Ads - yet again! Though that's not the only problem.
Today I seem to have a big problem with Firefox - not sure why, but it's not working properly. So I had to switch to other browsers.
One I tried was Opera - which works fine, but when I went to some pages I visit frequently ads appear. The ads are really distracting - and they have been carefully placed so that even if I try to move the window to the left to make an ad disappear, there is another one on the right hand side.
I reckon the ads are a real bummer re anything requiring concentration, so need to be turned off ASAP.
Then I looked for adblockers. One of them seemed to install, but I'm not sure. Then I was presented with a panel suggesting "honesty" payments. The suggested payment amounts were enough to make me look for something else, so I eventually found and installed Ghostery, which seems to work. I really dislike this model of the internet, where ads are routinely put on so many pages, and then removing them with an ad blocker prompts in some sort of charging system.
OK - so this reminds me a bit of some kinds of threat behaviour, which goes like this:
1. Ask some guys - vandals - to go round smashing up house windows.
Wait a while.
2. Then contact house owners and suggest that if they pay £10 per month "your" guys can prevent the window smashing.
There have almost certainly been criminal organisations which have adopted this behaviour. In the case of the Ad blockers, the organisations which make ad blockers can probably argue - reasonably - that they are trying to "solve" a problem, but they didn't create it in the first place.
Then of course things get worse. After you install one or two ad-blockers, which seem to work quite well, then you hit a web site you might really be interested in, and you get this "We have detected you are using an ad-blocker. Please consider removing it for this site, as the site relies on ads for funding."
The whole issue of this kind of behaviour stinks, IMO.
In the meantime I'm still trying to work around the Firefox issues - looks as though I'm going to have to abandon Firefox for some while.
Today I seem to have a big problem with Firefox - not sure why, but it's not working properly. So I had to switch to other browsers.
One I tried was Opera - which works fine, but when I went to some pages I visit frequently ads appear. The ads are really distracting - and they have been carefully placed so that even if I try to move the window to the left to make an ad disappear, there is another one on the right hand side.
I reckon the ads are a real bummer re anything requiring concentration, so need to be turned off ASAP.
Then I looked for adblockers. One of them seemed to install, but I'm not sure. Then I was presented with a panel suggesting "honesty" payments. The suggested payment amounts were enough to make me look for something else, so I eventually found and installed Ghostery, which seems to work. I really dislike this model of the internet, where ads are routinely put on so many pages, and then removing them with an ad blocker prompts in some sort of charging system.
OK - so this reminds me a bit of some kinds of threat behaviour, which goes like this:
1. Ask some guys - vandals - to go round smashing up house windows.
Wait a while.
2. Then contact house owners and suggest that if they pay £10 per month "your" guys can prevent the window smashing.
There have almost certainly been criminal organisations which have adopted this behaviour. In the case of the Ad blockers, the organisations which make ad blockers can probably argue - reasonably - that they are trying to "solve" a problem, but they didn't create it in the first place.
Then of course things get worse. After you install one or two ad-blockers, which seem to work quite well, then you hit a web site you might really be interested in, and you get this "We have detected you are using an ad-blocker. Please consider removing it for this site, as the site relies on ads for funding."
The whole issue of this kind of behaviour stinks, IMO.
In the meantime I'm still trying to work around the Firefox issues - looks as though I'm going to have to abandon Firefox for some while.
Comment