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Advertising on the Internet:
MAKE IT STOP!
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The internet is supposed to be a
convenient way to get information quickly, send written messages quicker and
also be more profitable for businesses.
When the internet first started out, this was the case. Newspapers, magazines, companies and so forth
placed their information online.
Newspapers like The
Toronto Star and the Ottawa Sun
placed their entire daily editions in online formats. Companies were merely happy to put their
products on their own websites in order to make it easier for their customers
to order.
Then came the advent of the “banner
add”. Websites found it quite expensive
to place all this free content on the internet.
Thus, when the banner ad was invented websites quickly gravitated to
this type of advertising. Banner ads
then started appearing at the top of webpages in various cases including before
newspaper articles and personal essays on free website hosting firms (e.g. netfirms.com). Website visitors got used to the banner add
and quickly got used to ignoring these type of
advertisements. By ignoring these ads,
website visitors were not clicking on these ads which caused revenues to
decline. The problem was that banner
adds were contracted to pay, in most cases, on a “per click”. For example, an overture.com banner ad pays
about $0.02 per click to the website displaying the ad. Therefore, with visitors ignoring these ads
and, thus, not clicking on them, website producers were not making any money
off these advertisements.
Facing declining revenues and increasing
internet costs to host website content and, in the newspaper industry,
declining revenues from newspaper sales, the relationship between advertisers
and the internet content producers had to change. Newspapers owned by the Canwest Global
Communications started restricting the number of stories carried on their
respective newspaper websites (i.e. Ottawa Citizen) so that
visitors were forced to purchase the product from the local newsstand instead
of reading the whole daily newspaper online.
Free website hosting companies were also hit as well. Geocities.com
started restricting services to their website hosting customers unless they
upgraded to one of Geocities’ paid packages.
In other words, in some cases both the newspapers and the free website
hosting companies started to move toward having the visitors pay for their
products they were using and moving away from free content while still
collecting revenue from the banner add.
The “pop up add” started to gain in
popularity with websites. Banner and
other sized advertisements could be popped up on the visitor’s computer screen
while the consumer surfed the website. These new “pop up” advertisements were a hit
with the website companies because the visitor was forced to see the
advertisement because the visitors were now forced to close the window with the
advertisement in it. Internet companies
specializing in programs that could be installed on a visitor’s
computer without the person even knowing where the program came from
also began to start up. Internet surfers
quickly became disgruntled over this new type of advertising as the number of
these advertisements clogged up their toolbars, screens and, in some cases,
even forced computers to run out of memory and crash.
Website visitors and web browser
companies (i.e. Microsoft Internet Explorer)
struck back at the dirty tactics of the advertising firms and their tactics of
forcing unwanted banner adds on website visitor’s screens. The companies wanting to install programs
that force pop up advertisements and track your interests by tracking the
websites visited were the first to be targeted.
With the advent of Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0, website visitors
could set the security settings to notify them when a
internet program was about to be downloaded.
Within this screen is a lot of important information including the
program’s name and the name of the company who produced the program. Also, an option to either accept the
downloading and installation of the program or not. Thus, a quick click on the “no” button
wouldn’t allow the dirty underhanded fiends of advertisers to install their
programs without the knowledge of the user.
I use this feature of Internet Explorer to screw over companies like Gain Publishing (formally known as
Gator.com or “Gator”) who sells the information they receive to marketing
companies. Also, by installing programs
like Gain Publishing’s, web surfers are sending important information to Gain
Publishing on their interests. This is
done be recording where people surf to on the internet and who doesn’t search
their interests on the internet? Gain
Publishing and other similar companies can now sell the information to other
companies or use it themselves in order to target marketing information to you
through pop up add programs and sending advertisements to your e-mail address
(SPAM). However, by not allowing these
programs to be downloaded onto their computers, companies like Gain Publishing
cannot get this information for free.
Besides, consumers should be paid for doing providing their personal
information including their interests.
So be sure to look into this feature of Microsoft Internet Explorer by
looking at: “Tools”, “Internet Options”, “Privacy” tab and moving the bar up to
the “medium level”. This will restrict
the programs from being downloaded without your consent. However, Internet Explorer does not prevent
pop up adds to be launched by websites that have code embedded in their page
code (i.e. language used to tell computer what the page should look like) to be
launched.
Pop up stoppers have become popular with
web surfers. I currently use the pop up
stopping button on the Google toolbar (see Google.com
to download) which doesn’t allow pop up windows to appear without your
permission. Some of these pop up stopper
programs they encourage you to pay for it.
However, the Google bar is free to download. I have found this program to be very effective
in eliminating unwanted pop up windows.
Also, if this program is programmed correctly by the user, the program
will allow pop up windows that are launched when the user clicks on a link but
still eliminates the ensuing pop up advertisements.
Screwing over website hosting companies
by employing anti-downloading techniques such as pop up stoppers and not
downloading programs will only send the message that pop up advertisements and
tricking us into giving them and other personal information without appropriate
compensation will not be tolerated!
Therefore, when you see a website host only using banner ads for revenue
(e.g. canoe.ca, google.com, the
star.ca, etc.), be sure to patronize their sites more and more. By encouraging other web hosts to not have
annoying styles of advertising web viewers can show the marketing companies
their true preferences, that the advertising that annoys will not be tolerated!