Google reportedly planning built-in ad-blocking feature for Chrome
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Google plans to introduce an ad-blocking setting in both the mobile and desktop versions of its Chrome browser, according to The Wall Street Journal. The option would be opt-in, and it would remove any and all “unacceptable” ads as defined by Coalition for Better Ads industry group.
Those types of ads include pop-up ads, autoplay videos, and what are
known as prestitial ads, or those ads that are often fullscreen and show
up before you’re taken to the homepage or desired website.
How Google will implement this feature is still being
debated, the report says. One option includes blocking all advertising
on a website if it includes even just one offending ad, which would
ensure that website owners keep all forms of advertising up to standard.
The other option is simply to block the offending ads in question,
though it’s unclear whether Google will go forth with either strategy.
Google declined to comment for this story.
It may sound counterintuitive for a corporation whose
entire business pretty much depends on internet advertising to consider
an ad-blocking feature in the world’s most popular web browser. However,
Google has a vested interest in ensuring web users don’t turn to
third-party ad-blocking tools that Google does not control and, in some
cases, that charge users website owners money to bypass ad-blocking
filters, effectively defeating the purpose.
The company has a history of disallowing or preventing
what it sees as harmful ad practices, like blocking pop-ups in new tabs
and issuing malware warnings. So in a way, Google appears to be taking
additional steps to clean up advertising bad practices and keep users
happy, even if it means throwing a healthy chunk of the lower-end ad
market under the bus.
The article was published on : theverge
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