Advertisers Thrilled About New Ways To Irritate Readers
from the wrong-direction dept
Though the rise of pop-up blockers is a clear indication that users don't like intrusive advertising, publishers haven't stopped looking for ways to annoy their readers. The trade magazines tend to be chief offenders as they often employ the dreaded dog-ear pullback and other intrusive flash-based ads that take over the screen. Then of course there are the embedded text ads delivered by Intellitxt and others. When you scroll your mouse over certain words, a small ad pops up on the screen. Because these ads look like hyperlinks, they amount to advertising by trickery. But apparently those ads aren't irritating enough as the latest generation brings up an ad with a small video right on top of the text as your mouse runs over the text -- something that Ad Age apparently thinks is a brilliant idea, rather than just incredibly intrusive and annoying. Also, you can add a point for the always-irritating unexpected sound. Seeing as broadcast TV ads are losing their effectiveness on TV, what makes publishers think it's a good idea to embed them into text? Though it may seem smart, in the short run, to chase the highest possible CPM, sites running these ads will ultimately pay for it by degrading the user's experience and eroding the value they offer readers.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
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build a better mouse trap?
oh yes and i can see the next version of firefox etc, developing ways of blocking this sort of rubbish anyway.
like banning 'moving DIV tags' etc, under the same sort of control as it currently has for cookies etc.
eventually they may get the hint, i don't mind sponsored pages, where they actually fund some nice content, but all this crap does is make me turn image loading *off*, and sound *off* and javascript *off* except for sites and domains i trust.
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i see an ad i hate, click on it, and buy the product? if i hate the ad so much, how do i end up owning the product?
if no one is click on the ads, i really don't think many companies will continue to spend their advertising budgets. that is why advertising is constantly evolving. spend, learn, redefine, spend, learn...
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Not so BAD
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serves a purpose?
Of course, I do agree some of these ads are going a little bit overboard...
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They Know What They Are Doing
Hate them all you want, but if the ads fail to work, the internet we all know and love will be gone. Advertising revenues are up a ton, and it only makes the amount and quality of free conrent better. If you don't like it, turn it off. But thank the diety that enough people DO respond to pay for free content for the rest of us.
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This type of ad recently spawned an evil twin which, instead of the splash page, actually opens a frame and loads another site into it. This is a crime against humanity.
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Not so bad.
Michael's right, if you can't stand it turn it off!
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IntelliTXT Launches (Annoying) Video Ads
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@j.r.
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Re:
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Forbes on Google home page
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Firefox + NoScript + Adblock
NoScript
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/722/
Adblock
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/1 0/
Install Firefox, install NoScript and Adblock and these things go away.
One thing to keep in mind, however with NoScript, the sites that you want to use JavaScript on will have to be individually enabled. In my case, it took about a half-dozen times of sitting in front of a web page, repeatedly clicking on the submit button before I remembered I needed to enable JavaScript for that site.
Personally, I only Adblock animated ads because I can't stand things moving when I'm trying to read.
MjM
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Re: Firefox + NoScript + Adblock
image.animation_mode = none
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