AOL Allowing Users to Block Pop-Up Ads
Posted by harryleung on 12 March 2003 - 08:53 · 5 comments & 456 views
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#1 Posted by leebobs on 12 Mar 2003 - 09:43
- Now if only AOL allowed users to block its own resource hungry junky software... We would be ok!!
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#2 Posted by cesardrgn on 12 Mar 2003 - 14:43
- I still don't like AOL...
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#3 Posted by eaglebtc on 12 Mar 2003 - 15:20
- I've said it before, and I'll say it again: [i][b]AOL should die of gonorrhea and rot in hell![/b] Would you like a cookie son?[/i]
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(1 reply)
#4 Posted by nacs on 12 Mar 2003 - 19:30
- They're about the last mainstream ISP to jump on this bandwagon. AOL sure learns fast.
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#4.1 Posted by Hawkeye on 13 Mar 2003 - 00:11
- [neoquote=#4.0 by nacs]They're about the last mainstream ISP to jump on this bandwagon. AOL sure learns fast.
[/neoquote]
So wait a second. MSN has had this for a long time already? That's news to me.
I've actually been using the pop-up blocker for a while now, because it has been available to beta testers for months already. It really does work very nicely. It integrates into AOL's browser efficiently, and allows custom controls for each site.
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"AOL's new Pop-Up Controls will allow our members to explore the Web without being trapped in pop-up purgatory," said David Gang, AOL's executive vice president for marketing. "We asked our members to tell us how we can continue to improve the AOL service, and this was near the top of their wish list." AOL trails Internet service provider EarthLink, which last year began offering its customers a free program called Pop-Up Blocker.
Pop-ups are like oil spills on the Internet ? they pollute without adding value, said Jakob Nielsen, an Internet usability expert with Nielsen Norman Group. "One the one hand, it's good for AOL to offer a pop-up blocker," Nielsen said. "But on the other hand, that's like an oil tanker carrying a clean-up crew because the captain knows he's going to spill the cargo. Repairing the ship before leaving port would be the better choice."
Several small software firms already sell or give away pop-up blockers, which operate on varying degrees of aggressiveness. At times, the software blocks more than ads, preventing users from seeing windows that display help information, photo enlargements or sales details.
AOL said its software allows users to see which sites have attempted to deliver pop-ups to them. If the customer wants to get pop-ups from a particular Web site, the user can add the site to a personal "allow list."
The browser will display a running total of the number of pop-ups and pop-unders blocked during each session, AOL said.