Things that would be useful in the "turn off your ad blocker" beg: * Will your ads not be clickbait zergnet style bullshit? * Can I see a list of your ad providers and how they're using my info? * Do you know what malvertising is, and can explain what you're doing about it?
-
-
This is true, although it’s much harder for small sites.
-
There could be ad agencies working for a cut. So you'd have both: a real human checking the ad (and the site it goes to, cause there are problems in that direction too), but small sites wouldn't need to invest loads into it.
-
And then your readership has to trust the agency, who you've likely given at least some degree of editorial control over your site, and likely the ability to inject malicious code. Adtech all over again.
-
Only if everyone does it. Monopoly is the real problem here.
-
Rather only if anyone does it, since once they do, they have competitive advantages (and disadvantages, but the advantages will outweigh, as adtech has shown us).
-
Possibly, but in a healthy market the immediate reputation loss should kill off anyone who tries it.
-
Markets are not healthy. They're inherently toxic.
-
That definitely isn't true in general. You could argue though that the online advertising market is beyond repair.
- 2 more replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.