Posted on 08/11/2018 12:49:27 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
On January 8th, ExtremeTech published a piece about Forbes forcing users to disable their ad blockers in order to see any content, and guess what happened. Malware.
For the past few weeks, Forbes.com has been forcing visitors to disable ad blockers if they want to read its content. Visitors to the site with Adblock or uBlock enabled are told they must disable it if they wish to see any Forbes content. Thanks to Forbes interstitial ad and quote of the day, Google caching doesnt capture data properly, either.
What sets Forbes apart, in this case, is that it didnt just force visitors to disable ad blocking it actively served them malware as soon as they did. Details were captured by security researcher Brian Baskin, who screenshotted the process:
And now back to the original piece
One of the things I loved about the internet in the 2000s is that it was an overflowing treasure trove of content. Following in the footsteps of AltaVista and Yahoo!, Google had made the internet accessible. PHP, Java, and Ajax were coming on strong and reforging plain HTML to make the internet usable. Creative types and entrepreneurs were developing new ways to leverage the internet. Sure, there were ugly things like HoTMaiL, GeoCities, and MySpace, but we also got YouTube, Amazon, WikiPedia, CraigsList. GMail showed up, Facebook took its early steps, and Twitter popped up out of nowhere.
There were also a lot of ads. Corporate Earth had found the internet to be a new resource to exploit, and exploit it did. This was the era of the internet that created the need for the pop-up blocker feature being added to just about every browser on the planet. New advances in web tech also created news ways for site developers to be more efficient and more expressive. This created the Flash revolution and early Javascript-based pop-ups. Both website owners and ad network owners were having conniptions over click rates and revenues, and web users were getting really sick of ads splashed into every corner.
Hell, they still are.
Yet Google built their entire empire, one of the largest companies on Earth, almost entirely on the simple concept of plain text ads that didnt stand out like a sore thumb, but few others followed that lead. From this incomplete history, admittedly lacking nuance, we know today that advertising on websites is deeply annoying. We have interstitials, ads which pop up between stories on some websites or when you jump from one site to another to keep you from reading before you look at the sponsors message. We have all manner of Javascript-based pop-ups that appear when you scroll down far enough, try to click the Close Tab control, or flip up to ask you to complete a survey telling them how much you loathe their website because of the ads. Even I use them to hawk my book or get you to follow me on Twitter.
DISCLOSURE: I employ Googles AdSense on my site and a few others and, get this, I earn a whopping $30 a month. It pays a few internet-related bills. whee.
Then theres the Despicable-class items. These are more behaviors than actual ads. The most common one people come to know and despise is Link Bait, links with titles shrouded in mystery, dropping just enough bombshell to get you to click. Then, of course, the resulting page is saturated in ads. One of the even more painful forms of this is the Amazing List-class. Heres a simple tutorial; think up something gross or sexual, find five or more celebrities who have possibly admitted to doing it, create a gallery of these entries with one entry per page, entitle it something like 7 Celebrity Men Who Have Worn Womens Panties, now advertise. Guess what! Schlubs have to load that many pages, each full of ads, just to get through the list. Hideous.
Enter the Ad Blocker. Ad blockers promise one thing; to block ads from appearing in your browser. The results are simply astounding, if you use the right one. I personally use AdBlock, a plugin for Chrome on Windows, which effectively blocks all ads I dont want to see, but allows advertisers who behave responsibly to display their tasteful ads. AdBlock is one of the most popular because it works well. In fact, it works so well, the internet advertising industry and sites that derive revenue from ads instead of subscriptions is engaging in collective howls of foul claiming that it works too well and too many people are using it. Theyre simply loosing too much money and theyll have to stop publishing if we dont let them violate our eyeballs with their ads (or the ears of our deaf friends who must endure hideously convoluted crap in their screen readers).
Its gotten so bad, in fact, that now its difficult to go to just about any website without seeing some pop-up (am I the only one seeing the irony here?) begging visitors to please whitelist their site so they can continue to exist. Some truly heinous asshats will just block the content altogether until you disable your ad blocker. If that wasnt bad enough, ads are just about everywhere. Theyre in our Free-To-Play games, which should really be called Free-To-Play-But-Costs-Money-To-Play-Well games. They flash brightly on giant electronic signs in our cities, blinding us while we drive at 80 MPH on the freeway. They invade our shows on Hulu, even when we pay a subscription fee (thats changed lately, but it illustrates the point). Weve been fed pre-movie ads in the form of trailers for so many decades, we now look forward to them! Billions of revenue dollars flow from one corporate entity to the next because of ads, but ad blockers have been putting a dent in that, at least on the internet.
Well, so what!
Who cares if you obnoxious ad people and website operators complain that not every human being on Earth is actively enthralled by your short-form, advert-oriented expositions of so-called creativity. You are hawking stuff and not everybody wants to look at gaudy promotional material every waking minute of every day so you can make a few more millions, shocking though that may be. If your damned ads werent so freakishly annoying and obtrusive, we probably wouldnt be blocking them! They slow down page loading times. They require plugins people dont want or need and likely shouldnt be using because they open security holes on their systems. Ad networks have even been a source of viral attacks on millions of unsuspecting people who never once thought they may get a virus from their respectable website.
