Are you stealing content if you have an ad blocker?


Recommended Posts

If you want my opinion as a site owner, content creation does not need to cost money, but when you run a popular site like Neowin then it does start to cost money, this also includes having to pay people for content management and creation of said content, including server costs and hosting.

 

We do our very best to only utilize inline advertising (there are many more methods that actually earn quite a bit more money, like popups and in-between pages ads) and even offer a reasonable 'ad free' subscriber account for those that really care about what we do. Unfortunately some people just don't understand this and only think about themselves, maybe they also wouldn't care if we could no longer maintain the community they so frequently visit too :p


For example, on this page alone, there is just one ad at the very top (if you are a logged in registered member). It isn't a lot to ask :p

  • Like 3

Secondly, is it also to my benefit that these sites put cookies on my computer so that ads will "follow" me from site to site? To say that I somehow gave them permission is beside the point. The point is they are not doing these things for my benefit but solely their own.

I actually agree about this, but that's why there is a 'do not track' option in the major browsers and you can actually opt out of ad companies putting cookies on your PC, there are even extensions that do this. It just means that if you whitelist Neowin, for example.. the ads won'tr be akin to your interests. There are benefits and downsides.

hackers, malware creators, ad creators, any individual who makes any of this should forced to listen to Obama and Hillary Clinton speeches 24 hours a day for the duration of their jail sentences

Yep thats why im a subby2, been here supporting the site since the beginning, so to me, paying the small fee every year is well worth it. 
And as a bonus for me, I get all advertising removed for my account, but, since im paying Steveo for server maintenance and all the rest, its all well and good. 
I do the same with other places I support too, giving them a couple of bucks to cover costs, but only for sites (like this one) that I feel deserve my money. 
Others, that have advertising everywhere, then I have no quarrels using AdBlock. Are we stealing? I don't believe so, if your running adblock on here and not a sub, your not stealing, but your not helping either. 

  • Like 3

Honestly, ads ruin the internet. They fill it with bloated, useless crap that requires you to "download" more information. Yes, we have super fast internet in most countries, but as someone who deals with a lot of foreigners, having ads bloat the site down majorly. I think ads should be optional, such as a hide feature. I use No-Script, and I freaking love blocking ads. It also catches XSS that try to run.

If you can get it elsewhere, why aren't you?

 

It's theft of service, and it's not a victimless crime... although it might feel like one. Somebody is hosting hardware that costs money and using electricity that costs money and an internet connection... and spending time creating content. And they are doing all this for you. And instead of switching to another provider - which would be the moral and right thing to do - you steal the service and use it for free.

 

At least when you pirate movies/songs/software, you aren't forcing the content creator to pay for the electricity and bandwidth to serve you that content you can't seem to live without. Those distribution costs are covered by the pirates.

 

 

i do find it elsewhere.

 

and despite what some of you said, the internet belongs to all of us and these admongers are most definitely stealing from us all. stealing bandwith for their profit making enterprises that slows the internet down for each and every one of us. which in turn raises carrier costs because even the most basic user now needs broadband to get even a basic level of quality internet service.

 

this is paid for on the backs of the everyday consumer, not the offending admongers. As a former Treasury Agent, I have seen and helped to disseminate the data for the FCC and other governmental agencies and that data is clear, concise, and irrefutable. the proliferation of ads on the internet degrades the quality of service for all users

 

Id love to see the admongers deny that simple fact

 

the truth is that these sites exist to make money....even this one. and while I commend Steve and his staff's attempts to be as inobtrusive as possible, the goal is still the same, the Internet i fraught with ads, spymare, virii, and various other malware, simply because of the poential to earn money on a public good. use of adblockers and other forms of protections is not stealing or immoral. it is simply prudent policy by the consumer.

  • Like 2

Yep thats why im a subby2, been here supporting the site since the beginning, so to me, paying the small fee every year is well worth it. 

And as a bonus for me, I get all advertising removed for my account, but, since im paying Steveo for server maintenance and all the rest, its all well and good. 

I do the same with other places I support too, giving them a couple of bucks to cover costs, but only for sites (like this one) that I feel deserve my money. 

Others, that have advertising everywhere, then I have no quarrels using AdBlock. Are we stealing? I don't believe so, if your running adblock on here and not a sub, your not stealing, but your not helping either.

