website/
According to Firefox's Network Monitor, that's 2.47kB of data transfer. It's static HTML, so server load is minimal. One small donation could cover the costs for years.
If something isn't working the way you want, that's a sign to do something else.
The web was specifically designed for that to not be the case. Despite all the garbage we've loaded on it since then, ultimately it's still an act of mere minutes for anyone with an internet connection to start a website and serve it to all comers.
Tools like IPFS and Bittorrent only enhance that ability. The future is rosy, and it does not need advertisers.
What they need is money to produce content worth reading.
People with something to say will find a way to say it, money or no.
The way this works for sports and music is you produce for free because you love it and are good at it, until you are scouted or discovered or get an agent, and ‘go pro’.
Used to work the same for writing. Can’t see why it shouldn’t just because a few written word performers prefer busking.
I think you believe we can get all our content from local, interested bloggers. We can't. There is no filtering and no curation. There are no stakes in telling the truth because no one has a business to defend. Pulling information together and filtering out the rubbish is long and arduous and it's work. That's what journalism actually entails, not the writing part, which is fairly trivial.
But yours seems to be a typical HN response. "People feel this is important to do without being paid, therefore we should not support them as a society". It is an attitude I cannot comprehend. Something is important to our civil society - why not make doing it a viable living?
I pay for the Economist, Bloomberg Businessweek, National Geographic and others. I would pay more for them, sans adverts.
If you can't produce content that people want to pay for, what are you actually doing?
Adblockers have become the norm because large enough a fraction of ad pushers have no morals. And because the ad industry tends to be concentrated, the blockers (rightly) target the observed ways used to push the ads.
So if you use any of the blacklisted firehoses or their observed methods, you can expect to be blocked.
> Seriously, we have a single unobtrusive banner yet 85% of our users are adblocking; it's not an issue of 'bad ads' as so many like to argue.
If 85% of your users have decided to use adblockers, I would take that a clear signal that the resources you use for serving ads have been deemed obnoxious in the extreme.
YOU may not be shoveling unripened-manure-quality-ads to your users, but other parties in the business who use the same services obviously do. And before we go to the concept of whitelisting certain sites, please realise that there are still two major factors working against you.
1: An ad served will mean successful tracking. Sophisticated users refuse to give in here.
2: The moment some whitelisting method becomes easy, useful and accepted, the ad networks will do everything they can to abuse that to bypass blockers. This follows from human nature and ruthless business practises.
And finally, I'm going to throw something I wrote nearly two years ago here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10521930 - that's my list of things that would qualify an ad as non-intrusive.
If the small site owners are only collateral damage for you then you also welcome a internet which is dominated by big companies and people with enough money to push their agenda.
Just like the offline world.
But advertising has led to the collapse of the small business or hobby website. Realistically nobody will ever see your content unless you advertise heavily, or post on a platform that uses your content to sell its ads.
Advertising, as far as I can see, has had a negative impact on the democracy of the web. And lead to an increase in the domination of big platform holders and brands.
Care to elaborate why this should happen? Do you believe the "Google will rank you bad if you don't use Adsense" conspiracy theorie?
This is a good point, and the fact that advertisers don't allow it is evidence that they're doing something immoral. If adverts were really about informing people to help them make their own reasoned choices, advert search would be very useful. But if adverts are an attempt to emotionally manipulate people, then allowing search would be counterproductive. It would give the audience time to think, which makes psychological trickery less effective. Advertisers choosing to make adverts appear and disappear unpredictably is telling.
I don't think it's that deep. The advertiser, the ad buyer (some digital agency), the ad deliverer (some exchange or third-party network) and the publisher (the site where the ad was displayed) are all distinct entities with budgets fired up and ready to go at that specific moment.
The advertiser would surely love for you to search for their ad again (and again, and again). The buyer wouldn't mind, if only to show that their placement has increased reach. But the deliverer or the publisher won't see any additional revenues off of this, therefore there's zero incentive for them to support it.
If you don't want people "stealing" your content, put it behind a paywall and watch user numbers plummet.
