Forum Discussion
- joebedfordNomad II
drsteve wrote:
I feel the same way. It's the really really annoying stuff that makes me turn everything off. A static photo is fine but junk jumping around on my screen is a no no.
If they get rid of popups, auto play audio and video, and other ultra annoying features, I'll be happy to turn off my ad blocker.
There are already lots of sites out there that won't let you see content with an ad-blocker. For the most part, I leave the site. I think only twice have I disabled my ad blocker to view content.
We Canadians have to deal with a lot of geo-blocking too. - drsteveExplorerIf they get rid of popups, auto play audio and video, and other ultra annoying features, I'll be happy to turn off my ad blocker.
- Sam_SpadeExplorer
coolmom42 wrote:
It's a perfectly reasonable option, and nothing really new.
Did you read my posts on this subject ?
Knowing that:
Pass-though ads are dangerous.
They put you at the mercy of multiple other sites to display your pages in a speedy fashion.
And the previous post about YOU paying for the bandwidth to display something that you have no control over.
IF you know all that and you still think it is "perfectly reasonable", then you need to think it over a bit longer. - wa8yxmExplorer IIII have two add blockers.. Why two? Well one is software, one is wetware.
YOu see. even if the ads appear.. I DO NOT SEE THEM. it's a mental block on the ads. so the advertising (And sadly the bandwidth) is lost on me.
Now the advantage of the software ad-block is bandwidth, when I"m paying for it. Ads burn up bytes. - coolmom42Explorer II
az99 wrote:
darsben1 wrote:
I did read it. What part did you not see about pay?az99 wrote:
Looks like Chrome will soon be my former web browser.No way I will buy into this BS.
http://www.cnbc.com/2017/06/01/google-confirms-ad-blocker-coming-to-chrome-in-2018.html
Please reread the article you posted. Then come up with a means to generate revenue for the companies that are out to make a profit. If you block ad's the publishers of websites for news, entertainment, etc get no revenue and then what.
"visits a participating site using Chrome, they will see a prompt that asks them to either turn off their ad blocker, or "pay for a pass that removes all ads on that site through the new Google Contributor." If they choose to pay the fee, Google will take a 10 percent cut. If they select neither choice, they won't be able to view the website.
I already have an adblock extension on my Chrome. Several sites I frequent ask me to turn it off, in order to view their site. They are sites that have advertising, or offer an add-free subscription. So without people seeing the ads, the sites can't make any money from people without a subscription.
It's a perfectly reasonable option, and nothing really new. - magicbusExplorer II
SCVJeff wrote:
Unless you are on a VPN, the servers you are talking to know where your browser is. The ad delivery services are not geared for relocation. When I fly cross country for business it take a few days for me to stop seeing ads from the other coast.stickdog wrote:
Browsers are not clairvoyant. If you want updated locations, turn it on just like you did with the browser you use that DOES know where you are
We're fulltimers may spend two or three days at a location then we're down the road. What I love about Chrome is I get Ads from the places we were 2 weeks ago.
Dave - eichacsjExplorerI take it those against don't have smart phones or do not have any apps. Many smart phone apps, free with ads, pay remove ads...nothing new here just moving to the browsers.
- The title sounds like Google is going to make you pay to use Chrome next year. That's not true. Google is going to make you pay to use ad-blockers in Chrome in some situations next year. Just in case anyone cares, I'm writing this using Internet Explorer. Microsoft has been very, very good to me.
- SCVJeffExplorer
stickdog wrote:
Browsers are not clairvoyant. If you want updated locations, turn it on just like you did with the browser you use that DOES know where you are
We're fulltimers may spend two or three days at a location then we're down the road. What I love about Chrome is I get Ads from the places we were 2 weeks ago. - Sam_SpadeExplorer
az99 wrote:
"visits a participating site using Chrome,
If they select neither choice, they won't be able to view the website.
Well that's pretty easy:
Either change browsers OR stop participating on that site.....after telling the owner why.
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