- cross-posted to:
- privacy@zerobytes.monster
- android@chat.maiion.com
- cross-posted to:
- privacy@zerobytes.monster
- android@chat.maiion.com
Besides Chrome, Google’s Privacy Sandbox initiative is on Android to let apps show you relevant ads in a more private manner. The beta started earlier this year, and Google is now prompting more users about it with new Ad privacy settings.
I don’t want ‘relevant ads’ to be private. I want NO ADS.
Speaking generally about ads, the issue is that people (a) don’t like ads, but (b) also don’t like paying for things that could be ad-supported. And the money for things that are ad-supported is going to come from one place or another, or they won’t be done.
Wanting to get rid of ads is a legitimate preference – but I’m saying that that probably comes with paying for something that wasn’t paid for before.
My experience with so many things starting as pay instead of ads, but then ads being added over time, is why I reject ads outright. I don’t trust companies to not double dip.
That said, I do pay for streaming services to avoid ads and refuse to pay for the ones that still have ads after paying.
Netflix is going there.
Ahem, cable TV.
I am ok with ads personally as long as it is context based ads with no data collections. So If I visit a tech website, I get tech ads. I understand running these servers cost money. Either you pay or ads. Currently, the issue is privacy.
See, this is what I think people get wrong about ad tech: the problem are not the ads themselves, but the tracking. I’m completely fine with ads, as long as I’m not tracked by their provider
Internet ads that don’t involve tracking are a thing of the past, so not worth discussing non-tracked ads as a middle ground.
Ads = tracking.
Unfortunately you’re right
I’ve gone so long without ads I am unaware of the concept of being fine with ads. It’s too unfamiliar an experience now.
Well are you willing to pay for every site you visit?