• @TankovayaDiviziya
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    31 month ago

    Unpopular opinion incoming:

    You know when you were playing hide and seek, found the perfect hiding place, and you reject anyone else who tries to hide in that place?

    DON’T TELL ANYONE ABOUT ADBLOCKERS!

    Seriously, corpos will crack down hard. I mean, real hard on adblockers. This is an arms race that corporations have not yet realised because not enough people are using ad blockers. However, if more and more people are using it, then corporations will also be trying to catch up and that is something they will win because of greater resources.

    This will be like with VPN; as many VPN IP addresses have been flagged and blocked as the service became more popular. And some of these VPNs have not updated the IP addresses making access to many websites nigh impossible or awkward-- unless you want to trawl through countless addresses. I’m afraid the same thing will happen with adblockers. This is something that open source adblockers could not easily win-- if they could win.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      1 month ago

      they will try to crack down on it either way, might as well go out with a fight. The more popular it is to use adblocking and the less niche weirdo psycho, the less “normal” it is for whatever shit they wanna do, however far they want to go to literally force bullshit into your brain wether you want it or not.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      51 month ago

      Amigo - the corpos already know. They also know that anyone who hates ads enough to install and maintain ad blockers is also not going to click on ads. They’re wasted impressions. The amount an advertiser pays to put an ad in front of you is a rounding error compared to the amount they pay when you click.

      When I worked at G I had a Linux laptop. It came pre-installed with Firefox and uBlock origin in addition to Chrome.

      If Google is distributing Firefox with uBlock internally to employees they know about ad blockers.

      It’s similar to how scam emails always have egregious spelling errors: they’re trying to select out the people that won’t fall for the scam.