Images, animations, auto-playing videos... ads are much larger than 2KB. 2KB for the network overhead alone, maybe.
Anyhow, my primary reason for blocking ads is that I seriously hate animated stuff next to text I want to read.
Its like people forget (or just don't care about) history.
The web started off advertising free.
THEN people moved in because they thought they could use the communication medium for a business opportunity.
NOW you're telling people not to consume from the medium that YOU moved in on.
Its a ballsy position :)
The web started off as a very limited network funded by universities and the military. You did not have to pay to host anything for the first several years.
Are you suggesting we return to that?
And to be extra nice for you, I'll go ahead and do the same on all my friends devices too, since every last one of them uses adblockers. You wouldn't want them stealing your ad supported content would you?
I'll even block your website on every firewall I get my hands on, because believe me, there are no ads going through those firewalls.
The idea that people will find about the products they like without any avertising or marketing is naive at best.
It's the "build it and they will come" fallacy over again. For the small business advertising might be necessary because not everyone can fight in the content marketing game.
That won't stop me from milking the cash cow while I can, but I'm not going to moralise to others about how they should help me keep the cow alive.
No, but if they follow me around, keep track of what I do, sell this information, or hand it over to a/the government, and occasionally accidentally sneeze in my face as they follow me, causing me to fall ill... well, I'd find it hard to resist kicking their hat as far as I could.
I think the privacy issues kind of render all arguments in favor of (current-day) advertisements moot. I suspect many of us would happily have a few ads on a page if they weren't so obnoxious, privacy-invading, and occasionally downright dangerous.
Furthermore, while I do sympathize with your situation, assuming that your ad is both unobtrusive and non-privacy-invading, surely you can see how guilt-by-association is not entirely unjustified in this case? How can we tell that your ads are the good kind?
(FWIW I try turn off uMatrix/uBlock on sites that I like, but unfortunately it's just not worth the trouble unless I'm a repeat visitor. And even then I often turn it right back on when I see how much the experience degrades as a result!)
The methods people who rely on ads put up to counter that, will just hurt them because pointing the finger at the user of ad-blocking software is the wrong direction entirely.
I know this is a contrived illustration ... but you get my point.
it's good if bad bad bad infrastructure is teared down mercilessly. especially if the worst case consequences are first world problems. you're not going to die or starve.
i work in ad industry and it's utterly mesmerising how zombiesque many people do their job ... best thing that could happen to poor schmucks making money by configuring ad network setups is to lose their job and be forced to think about the life and if there is maybe something more worthwhile.
Well. I had an idea to fork µblock and add a function to white-list sites that are OK, not flooding me with ads and popups, don't have 4 trackers and have max. 3 social buttons. Whitelist would be made by a community, so you could add your domain, people would visit it and vote to whitelist or not.
However eloquent your case, I will not disable my anti-virus for your sake. If your site makes an effort to prevent my visit as a result of my security choices, I will respect it, otherwise I am ignorant of who runs third-party code on their site that has proven time and time again to be unsafe.
But there is a market for content. E.g., a relatively small German newspaper (Taz) has a 'voluntary paywall' (which you can basically click through without paying) [1] and still they earned approximately 0.5 million Euro so far this year:
https://www.taz.de/Archiv-Suche/!5436670/
This is besides regular subscriptions and a system where you can buy shares in a 'cooperative'.
Another, more well-known example in these confines is Linux Weekly News, which besides relatively non-obtrusive ads, offers subscriptions [2] to see new content immediately (rather than after a week).
[1] http://www.taz.de/!153704/
[2] https://lwn.net/op/FAQ.lwn#subs
From the consumer side, the only investment is an Internet connection and the equipment needed to access it. More expensive than a single book or a movie ticket, but practically limitless once you have it.
So yeah, no one wants to pay. I'm surprised that anyone pretends to be surprised by that.
Advertisers are parasites. They need a host to survive. Almost no one cares if they don't survive, including the content creators and the companies with products to be advertised, if they can figure out how to make money without them. There's the rub.
