Comment by tcfhgj

4 days ago

Blocking ads is hardly "pirating" content

To be clear, this is not a value judgement. I pirate content sometimes, and I use adblockers, but ad blocking is definitely piracy – you're circumventing the method of paying for content.

I realise that online ads have other implications such as tracking that, say, a blu-ray rip downloaded from a torrent doesn't have, but the reason for piracy doesn't change the fact that it is.

  • > you're circumventing the method of paying for content.

    So it is a payment?!? Through out the last decades advertisement has not been liable under customer protection laws that regulate sales of products, and generally avoided local laws. The stated reason has been that advertisement is not a sale since the viewer is not recompensating the publisher. A product given for free is in a completely different category of law than that of a sale.

    Im old enough to remember when phone companies tried the tactic of giving away mobile phones for free, but which carried a binding contract with the carrier. Courts found that to be illegal and forced companies to sell them for 1 cent since a free product can not have a binding contract, which turned the transaction into a sale. The outcome of that meant that information of the full cost must be given to the customer in no unclear terms, since we are now dealing with a sale.

    Products given for free with advertisement is also exempted in EU from value added tax. The given reason (can't find the original legal source) was that viewers may watch nothing, some or all the advertisement, and that makes putting a monetary value and taxing it difficult. If you buy a subscription it can be taxed, but watching it free with adds do not. This is true for both physical and non-physical goods.

  • I don't think it is piracy. Most advertising supported content is made freely available to you with the expectation that you will view the advertising. That expectation is not a contract and was a decision made without your involvement. You have no obligation to perform to someone else's expectations. If the content is made freely available you are free to watch it whichever way you choose. Choosing not to view the advertising might mean they don't get paid for producing their content, but you are under no obligation in the absence of an agreement.

    Piracy involves you deciding to acquire content that has not been made freely available.

  • 1. It's not piracy.

    2. I don't care.

    I choose what code runs on my machine, not Google. Google can run their own code on their own machines, that's fine. Once data is in my processor, I'm going to do what I want with it. Google doesn't have to concern themselves with what I'm doing on my own computer.

    • > 1. It's not piracy.

      Simply re-asserting your opinion doesn't lend any extra weight to your argument. If both sides just repeat their opinions, that's not a discussion.

      3 replies →

  • > you're circumventing the method of paying for content.

    I disagree. If you were buying every advertised product and falling for every advertised scam then fair enough. But assuming you were ignoring them, there is no issue with offloading the thing you would do anyway to a computer and save everyone the time/bandwidth.

    • The advertiser is buying the right to put an advert in front of you, not the right to a sale. Whether they convert you is up to them, their product, their offering, etc. I think you can never buy a single product from an ad and this is still piracy.

      That said, a lot of advertising is not performance/pay-per-click focused as you've described and is instead brand advertising. The point of the Coca-Cola christmas ads is not to get you to buy a coke today, it's to have a positive impression that builds over years. This sort of advertising is very hard to attribute sales to, but a good example of how you don't need to buy a product for seeing the ad to be worth something to the company.

      36 replies →

  • Ad blockers are recommended by the FBI as safety measures. I follow the FBI's advice. Internet ads are a vector for executing untrusted code that can invoke exploits and engage in invasive fingerprinting. Revert back to the 90s web with dumb ads and I'll look at them. It's amazing how blinkered people will be about potentially malicious programs downloaded from the internet just because it's hidden behind a browser interface.

    • Forbes literally did this.

      Guys, please disable your adblockers

      People disable adblockers

      Malware!

  • I can absolutely decide to reject with impunity any and all packets that my computer receives, no matter if I initialized the request. I have not made a sale by reading some other website content and have absolute authority to discriminate over which data is allowed or blocked. Ads have absolutely no higher authority or preference over other packets that would obligate my bandwidth, attention, or time.

  • > but ad blocking is definitely piracy

    This is a huge escalation of an already over-stuffed term.

    Equating piracy to theft was bad enough, now choosing to not view ads is also piracy, which is theft?

    I try to be chill here but no, foot down, absolutely not. Blocking ads is nothing more than determing what content comes in on the wire to the computer you own, or what content is rendered in your web browser. That's it. If that means someone isn't making money when they could be, well, too bad so sad.

    It's like, "if you walk past a Nike store without pausing to hear the sales pitch, you are stealing from Nike." Capitalist hellscape.

    • If we're going with bad analogies I have an opposite one - you're walking past the Nike store and the store has a promotion on "Watch 5 minutes of ads and get a free pair of shoes", but you instead kick the TV with the ads over, grab the shoes and run away.

      Or are you going to pretend that there's no agreement between you and YouTube that you're going to watch ads in exchange for the free content?

