dsheinem wrote:I’d disagree that it is unethical. If you are trying to monetize web content then you are doing so on a platform where users have (and can create) tools to choose how to consume your work. It’s part of the nature of the medium, and a feature which attracts audiences in the first place. I actually think it is far worse (though not unethical) to force tons of ads on a viewer that may disrupt their browsing experience. Sometimes these ads have malicious code in them, steal focus, are designed to be loud, cause loading problems, etc. Fuck that.
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I think it really comes down to the agreement with the content creator to clear things up. Does the content creator does not mind if you block the ads? Or does he insist on you watching the ad for you to get the content? Its a little bit like the freemium model. You can play the game for free and they make money if you choose to buy items. Can you choose not to watch the ads by the creator's will?
We discussed this in another thread, how you can subscribe to cable tv and record the shows for personal viewing and tv networks are happy with that (its legal), but if you subscribe to Netflix and do the same they will be upset. I think it breaches their terms of service.
A similar example is how you would be in Egypt and pay $10 for Netflix, and in the USA and pay $10 for Netflix. Although you pay the same amount for the same company, they still won't allow you to access cross-country libraries. I know why they do it, but its all about the terms between you and the content provider. Its not as clear with online ads
Ziggy587 wrote:3) Websites can choose to block your access to their site if they detect you are using an ad blocker. That is totally up to them, just as it's totally up to you if you want to block 100% of ads. If YouTube had a problem with you using an ad blocker, then they would do something about it.
5) As for YouTube losing revenue for offering a free service... Don't worry, YouTube is Google. I think they have enough money.
Personally, ad revenue sounds good on paper but it leads to too much bullshit in my opinion. News sites that rely on ad revenue end up relying on "click bait" articles in turn, which are usually garbage articles that aren't worth ready. There are YouTube channels that are the same way. Look at Racketboy articles, they're written from the heart. If our articles were written specifically to get ad revenue, then we would have bullshit articles like "PS1 Classic Is Horrible, Here's Why" and "The Thing Nintendo Is Doing That You Should Really Know About..."
You make a very good point about blocking access if they detect an adblocker, if they were not ok with it they would have blocked access to the site altogether. I still guess they are wiling to let it slide in the hopes that the majority choose to watch the ads. Can they detect a DNS sinkhole?
As for Google, Google is Google because of the ads. No ads, no Google, no Money. I believe Google's only paid service is their online storage and some hardware.
I agree with your point about ads turned websites into click baits, but I did refer to websites that helped me out like mobygames which serves ads. I know the solution is to whitelist them, but when you have adblock on for so long you don't know they even have ads. This happened to me, I used a browser without uBlock Origin and was surprised how different websites looked!
Nemoide wrote:Well, since KissAnime illegally profits off anime and doesn't pay a cent to the creators anyway, I'd argue that using an adblocker on that site is the *most* ethical way to do it.
but if you do that, KissAnime will shutdown and you won't get their service. The only reason they are putting the effort into building this website and streaming these shows is because they are hoping to gain from the ad revenue. No ad revenue no service, which makes you lose in the end. Same with torrent trackers, someone has to pay the server bills and etc.
Of course, if you just did it they won't care but if like 40-60% did, I guess they will take it down. Its not worth their time.
Nemoide wrote:Maybe I'll stop blocking ads for a while and see how different the internet becomes...
You are in for a treat, I did this and surprised how horrible the internet really looked. I had adblock on for years.