On Wednesday, August 8, 2001, at 10:39 AM, Ray Dillinger wrote:
On Tue, 7 Aug 2001, Tim May wrote:
To all who have contributed ideas about turning off Java, blah blah, l wasn't really _complaining_ about my personal situation. I was noting the bizarre world of online advertising in which the right third of a page is filled with ads, the top third is filled with ads, and now there are pop-up windows covering the main page...and which pop-up several times.
Newspapers are usually over 60% advertising. But at least in newspapers, the ads don't wiggle.
And newspaper pages are vastly bigger than a typical screen. The eye can move very quickly to the sections of interest. Magazine pages are more like normal screen sizes. I don't begrudge the ad makers their "right" to buy space at some site for their intrusive ads. I _do_ think it's getting to the point of absurdity. This will cause more and more people to look into Ad busters. What will be interesting is if the advertising industry seeks to block the distribution of those ad busters, perhaps based on some kind of DMCA claim. (Ads could be tied-in to the content, with some light crypto or copright protection. A "circumvention" of this liight crypto could be a DMCA violation. I would not be surprised to see this already impicated in the DVD cases: that 5 minute period of trailors that cannot be fast-forwarded past...it's probably a violation of the DMCA to build devices which circumvent the copyright holder's plans and intents.)