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Comment Re:He's not lying (Score 1) 120

Hi, I've worked in two restaurants that have been extorted by yelp salespeople. Also, I'm friends with managers of other restaurants and bars that have had similar experience. Your salespeople consistently claim to be able to get rid of unwanted reviews. They tend to call with a pitch that starts with something like "So I see you got a 2 star review on your page, wouldn't you rather that wasn't the first thing your potential customers saw when they research your business?"

Comment Re:HA! (Score 1) 468

Doctorow's argument can be easily countered by pointing out the fact that he sells an order of magnitude less books than LeGuin.

Do you his argument that his problem is obscurity rather than piracy? How exactly do his smaller sales figures counter that?

Comment Re:The freerider problem.. (Score 1) 615

There's at least one model that you didn't mention: sites that sell something that is relevant to the content on their site. An example is http://www.breadtopia.com/ a site about breadmaking that also sells breadmaking supplies. Given time, other business models would appear as well.

To answer your first question, yes I do think it would be a positive thing if we had an ad-free internet.

(Sorry, there is more to this thought that I should flesh out here, but I'm having trouble putting it together in a way that communicates it properly and I have to go out right now).

Comment Re:Who uses these things anyway? (Score 1) 615

For people who use these plug-ins, do you ever whitelist ads for sites you use a lot for free, or do you block everything? If the latter, can you give me the dime tour of your justification for doing so? I'm not trying to start a flame-war; I'm really trying to understand the motivation.

No, I don't whitelist sites. One reason I don't is that I find the ads distracting, and even if I didn't, I have no desire to increase the amount of advertising I'm exposed to every day. It has an effect. If it didn't, companies wouldn't bother doing it. Another reason is that I don't want the big web ad companies to track my browsing habits. What I look at is my business, not theirs.

That said, some sites host their own ads. If those ads don't blink or move (and my settings in FF don't allow GIFs to animate) then I don't bother blocking them, and my ABP settings have nothing in there by default block them either.

Comment Re:I'd only agree to view ads if (Score 3, Interesting) 615

I'll agree with all your requirements and add this: No ads served by advertising companies. I have no desire to allow companies like Doubleclick or Yahoo to track my movements across the web.

If a site hosts their own ads and they don't blink or move, then I will consider turning ads on on their site.

Also, the ad should be text or a simple image, no scripts. unnecessary scripts slow the browser down too much

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