I agree with Anarkii. I'll gladly pay my share to support sites I think are worth it, like this one, or whitelist other sites. In most cases I have no qualms blocking ads though, and have done so since the first version of Adblock for Mozilla was released in 2002. Why? Too many really annoying ads at the time (remember the X10 pop-under ads?) annoying the hell out of me.

What I find kind of ironic is when the editor of a tech website with some of the more annoying advertising methods I've seen lately claims adblockers are immoral.

Honestly, ads ruin the internet. They fill it with bloated, useless crap that requires you to "download" more information. Yes, we have super fast internet in most countries, but as someone who deals with a lot of foreigners, having ads bloat the site down majorly. I think ads should be optional, such as a hide feature. I use No-Script, and I freaking love blocking ads. It also catches XSS that try to run.

How will they make money?

How will they make money?

Make money? :p Every profit we've turned has gone back into the site with server hardware or additional full time staff. In one year we went from one full time reporter (John Callaham, who left June 2014) to three (Andy Weir, Brad Sams and Vlad Dudau). We also signed a multi-year contract with Amazon at the start of this year, because we were no longer able to be hosted by our parent company Stardock.. this was to do with trafficking/bandwidth reasons.

There's also the security consideration.  Unless a site can 100% guarantee the safety of third party sites/data (the advertisers), the blocks stay up.  "Rogue ads" aren't exactly an uncommon thing, compromised/infected/fake web servers are a dime a dozen, and my time and data aren't free either.. is the site going to pay me for my time to pull a backup and deal with lost data, or worse in the case of phishing/theft/etc?  Of course not, and I don't feel guilty in the slightest for protecting myself.  One of the basic rules of internet security nowadays. If they want to make money off of me (random website owner, nobody in specific), make it a pay site and see if I subscribe or not. 

Make money? :p Every profit we've turned has gone back into the site with server hardware or additional full time staff. In one year we went from one full time reporter (John Callaham, who left June 2014) to three (Andy Weir, Brad Sams and Vlad Dudau). We also signed a multi-year contract with Amazon at the start of this year, because we were no longer able to be hosted by our parent company Stardock.. this was to do with trafficking/bandwidth reasons.

steven, not picking you out personally because you obviously do not seem to be an offender here, in fact you actions appear to be highly moral and socially responsible, but as a site owner, is it not true that even this site exists as a potentially profit making enterprise..? if it were guaranteed never to be so would you continue? I do not begrudge you a profit by the way....just clarifying that you do have a position of some bias.

 

I only ask because it gives a certain basis for this discussion....

 

it would appear that the only ones who complain about adblockers are those interested in profits, rather than those interested in the social good their site provides.. generally the more they complain about adblockers the more interest in profit and less interest in providing a social good

The most annoying thing about ads to me isn't so much the data mining or tracking... it is just that they totally destroy a site's layout and color schemes, frequently while hiding data. You end up having to design a site literally around an ad, so it matches the site layout and won't be seen by viewers as part of your data. The coloring issues are just impossible to address.

 

Those stupid CSS popups are the most annoying thing, though. There are plenty of places to pimp your site on the page.

steven, not picking you out personally because you obviously do not seem to be an offender here, in fact you actions appear to be highly moral and socially responsible, but as a site owner, is it not true that even this site exists as a potentially profit making enterprise..? if it were guaranteed never to be so would you continue?

 

I only ask because it gives a certain basis for this discussion....

 

it would appear that the only ones who complain about adblockers are those interested in profits, rather than those interested in the social good their site provides

I answered this already, you quoted it.

The problem is, that Steven P. and Max Norris both have valid points. 

 

Steven P.'s site does things for the good. There are other sites out there that have done wrong, and have caused Max to feel the way he does.

 

If we simply turn on the Ad-blocker, then not only do we block the bad guys (more or less), but we block the good guys.

 

I, for one, am guilty because it's simply easier to turn on uBlocker and be done with it. 

 

In the short term, turning on the ad-blocker seems to work because then you don't have to worry about it.

 

in the long term, though, it is encouraging otherwise decent sites to go bad because they will feel they are at a competitive disadvantage by doing what's right. 

 

I will have to give this more thought because, for myself, if I"m not trying to be a good "Net" citizen, then I can't point fingers at others for not being. (This is just for myself).

 

I do believe, however, that Neowin does provide a service worth paying for even though I haven't considered it until now.

I answered this already, you quoted it.

yes you did, but im asking further, if this site were guaranteed to NEVER  make a profit, or to be sold at a profit, would you continue on the basis of its social benefit to society ?