In a nutshell, you are exploiting us and we dont like it. We now have the power to stop it on the internet, and that bothers you. When Replay TV and TiVo first came out, they had the ability to skip ads. Wheres Replay TV now? Dead. Wheres TiVo? They had to cripple the function to survive, but have recently announced their new console that brings back Replay TVs long coveted 30-second jump, thumbing their noses that their oppressors. Millions of people are cutting the cord, ditching cable TV, and getting subscriptions to Netflix, Hulus new ad-free program, and just getting TV the old fashioned way, through an antenna. YouTube even has an ad-free service for $10 a month.
Nobody loves your ads because you abuse it and there are some people who will take that abuse to the extreme. So, heres the breakdown. You stop horribly exploiting us users and well stop blocking your entirely reasonable, unobtrusively placed ads and you can go on making revenue.
Better yet, why not try charging a super-small monthly fee to go ad-free, and no, you dont get to spam those who dont pay. Just consider asking for a few bucks a month. This is the internet, after all. You can reach millions of people instead of a few thousand in a neighborhood. You can make real money. Its not that hard.
Look at Google.
we all do it...he talks about the “internet” when he means the WWW.
And Brave adds a new revenue generation model in lieu of ads for content providers...a “pay per view” model. Hope JimRob takes advantage of it (extra revenue for FR).
https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/basic-attention-token/
Won’t click on Daily Caller, Business Insider, Washington Times and many others who are obnoxious about their efforts to get you to disable your ad blocker. I can get my info elsewhere. If you business model requires those ads, you are going to die out.
I use Adblock and Ghostry. Adblock captured 20 ads, while Ghostry captured an additional combination of 21 trackers and ads — at the same time! Truly insane.
I have no burning need to read anyone’s content. If they just had static ads I wouldn’t care, but I got tired of videos popping up and running by themselves, clickbait ads blocking the article etc. so I installed adblock. If they don’t want me to read without putting up with all that fine. I won’t read their articles.
See Reply #21.
Cumulus media recently implemented a mandatory registration/login to listen to their streaming content. This affects people who like to listen to their affiliated AM radio stations on the net. Inconvenient and invasive since one has to listen through all the advertising content anyway which is their bread and butter. I suppose contact info gives them something else to sell.
.....”I refuse to disable and just make a search for the same story at other sites”...
Exactly what I do as well....I just highlight the title and paste.....always plenty other sites carrying the article.
What amuses me is when I get ads for the thing I just bought.
No I don’t need another Ibanez SG. No I don’t need another RCA tablet. Lol.
I get ads for things I look up for a pricing reference when I sell them online; they are trying to sell me something I’m trying to sell myself.
>I use AdBlock Plus and Ghostery both turned up full blast.
>Another blocker I find most useful is Reader View which takes the web site and turns it into very readable text while eliminating all the ads, autostart videos and other garbage that detracts from the web site. I really appreciate it. It is available is a browser plug-in.
Another option for those that run Linux is to install Links text browser in graphic mode, shows all the graphics and no nagging ads, also good for paywalled sites. It is fork of the original Lynx text browser which did not do graphics. Browsers like this are good if wanting to view notorious adware/malware websites with no risk.
I just switched from Adblock Plus to uBlock Origin and it works on https://www.washingtontimes.com/ where Adblock didn’t.
I’ll do some more testing.
Thanks for the tip. Coincidentally I followed a FreeRepublic link to a story just yesterday, and the Forbes.com site picked up TouchBlocker VPN on my iPad. I had to read that very b*tch article by Forbes. Anyway, TouchBlocker was a little too finicky for my version of iOS, so I just tried Ghostery. Works great and Forbes doesn’t detect it.
>Thanks I just added Ublock. It works great!!
Add in ~$50 Pi running Pi-hole and be amazed.
Finding the right ‘balance’ of block vs. not to even get the ‘smart’ TV to work correctly
Good job Ill try that!!
I use an ad blocker because so many sites have so many ads that the site is un-viewable without one. If they require me to disable the ad blocker I just ignore it and just leave the site .... probably not worth the effort anyway.
There are several websites that block my access if I don’t remove my adblocker, such as Business Insider. So, I don’t patronize those sites any more. I don’t need any malware, thank you.
glad to hear it. I have been using it for a number of yeats. top notch.
I believe uMatrix would completely block that.. It also has a user friendly UI that you can individually choose what to block and what to keep (it gives a detailed list of everything on the page you are on).
I am using Adblock Plus, Ghostery, uBlock (Origin), Privacy Badger, Adaware Ad Block, and uMatrix.
I rarely have any issues ;^)
Thank you! I have just gone and added uMatrix. I will probably look into the other ones you mentioned that I don’t already use. Can’t have enough ad-block!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.