      20 replies →

  • > you're circumventing the method of paying for content.

    Without an ad blocker I can stand up and walk to the next room - optionally muting audio output - then come back.

    Is that fraud? Or should I drink a verification can?

  • Just because you say it's piracy doesn't mean it is.

    When they provide all the equipment necessary to watch the content, and pay for the internet connection and power to my house, only then will they have a claim to what commands are run on my computer.

    But my computer, that I paid for, using the power and bandwidth that I pay for, does not play ads.

    If they don't like those terms, they can feel absolutely free to not send me any content they don't want me to watch.

  • I'm pretty anti-piracy, and I don't think ad-blocking is piracy.

    Metaphors are dangerous, but, for the purposes of this specific comparison, I see piracy as breaking into a video store and taking a disc, and ad blocking as allowing some people into my house but not others.

    YouTube is free to block me as a user or put its content behind a paywall if it doesn't like me doing this, but I am also free to decide what comes into my browser.

    • and they won't block you, because they understand that their dominance of this particular style of video content requires allowing everyone in.

  • Just use AdNausem (uBlock Origin mod) that clicks ALL THE ADDS. Problem solved! Wish more people used it, so the creators could again make money from ads.

  • > "you're circumventing the method of paying for content"

    Because the payment method is a scam. Imagine if all car owners were charged the same price for fuel regardless of how much they used.

    Likewise, imagine watching 10 videos and being charged the same as someone who watches 200 videos.

    We should pay for what we watch. The end. Ad blocking is not piracy when the payment option is at best a blunt extraction of funds from my wallet, at worst a sleazy shakedown.

  • > ad blocking is definitely piracy – you're circumventing the method of paying for content

    This ship sailed when adblockers first went mainstream. (One of the early developers dropped their product because they thought it was unethical.)

    I think we’ve now moved to the consensus that adblocking when viewing content isn’t pirating. It’s similar. But not the same, in intent, mechanism or effect.

  • What you are describing is not piracy/Copyright infringement.

    You can say that we should not be blocking those ads, that is fine. But blocking ads is not making unauthorised copies of the content.

I don't really see what the difference is.

They're not getting the payment for the video either way.

Morally I don't see how they aren't equivalent. I'm not going to stand on a high horse saying you shouldn't do either, but I don't really see how you can pretend one is less harmful to creators than the other, in terms of the basic principles involved.

  • Piracy involves obtaining media content for free for which you should normally pay for, as a result of someone sharing the media meant for their own personal use to the general public.

    YouTube does not ask for payment, it sends the video data you want alongside some bullshit you’ll ignore and waste precious human time doing so.

    Ad blocking just involves offloading the ignoring to the computer, as it should, since computers are meant to automate menial tasks.

    • I've tried to explain this to people repeatedly and they don't get it. They're always like "oh no the AI scraper is slamming my website it's ruining everything". Um, maybe configure your web browser to not send me data if you don't want me 'scraping' your website. It's literally your server's choice to send me data. I'm just asking from a few IPs. If you want to send data to all of them that's your server's choice.

      But I think people don't get the fact that they can just request payment or only send to authenticated users from authorized IPs and so on. Instead they want to send to all IPs without payment but then get upset when I use a bunch of IPs without paying. Weird.

      I'm trying to read a bunch of stuff. The entire point of a computer is to make that easy. I'm not going to repetitively click through a bunch of links when a bot can do that way faster.

      6 replies →

  • > the payment for the video either way.

    "the payment for the video" as if it's a given that my ad impression is required for me to watch some video that they made available to me on their website for free.

    Morally, YouTube shows the most heinous and scummy ads 24/7 on their platform and fails to take them down when reported. Gambling, AI sex games, "cure what doctors miss" ads for human use of Ivermectin - it's your moral duty to block them.

its pirating content in a way that you dont generate revenue for youtuber that expect from ads

  • Most content creators have links to support them with donation or patreon.

    Once a year choose 3 small youtubers (larger ones are already multi-millioners, they don't need your help) and drop them $5 each.

    Now you just did 1000% of what they could get from you watching ads.

    • what's insane, even $1 is more than they'll get from you watching every single one of their videos. The issue is processing fees on that payment, so might as well give em a bit more.

      It's wild how low the payout on ads is. Seriously, just flip people $1 every once in a while and it's more support than ads.

      It's so stupid how people get all morally superior when they figure out that someone block ads.

      1 reply →

  • I'm sure that trillion-dollar analytics empire is worth something even without my eyeballs consuming some shitty pre-roll.

    • Most of the ad revenue actually goes to the people uploading content.

      But sure... they're all clearly are "trillion-dollar analytics empire"