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Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2015 11:19 am
by chriswcs
As far as I have understood, large companies DO NOT pay for their ads to be accepted, but pay for the whitelisting PROCESS.

This is completely understandable as they have a great deal more ads to be looked at than most small websites.
I don't want to discuss this part of ABP.
I want to discuss Acceptable Ads. According to the survey in 2011, 75% of people are okay with advertising as long as it's not intrusive. I think this is a good place to start.
Personally, I think advertisements are okay if they help me find something interesting. Not clickbait crap-lists, but genuinely interesting. If I'm reading about the stock market, I wouldn't mind an ad connecting me to additional information about stock market trends in the past year.
What about you? At what point is an advertisement okay? (It's okay if your opinion differs from the Acceptable Ads manifesto).
Remember that there are many sides to this: the consumer, the user, the advertiser, the supplier, the gatekeeper (ABP), the government, etc. Please keep these actors in mind when replying!
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Wed Jun 17, 2015 10:23 am
by Donaldzzz
As an advertiser I don't mind publishing ads at various opportunities.
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2015 5:32 am
by farola
I believe an acceptable ad (besides the usual non-intrusiveness: being small, static, etc) is one that is well placed. Simple as that. For example, when I'm getting information about a product, it's okay to advertise similar products, or to sites that sell those products. This way, the ad is aggregating useful information that can benefit me.
Usually those types of ads appear when you are looking for them, like in review sites or the paid results from Google searches.
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Thu Aug 13, 2015 8:41 am
by pactsocin
Très interessante cette discution, merci pour vos retours et vos lectures.
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Tue Aug 25, 2015 12:06 am
by jonnymoon96
many people unfortunately consider ad block plus to be the mafia they accuse the eyeo corporation about google amazon and others paying but if this is not something you approve of there is always adblock but the large corporation who do pay the eyeo corporation have to go through the accepted ads process but for a small business it is free as far as my knowledge goes i can understand if you are not comfortable with adblock plus business model this is why i have suggested alternatives but so far they have been transparent about it but they do not show how much they get paid though
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Wed Sep 16, 2015 9:29 pm
by treos
jonnymoon96 wrote:many people unfortunately consider ad block plus to be the mafia they accuse the eyeo corporation about google amazon and others paying but if this is not something you approve of there is always adblock but the large corporation who do pay the eyeo corporation have to go through the accepted ads process but for a small business it is free as far as my knowledge goes i can understand if you are not comfortable with adblock plus business model this is why i have suggested alternatives but so far they have been transparent about it but they do not show how much they get paid though
...what? dude, use proper punctuation when typing a paragraph like that (or anything really). that's just a big unreadable wall of letters with no punctuation at all.
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 11:11 am
by kenzie25
so, whitelist is not same as accepting ads?
Re: Ethics & the Google, Amazon, paying for ads thing
Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 11:14 am
by mapx
kenzie25 wrote:so, whitelist is not same as accepting ads?
about acceptable ads
acceptable-ads
whitelisting is an action you can do yourself for a page / site.
"acceptable ads" are organized in a separate list which can be disabled.