Your busker analogy is actually perfect, by the way. The content is freely available because the busker chose to make it so in an effort to get an audience. Then the busker is outraged when someone doesn't pay? Under what theory of justice is the busker outraged when people take him up on his offer of free content?
And what’s wrong with that? If more entities focused on "exceptionally good” content and services, a lot more people would be willing to pay.
People have replied (not very politely, unfortunately) with some suggestions though. Self-hosting ads, using a banner asking people whitelist you, or just straight up using Patron might help.
Again, I'm sorry you're in a situation like this, it really sucks :/
I ignore that guy and move along hoping that he would fuck off and that I won't see him again tomorrow.
https://flattr.com/ has been around for a while, but they're doing an overhaul of their model now, together with the company behind Adblock Plus. Here's the latest related post:
https://adblockplus.org/blog/the-story-about-the-new-flattr-...
1. Advertising gives advantages to the largest richest corporations and stifles competition from superior small businesses.
2. It makes people stupid, they don't take the time to investigate products before buying, because they are literally brainwashed from hearing the same bullshit every day from advertisers.
3. It wastes our time. It is 2017, it is the information era, if you want a product you open a web search and look for it. Advertising is no longer necessary or relevant, and it is stealing moments from people.
There are more reasons.
Advertising is already dead, and if your business operates solely on advertising then your business is in real trouble. I started telling people this a year ago and they laughed at me. Get off that flaming wreck now while you still can, or sink and burn with the rest of them. The smart people are already looking for new revenue models. Adapting to new conditions is a critical part of survival skills, and if you can't do it you won't survive.
I think it'd be really cool if you dropped some of the defensiveness and used your position to help offer some suggestions to the problem. I know it's hard to see it from other angles that may not directly benefit you, but it'll help extend a resource that might disappear if people disagree with it hard enough en masse.
EHHHHHH i mean i'd like to agree 99% of the time with this, but since were being moralist and absolutist here....
why not just have absolutely no loopholes, and let the "good guys" do HTML text ads, or just a good ol image file?
Allowing loopholes though - Isn't that how Adblock Plus first introduced their pay to win system? My bet would be these guys are going to start taking payments for whitelisting.
Fortunately for us, we have uBlock, which is open source and is also the basis for AdNauseum.
If it really is futile to spam the spammers, then small blogs indeed will be the sole losers here.
What is worse though, is that the internet is already a terrible place in aggregate for intelligent content to make money.
It's basically given away for free, or sold to very specific buyers (usually people who are purchasing consulting or are hiring smart people for full time).
So, not many people make ad money off of high quality content, for two reasons: too much bad content is drowning them out, and too much good content being given away for free
How do you currently make a living? Is it all through donation?
If you work for an employer. Do they sell products or services? So, they must advertise right?
If you work for google? Well, that's how they make their profits each year.
If you work for a non-profit. How do the people who donate, earn their living? Can you be sure they also live from donations only?
Bottom line is, if advertising goes away. How do you expect to make a living, if no one knows about products and is not buying?
Advertising has been around far longer than a large portion of the audience of this website. The thinking that advertising can be changed to a tipping system is naive at best.
-------------------
I'd love to hear what the stone throwers think. How do we replace this industry that must be destroyed at all costs. How will someone from the future, market their product without advertising of any kind. Must new products sit on the shelf or be used by a very few because any form of communication about a product IS ITSELF AN ADVERTISEMENT and must be STOPPED!
Honestly, I'd like to know!
It's a Samsung SUHD, by the way
http://i.imgur.com/m3ePBkr.jpg
Still nags me about "Smart Hub" if I misclick some button on the remote named "Extra".
I could go the Amazon Fire route (Chromecast still won't play Amazon Prime) and disconnect the TV, but it's annoying because apart from the ad, the TV is great.
The worst thing is that the ads weren't there when I bought the TV, they came (undocumented) in a software update that I can't roll back.
Does it mean that the site is profitable with only 10% of ads delivered?
