Adblock Plus is launching a new service that puts more ads on your screen. Yes, you read that correctly. The #1 ad blocker is now selling ads.
Rather than stripping all ads from the internet forever,
Adblock Plus is hoping to replace the bad ads — anything it deems too
big, too ugly, or too intrusive — with good ads, ones that are smaller,
subtler, and theoretically much less annoying.
It’ll begin doing that through an ad marketplace, which
will allow blogs and other website operators to pick out so-called
“acceptable” ads and place them on their pages. If a visitor using
Adblock Plus comes to the page, they’ll be shown those “acceptable ads,”
instead of whatever ads the site would normally run.
“It allows you to treat the two different ecosystems
completely differently and monetize each one,” says Ben Williams,
Adblock Plus’ operations and communications director. “And crucially,
monetize the ad blockers on on their own terms.”
The
marketplace is a extension of the Acceptable Ads program that Adblock
Plus has been running since 2011. Since then, the ad blocker has
defaulted to “whitelisting” approved ads, so that they show up even when
users have the blocker turned on. But the program has been fairly
limited in scope, since publishers and ad networks need to specifically
work with (and pay) Adblock Plus to have their ads deemed acceptable.
It’s a time-consuming process, Williams emphasized, which limits how
many websites can sign up to display ads to would-be blockers.Adblock Plus hopes that, through this new marketplace,
there’ll be a big expansion in the usage of Acceptable Ads. Because
they’re already picked out and ready to go, any publisher will be able
to sign up, plug some code into their website, and start running
whitelisted ads. None of the ads are able to track visitors from site to
site, and they’ll all be limited to certain dimensions and page
locations, as defined by Adblock Plus’ guidelines.
The program is meant to be friendly to publishers — it is, after all, letting them display some ads
instead of none whatsoever. But there’s still obvious reason for
publishers to be unhappy. Acceptable ads are likely to be less valuable
than the ads a publisher could otherwise display, limiting what a
website can earn. And in setting up its own marketplace, Adblock Plus
continues to position itself as a gatekeeper charging a toll to get
through a gate of its own making.
Publishers
will get to keep 80 percent of all ad revenue from marketplace ads,
with the remaining 20 percent being divided between various other
parties involved with serving the ads. Adblock Plus will receive 6
percent of total revenue.
The ad marketplace is launching in beta today and is
supposed to launch in full later this year. At the same time, Adblock
Plus is working toward setting up a committee of publishers, privacy
advocates, and advertisers to figure out the future of what its
Acceptable Ad guidelines should look like. That too is supposed to get
nailed down sometime later this year, with committee meetings beginning
next year.
Source: The Verge
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