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Well opinions are subjective anyway, so two people who regularly follow Kent may not agree on that percentage - assuming that's a thing now
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Understood. I'm just saying it. Just not for debate but to remind to look the surrounding in the community. I feel like you ignoring it. Even your subject is same as his. What did you feel if I post it again in third times forth times,...
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You can re-post it on other forums as many times as you want to You can even re-post it here after a week or so, and people won't mind.
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Thank you for your "insightful" advice!
Rgds,
Step Gone
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Love the genuine gratitude, a rarity these days.
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I born with it. It's all over my blood and my name, Stephen
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I don't understand how developers can use an ad blocking tool. They should keenly understand that someone has to pay for a site to exist. There is no magic that pays for it all.
It is very dishonest to use ad blocking. Ads do not bother me much at all, but then again, I never visit sites that have tons of ads. Sometimes someone links to an ad heavy site in here and I end up closing the site before it can even finish loading. There's nothing so important on any site that I either will wait for all the ads or install malware ad blocking. Too many ads means I don't visit it. Simple.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I work on a different principle.
When you first visit a site, you have no idea if the content is worth anything at all, but you get all the adverts anyway, and the site owner gets paid.
So I use an ad blocker and will selectively disable it for sites I use because they have worthwhile content. Fill your site with ads - and uBlock counts them on a page-by-page basis - and it's not likely you'll go on that "approved" list. That way the worthwhile sites get paid, and the rubbish ones aren't encouraged to proliferate.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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OriginalGriff wrote: I work on a different principle. I suppose whatever makes it so you can feel justified.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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My justification is that my browser has sent a "Do Not Track" header, but the ads try to track me nonetheless. Since they have not honored the fact that I have not given them consent to track me, I block their content. I do not block ads that do not track.
I use the Privacy Badger add-in.
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Spot on.
Pay for good service, not for the privilege of being allowed to use the Internet. If a web-site does not provide good product, don't pay them for it.
Those who argue against that principle will be people who cannot produce good product, so have to use more devious means to snatch money.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I use IE for sites I trust, like CP, google, MSDN, etc - looking at an ad for IBM Cloud even as I type this.
Chrome with ad-blocker enabled for other sites.
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RyanDev wrote: Sometimes someone links to an ad heavy site in here and I end up closing the site before it can even finish loading. There's nothing so important on any site that I either will wait for all the ads or install malware ad blocking
You do realize that there are plenty of "big name sites" (forbes.com anyone?) that will infect your computer with the first ad downloaded? Before you even have a chance to decide if the site is overly ad-laden or not?
Not blocking ads in today's malware-infested ad world is the very definition of unsafe computing.
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Vark111 wrote: very definition of unsafe computing. I guess that is how you justify stealing to yourself. OK. To each their own.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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RyanDev wrote: I guess that is how you justify stealing to yourself. OK. To each their own.
To me, it's more like switching channels when a commercial comes on TV.
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Nish Nishant wrote: it's more like switching channels when a commercial comes on TV. Only the commercial is still there when you switch back.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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RyanDev wrote: Only the commercial is still there when you switch back.
Not for me, I switch back after a few minutes by when the commercial's finished
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So, it's OK for websites to push out malware but not for the users to take preventive measures to protect themselves? I hope you're aware of the forbes story[^]?
Forbes told me that I need to disable my malware blocker or I can't read their content. Fair enough, I've stopped visiting their site (added forbes.com to my hosts as well) and have resorted to one of dozens of other competing websites serving similar content (minus the malware).
modified 13-Sep-16 23:06pm.
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A lot of Indian news sites are doing that too. Not one of them is worth the risk of disabling a blocker though, no surprises there I guess
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The default settings I run under prevents most scripts from running. I visit sites I trust with another browser (just noticed that's what you do) and pretty much everything else will be treated with suspicion.
I also use a custom hosts file (you'd know - from the MVP group) which offers excellent passive safety. While my intention is not to prevent any website from making revenue, I can't trust webshites like forbes with my privacy or safety.
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: So, it's OK for websites to push out malware but not for the users to take preventive measures to protect themselves? If you think that is what I said or implied, you are wrong.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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What were you implying then? The person you responded to mentioned that he had to block forbes.com from displaying adverts because they started serving malware. To him, you responded that he's stealing.
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote: that he had to block forbes.com
Quote: that there are plenty of "big name sites"
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Am I missing something here?
There are plenty of high traffic websites, serving up a steaming pile of malware. So, the other poster blocks it. He was very clear in implying that he wouldn't know if a website could be trusted until it's visited, so what's wrong in being proactively safe?
There are other people here saying that they visit trusted websites using a different browser, which sounds very reasonable to me (it's what I do). There's no reason for forbes or any other crap website to track me and invade my privacy in spite of my browser settings telling them precisely not to do that. If they're not playing fair, why should the user do so?
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