If (say) 20% of the 85% now using ad-blockers were convinced that they are hurting you, and stop using the ad-blocker, what will change?
I am assuming that the "conversion rate" (i.e. people actually clicking on the ads that they now see) will be very near to 0%.
The site would become less of a burden on our company. It would still not be profitable, but there's quite a difference between losing 100$ a month and losing 80$ a month to provide users content they've come to expect.
The question, if you prefer was:
Is there a difference between preventing ads from showing on the page (adblocker) and seeing them but ignoring them?
[1]: https://pi-hole.net/
http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/
The creators clearly haven't been on both side of the ads spectrum: As content creators and intrusive ads blockers
They don't know the inside of this market enough, they don't know what happens when a website get it's ads clickbombed
Some websites really have no other way to finance themselves other then using ads, and use not intrusive ads network and AdNauseam will just get them banned
AdNauseam is just about wrecking avok publishers revenues by getting them banned from ads networks, so like always, it's the small publishers that will get punished, and not the big shit ads companies.
Buzzfeed-like companies will find a way to counter AdNauseam,they have the ressources for it, but not the smaller tech blogger that you like reading
I wrote something about it a few months ago:
https://medium.com/@MaxenceCornet/please-consider-carefully-...
I'll stick to ublock.
If you hate ads but like some content, stick to ads blockers as well
Right now, google adwords are the best way to get my products in front of people. It works and is worth it. I'd love for that not to be the case. Ads are intrusive. Conversion rates are low but the math still makes sense.
As an aside, my business recently started more aggressively running email campaigns for previous (ecommerce) customers to get them back. We saw a huge return for emailing our customers multiple times in a month rather than once a month.
This is awful, as the conversion rate from email to purchase is something like 0.5%. It's still worth it. All those people are opening email after email. So much wasted time. But in the end, email marketing works and is cheap.
Marketing is one big tragedy of the commons.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons
https://www.reddit.com/r/privacytoolsIO/comments/6lq3k6/is_i...
The crazy thing for me is that I still did depend on ads to keep my free content alive. On the cheapest hosting option one of my sites would run into around $40 worth of hosting a month plus endless hours of moderation and 'fixing'.
I did experiment with self hosted ads. Sorrily this is a pain in itself because for whatever reason a lot of adblockers block anything that appears like a obvious ad. Even self hosted images if they may are in a subdirectory called ads or have a id therelike. So I called everything 'meow' instead of ads. A month later a popular ad block list included a filter for my ads... (~3 million sessions/month) and my self hosted, non evil, non JS ads were blocked again.
Not to mention that the income was not even a 10th.
I still am undecided on the topic. But i want people to understand that especially Adsense is indeed important for small publishers.
End of the story is i sold the site because Adsense started to pay less and less for more traffic and now a ad company is milking my back then only Adsense site with about 5 more trackers and ad networks...
It's crazy that ad blockers would block self-hosted, non-js images ads, I mean, there's no tracking associated with it, it doesn't make any sense IMO
What kind of traffic allowed you to live of Adsense? Millions hits a day? Or very targeted traffic with high CPC maybe?
Also i dont know either. It really still bothers me. We can't fix the ad industry if we just turn a blind eye.
Yes, this is not really tied to my Google account, but would Google associate me with it and delete my account anyway? I think they might.
For that reason I'm happy to continue just blocking ads, since that's much less likely to put me on their radar
When I started my first tech blog back in 2009, I was 18yo, living in Nepal. I had no means whatsoever to make money online but it was super easy to setup adsense account and in no time I was generating some revenue.
I agree, the ad system is broken, but this is not a solution. This tool will do nothing but harm publishers, possibly get their adsense account banned for click fraud, and eventually cause them to shut down their website.
Ad industry is huge and there ought to be better way to fix the problems than straight out blocking the ads, or tools like these which gets so much kudos on HN that it makes me sick. It is the same bunch of crowd who call themselves entrepreneurs and then they cheer for anti-entrepreneur tools like these.
The ugly fact is we don't have a better system in place than what we have now, and tools like these don't make the situation any better.