Goodbye! ๐Ÿ‘‹
@alternativeto Ex-act-ly this โ˜๐Ÿป
@alternativeto that is how I feel most of the time. Bravo. make T-shirts.
@alternativeto Alternatively:
*Blocks your ad-blocker detecting script* Checkmate.
@alternativeto
enjoy your secrets! ๐Ÿ–•๐Ÿ˜ธ๐Ÿ–•

@alternativeto

My sentiments exactly! Thank you to whoever drew/shared this!

@alternativeto This is nice! But from the AltText it isn't clear what's the humorous goodbye exchange.

Company: person with computer head: welcome to my website. Here are some adds.
user, smiling: I won't see them because I've addblocker.
Company computer face thinking he's smart: well, you need to turn off adblocker to continue.
User, still smiling: Goodbye.
Computer face left standing with open mouth.

#Alt4you #AltText

@Heidentweet @alternativeto Yup, the original is some ChatGPT-ass alt text...

@alternativeto

It's a really big internet and there are a whole bunch of places to go and be entertained, informed, provoked, whatever-you're-trying-to-do.

@alternativeto Once upon a time, I wanted to keep the ads on so I can support the websites I visit.... Then I got a virus and it was like, f@& that, and have been using adblock ever since. Using the internet without adblock, is no different than having unprotected sex.

@alternativeto I was ok with websites serving me adverts to generate revenue. Which is how ads used to work.

But it's a level beyond that now, and far more nefarious. Websites now use trackers dressed as adverts, so third parties can collate the info, invade my privacy and flog that data in a way that could be used against me.

They broke the social agreement, so I'm not accepting their ads or their cookies, and I'm blocking their trackers whenever I can.

@alternativeto It always amazes me how salesmen think people actually want to talk to them
@bhaugland @alternativeto
They're desperate, because they depend on commissions.

@alternativeto

I don't have Ad Blocker. It's not perfect but the on off switch works fairly well.

@alternativeto archive.is come in clutch sometimes, especially with those articles you have to pay to read.

Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today, starts removing 695,000 archive links

If DDoSing a blog wasn't bad enough, archive site also tampered with web snapshots.

Ars Technica

@alternativeto
Every ad that we see makes an imprint in our brain. It uses our own brain resources to store itself in memory, in the connections between our own neurons, because that's what our brains naturally do.
Who knows, it might even be consolidated in there and compete with actual, useful memories of our real lives.. Biasing the competition in their favour, ads are designed to attract our attention and stick in our memory as much as possible.

Like cigarettes rot our lungs, it's very likely ads rot our brains.. We should protect ourselves from them and set up boundaries while we can!

@elduvelle @alternativeto
More directly, advertisements are designed to make us discontent. That is what they are FOR. To create a desire for a thing we don't have and don't need; to make us hunger for it, to make us UNHAPPY. That is an attack on one's mental health. Even before advertisements became so aggressive, I cut them out of my life many years ago for that reason.

Sorry, I will not ingest this poison.

@alternativeto

Alt Ending:

user: โ€œfine I guess Iโ€™ll turn off my ad blocker, just this one time though.โ€

*immediately gets redirected to a site telling them to download some random ass browser extension*

user: โ€œyeahhhhh fuck no.โ€

@alternativeto

If a web site is too difficult to use, whether it complains about my software blocking its advertising and/or trackers, a paywall, a tracking wall, questionable terms of service, etc., I'm not shy about pulling up (and sharing) a link to an archived copy.

archive.ph has been a good service

Wikipedia blacklists Archive.today, starts removing 695,000 archive links

If DDoSing a blog wasn't bad enough, archive site also tampered with web snapshots.

Ars Technica
@johnlogic @alternativeto Okay, what is the difference between "archive.ph" and "archive.today" and "archive.org"?
They're different websites -- unless they aren't?

@alternativeto

I never use my smart TV using the TV functions. I *only* use it via HDMI cord from my desktop, which is running Firefox and uBlock Origin.

No ads whatsoever on Prime, YouTube, or Tubi.

I have a visceral, almost trauma response to seeing an ad. If I see an ad from your company, not only will I never buy your product, I will contemplate going to your corporate headquarters and burning it to the ground.

Also, thank fuck for VPNs and The Pirate Bay

@alternativeto It's so weird to me that web site makers think their stuff is so good I'm willing to let them shove ads and bad software down into my computer.
@alternativeto
Also, Javascript. Google Search for example won't work at all unless all Javascript features are completely enabled.

@alternativeto fun fact! the adblocker contains an overlay element remover which i can point at the message telling me to remove the adblocker,

*pop

@alternativeto I get a grey box because of my hosts file.

@alternativeto This was exactly my reaction to Boing Boing requiring that I turn off my ad blocker some month ago. Or pay a monthly subscription.

Enshitification has been lurking in the background of the site with their questionable merch vendor. When I came back randomly some 6 month later, they'd removed the ad block ban and switched to a freemium model. But the artlcles were a lot crappier.

Haven't gone back since. RIP.

@alternativeto did that to many sites. There are many good alternatives that shows ads AND doesn't run intrusive scripts. Same goes for cookies. My answer is NO. If they cannot accept it or makes me turn it off for each 'partner' then I just walk away.
@alternativeto that's how I treat them as well.