 

as a 25 year veteran of civil service, I knew I could earn 30 to 40% more if I moved into the private sector for employment, but I made a choice to stay in treasury, especially late in my career, because I felt it was a greater good for society....

 

that was my social conscience making that decision...... I'm asking for your view personally, trying to take profit out of the equation

 

yes you did, but im asking further, if this site were guaranteed to NEVER  make a profit, or to be sold at a profit, would you continue on the basis of its social benefit to society ?

 

as a 25 year veteran of civil service, I knew I could earn 30 to 40% more if I moved into the private sector for employment, but I made a choice to stay in treasury, especially late in my career, because I felt it was a greater good for society....

 

that was my social conscience making that decision...... I'm asking for your view personally, trying to take profit out of the equation

 

If we were forced into debt, then there would be no point continuing :)

The problem is, that Steven P. and Max Norris both have valid points. 

 

Steven P.'s site does things for the good. There are other sites out there that have done wrong, and have caused Max to feel the way he does.

 

If we simply turn on the Ad-blocker, then not only do we block the bad guys (more or less), but we block the good guys.

 

I, for one, am guilty because it's simply easier to turn on uBlocker and be done with it. 

 

In the short term, turning on the ad-blocker seems to work because then you don't have to worry about it.

 

in the long term, though, it is encouraging otherwise decent sites to go bad because they will feel they are at a competitive disadvantage by doing what's right. 

 

I will have to give this more thought because, for myself, if I"m not trying to be a good "Net" citizen, then I can't point fingers at others for not being. (This is just for myself).

 

I do believe, however, that Neowin does provide a service worth paying for even though I haven't considered it until now.

as do I,

 

there are indeed multiple sides and shades to the issue....I see Steven P. as a "good guy" here because Neowin could go much further, as many other sites have. the fact that they havent speaks volumes about how they feel about the service they provide and their members.

 

personally i feel that the very question of are Adblockers immoral is offensive....part of a subtle campaign to shift consumers perspective. the only question should be does it add to their safety and or experience.

 

Why should anyone apologize for something that keeps them safer?

If we were forced into debt, then there would be no point continuing :)

thank you for your honesty and your social conscience Steven P. that was why I asked. it highlights that even those with a profit goal, can still act responsibly. and you do.....which is the point I was trying to make

 

You and Neowin are to be commended for your choice :D

  • Like 2

As with most things there are two sides to the story but both of which merge to a very large grey area ergo the main arguments might be boiled down to

The end user is not supporting the sites by blocking ads v the sites are stealing bandwidth from the end user

  • Like 1

As with most things there are two sides to the story but both of which merge to a very large grey area ergo the main arguments might be boiled down to

The end user is not supporting the sites by blocking ads v the sites are stealing bandwidth from the end user

its not like the adds are taking up Megabytes of bandwith and most internet users are using broadband connections so its hardly going to affect them to the level that

browsing the site comes makes them feel like they are on dial-up

 

perhaps neowin should have a wall of name and shame for those users who do adblock the site.

I don't particularly like having to block advertising but ads are so intrusive these days I often feel that I have little choice. If web advertisers had a rethink about their advertising, ad blocking wouldn't be necessary. This is another industry where people need to stop pointing their fingers and calling people thieves and start adapting their business models to represent changing attitudes.

Most content website make there money on ads and a small percent make money on goods. I know a lot of people who uses an ad blocker to not see ads. I do it too. Do you think you are stealing if you use one?

 

How about paying me back for all the expense and lost time cleaning and re-imaging my computer out due to an infection from these so called ad networks?

 

What about caring more for profit than security for your customers?

 

Criminals from Russia use them to pay for ads and use java and flash exploits to install keyloggers to encrypt my data or steal bank account info etc. I used to use adblock plus as it allows some networks like Google in but criminals use these too.

 

Sorry Neowin owners and others but you got to be batshit insane to put +20 ad networks and trust whomever to run executables on my system?! I mean that is common sense not to run a .exe from a random spot on the internet yet we do the same with flash. Yes, they have sandboxes but how many hundreds of exploits have Oracle and Adobe patched over the years from their lousy plugins?

 

Part of the reason to switch to HTML 5 is to rid the web of these but guess what? Javascript exploits exist too.

