Sadly, most are too busy raking in cash to care how their networks are being abused, so I choose to ensure they get as little cash off of my visit as possible until they get the point. To replicate the issue all you have to do is close Adguard and let the service running (this would normally keep blocking ads, but is. As such, I'll be locking them out until they clean up their act. Can also relate, Adguard is no longer blocking any ads since the latest update, I tried to force update Adguard and it's filters, even clear all Cookies, Cache and Content from Microsoft Edge. Would you visit a mall where any ad signage could have a guy with a loaded gun hiding behind it, picking targets that look at the sign at random? That's (metaphorically speaking) what the Web has become to most users today. If advertisers want to monetize my visit, they darn well better step up to make sure their content is safe too. As it is, being forced to watch a 1 minute ad before a 20 second clip on YouTube, or always having to watch my back for sneaky download attempts, or worse yet, being suddenly redirected to yet another "Congratulations, you won" page, means I'll go out of my way to smash all advertising flat on my networks. AdGuard blocks all ads including video ads, interstitial ads and floating ads, pop-ups, banners, advertisements, and text ads. If we had some kind of guarantee that one of the "ads" wasn't a malicious drive-by payload delivery instead, I'm sure the drive to block ads wouldn't be so strong right now.
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