▲ | nobody9999 2 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
>Plastering websites that contain content you want to consume is paying for the website. The problem with that interpretation is that such content that's being "plastered" (that is, unvetted third-party software which wants to execute on my property -- in fact, such ads are generally served from sites other than the one that I visited) over the website aren't actually part of the website. They are third-party programs unrelated (except via a business relationship between the website proprietor and the ad network -- one that I have no part of, nor have I been consulted WRT said contract) to the website itself. By your logic, I should be forced to run arbitrary code on my private property. Is that correct? I refuse to do so. As it is, after all, my property. If the proprietor of a website doesn't like it, they can block access to the site for those (like myself) who use ad blockers (which some websites already do). Whether I choose to block ads just because I don't like ads or because I'm trying to protect myself from malicious software distributed through those ad networks -- or both -- is irrelevant. My property is my property and I get to decide what code runs on it. Full stop. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | rkomorn 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ads are part of "the website". They don't just magically show up (unrelated malware aside). They're there because the people running the site want ads there. They're content the website wants you to see. They're just not the part of the content you want. > By your logic, I should be forced to run arbitrary code on my private property. Is that correct? I was going to say "no, obviously not", but actually, if you want to consume the content you're trying to get? Yes. That is the implicit contract for consuming web content (regardless of how aware the website is about the quality of the ads its users end up getting). Your choice should be "I don't want these ads/this code, no thanks for the content." And you're right: websites that don't want users with ad blockers can themselves deny access, and if ad blockers explicitly announce themselves so that the website can make that decision, great. That'd be the fair thing, right? My actual take on this has more nuance than I'd care to fit into a HN comment (of course). I'm not dogmatically "pro ads". I've worked at ad-supported places and I plan / hope I never do again. I think the current web browsing experience is a nightmare (ads, clickbait, content specifically made longer to fit more ads and/or increase presence). It all sucks. I'm also not absolving all the people publishing sites who would disown third-party ads like "oh well WE don't pick what's displayed" from their responsibilities. Ultimately, though, ads is how (nearly all) websites get paid, and just as I want to get paid for my work, I think I should pay others for theirs (or at least not benefit from their work if I don't want to pay). I don't try to get around paywalls, I don't try to get around sites that think my browser isn't giving them enough latitude. I just walk away. No one's forcing me to load their ads against my will. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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