  • Like 2
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • GnuCash 5.16 by Razvan Serea GnuCash is a personal and small business finance application, freely licensed under the GNU GPL and available for GNU/Linux, BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. It’s designed to be easy to use, yet powerful and flexible. GnuCash allows you to track your income and expenses, reconcile bank accounts, monitor stock portfolios and manage your small business finances. It is based on professional accounting principles to ensure balanced books and accurate reports. GnuCash can keep track of your personal finances in as much detail as you prefer. If you are just starting out, use GnuCash to keep track of your checkbook. You may then decide to track cash as well as credit card purchases to better determine where your money is being spent. When you start investing, you can use GnuCash to help monitor your portfolio. Buying a vehicle or a home? GnuCash will help you plan the investment and track loan payments. If your financial records span the globe, GnuCash provides all the multiple-currency support you need. Between 5.15 and 5.16, the following bugfixes were accomplished: Bug 421610 - RFE: Include logical dates for View->Filter by "date range"The Select Range section of the Date tab of the register's Filter By dialog box is changed to provide relative, specific date, or days ago options for the start and end of the filter range. The Show number of days item label is changed to Show from days ago to better reflect what it does. Bug 436105 - esc key not working as expected in register: Enable the escape key to cancel a field edit. Bug 797384 - Gnucash doesn't handle commodity prices with big numerator/denominator properly. Bug 798004 - Next gen UI for stock transactions Bug 799314 - Add "enter now" option in scheduled transaction editor. tab to allow users to select the scheduled transactions to be included in a “Since Last Run…” window. If there are no instances of a selected transaction triggered by today’s date, the next instance is triggered. Bug 799751 - autocomplete crash Bug 799759 - Users can't Enable entries via Checkboxes on Scheduled Transactions PageAllow the Enabled box in the list of scheduled transactions to be operated instead of having to open the transaction editor dialog and change the Enabled checkbox. Also added use of the Name column as the secondary column sort for all the other columns. Bug 799762 - Poor handling of cases where hidden/placeholder accounts are used in the account register Bug 799766 - Double line preference not respected in search register Bug 799767 - POST /accounts in bindings/python/example_scripts/rest-api is broken Bug 799777 - `xaccSplitSetParent`: reparenting a committed split silently drops its KVP slots (online_id, cap-gains links) Other changes & improvements: Numeric values may now be selected to copy in the Accounts page. Add new Finance::Quote source Finnhub.io: Free API key (personal/non-professional use) available at https://finnhub.io. Set FINNHUB_API_KEY environment variable to API key to use this source. As of June 2026, free tier API limit is 60 API calls/minute. The Investment Lots report has new optional columns for Computed Annual Growth Rate. Python Bindings: Improved translation of primary object (Account, Transaction, Split, etc.) so that they can be treated as normal Python objects. This is accomplished with SWIG magic so no existing code is obsoleted. Python Bindings: Better conversion of GLists to Python lists. Python Bindings: Destroy the QofSession in the Python Session dtor to prevent leaving the database locked. [engine] Add first-class online_id accessors for Split and Account and make them available to Python bindings, removing the unused Transaction online_id property. Improve C++ implementation of QofBook. Correct the Doxygen doc for qof_instance_get/set_kvp. [gnc-log-replay.cpp] fix incorrect guid dump Add some Boost library requirements needed by libgnucash-guile to CMakeLists.txt so that missing feature will fail at configure time. Use Compile-time Regular Expressions instead of std::regex in gnc-filepath-utils.cpp and instead of boost::regex in the CSV importer, with the CTRE v3.11.1 header added to borrowed [gnc-filepath-utils.cpp] null check char* arguments Add ChartJS licenses. Removed AEX from list of commodities. euronext.com is now using JS based anti-webscraping. [report-core] always offer options summary in reports. This is useful to debug reports. The Add options summary option is removed because it's no longer optional. Remove remaining obsolete IMContext from sheet Fix blurry text in HiDPI offscreen-rendered widgets Add port field to database connection dialog: The convention of appending the port number after the host isn't obvious. When editing a split in the register treat the account as being changed only if it isn't the one selected before editing instead of if the user performed an edit Return immediately from qof_book_destroy if hash_of_collections is null. If qof_book_destroy is called on a QofBook* freshly created with qof_book_new (usually because it was used to create a session that now must be destroyed) it would try to empty the non-existent hash tables, crashing. Clean up Flathub metadata to solve warnings at flatpak build time. Be consistent in naming GncPluginPage and GncPluginPageRegister HTML: Remove unimplemented function declarations. [gnc-html.cpp] remove unused buggy string conversion functions Convert libgnc-html to C++ Apply -Wall -Werr -Wmissing-prototypes to C++ compilation on Windows and fix the resulting errors. New and Updated Translations: Arabic, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, German, Finnish, Hungarian, Korean, Norwegian-Bokmal, Spanish Download: GnuCash 5.16 | 176.0 MB (Open Source) Links: GnuCash Home page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft finally launches WSL Containers in public preview by David Uzondu Microsoft has announced that WSL containers, a feature that allows developers to run Linux containers natively inside Windows without the need for Docker Desktop, is now available in public preview several weeks after Microsoft previewed it at Build 2026. To use the new container feature, you first have to install the latest pre-release version of the Windows Subsystem for Linux by running a quick update command in your terminal: wsl --update --pre-release After installing, you'd get access to the new Linux container CLI (wslc.exe) and the programmable API. Microsoft said that the CLI has a "familiar format" that matches the toolsets developers already use every day. If you know standard Docker commands, your muscle memory will translate directly to wslc.exe, which even features a built-in alias called container.exe. You can quickly run a full Ubuntu KDE desktop container by exposing ports, or pass your graphics card straight into a machine learning environment to run PyTorch workloads. Passing the --gpus all flag inside the run command instantly links your hardware. Image via Microsoft As for the API, developers can now embed Linux container operations directly inside native Windows applications without exposing the command line to users. The team integrated the API directly into MSBuild and CMake, so developers can define container steps directly in project files. Apart from bringing the CLI and API into public preview, Microsoft also said that it's working on a new default file system called virtiofs to speed up file transfer rates between Windows and Linux. Microsoft also introduced an experimental networking mode named consomme, which resolves compatibility issues with corporate VPNs by routing Linux network traffic straight through Windows. One thing to note about WSL containers is that they don't run in your standard WSL distributions; instead, every application and CLI session spawns its own lightweight Hyper-V utility VM in the background. This basically reduces the chances of one app snooping on the container of another app.
    • Google reportedly limited Meta's Gemini access over limited AI compute by Karthik Mudaliar Google is reportedly limiting Meta's use of its Gemini AI models after Meta tried buying more computing capacity than even Google could supply. According to the Financial Times, Google told Meta in March that it could not provide the full Gemini capacity that Meta had requested. This shortfall even disrupted and delayed some of Meta's internal projects. Due to this, Meta even told its employees internally to use AI tokens more efficiently. Meta wasn't the only one to get hit by this sudden refusal by Google; even other customers were affected. But Meta was hit harder because of its unusually high demand for Google's models. The move from Google makes it evident that companies all over are in limited supply of both infrastructure and compute. Alphabet said in April that Google Cloud revenue grew 63% year-over-year to $20 billion in the first quarter, helped by enterprise AI infrastructure and AI solutions. In pursuit of more compute, Meta had earlier signed a multi-billion-dollar AWS agreement as well as a large AMD GPU deal for AI data centers. But the crunch would be short-lived as both Meta and Google have also ramped up infrastructure investments heavily. Meta said in November that it was committing more than $600 billion in the U.S. by 2028 for AI technology, infrastructure, and workforce expansion. In the first quarter of this year, Meta also raised its expected capital expenditure for 2026 to a range of $125 billion to $145 billion, citing higher component pricing and additional data center costs for future capacity. However, this doesn't make the company immune to the current dependence on outside suppliers. Meta has also spent many years promoting Llama as an open-weight alternative to closed models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. But if the reported reliance on Google's Gemini models is severe enough for internal work to get impacted, then it looks like even frontier labs and Big Tech aren't fully self-sufficient. Source: Financial Times
    • I like to reminisce about the good old days, way back in autumn 2025 when building a gaming machine was fun and the drives were about $150 when you caught a deal. Yes duh, back in the day we had it gone. Then baby Skynet came along, hiding in AI datacenters demanding more processing power until it reached singularity. End of a not totally fictional story.
    • My experience in the past with older Windows 11 builds was not great on unsupported machines but I recently used Rufus to put the latest build on a older 5th Gen Core Thinkpad T that we upgraded with a SATA SSD and 8GB of RAM four years ago when hardware was reasonable and it seemed pretty fast and solid. Customer is very happy with the performance and will probably get four more years out of that venerable laptop that he loves so much. Another customer just retired his Dell Studio laptop from 2009 running Windows 10. It got an SSD over 10 years ago and did everything he needed it to for 17 years but he also retired last year and is happy doing everything on his iPad now.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      533
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      269
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      98
    5. 5
      macoman
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!