-
38 votes
-
Sweden and Denmark will summon tech companies over ads on their platforms that are posted by gangs to recruit young Swedes to commit violent crimes in the Nordics
17 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission bans fake online reviews, inflated social media influence; rule takes effect in October
52 votes -
Google and Meta struck secret ads deal to target teenagers
61 votes -
YouTube without a working ad blocker
I liked ( past tense ) watching YouTube with the latest Firefox on my Mint Linux box. No more. The ad blocker I use ( latest version ) has stopped working for removing YouTube commercials. The...
I liked ( past tense ) watching YouTube with the latest Firefox on my Mint Linux box.
No more.
The ad blocker I use ( latest version ) has stopped working for removing YouTube commercials.
The commercials are obnoxious.
I think I will quit until the ad blocker I use updates again with a fix.
Sorry YouTube, you are far from being worth $14.00 USD a month.
Edit:
Mint Linux 21.2
Cinnamon 5.8
Firefox 128.0.3
Ublock Origin 1.59.0
- I completely removed UBlock Origin
- I completely emptied my Firefox cache and other data
- I signed out of Google completely
- I reinstalled UBlock Origin
- I signed back into Google
- I tried using YouTube with my VPN turned on.
No joy.
I can watch YouTube ad free via a private window in Firefox.
I can watch YouTube ad free if I log out of my Google/YouTube account
My add blocker works in other browsers when I am not logged into my Google/YouTube account.
49 votes -
Voting for the Tiny Awards 2024 is now open! Creativity and experimentation through the small web.
15 votes -
ROMhacking.net moves to news only, database and file archive released to Internet Archive
34 votes -
Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled
82 votes -
More popular than Netflix in Finland, YLE's approach to digital transformation may hold lessons for public broadcasters everywhere
12 votes -
Google to charge new fee on ads in response to Canada’s digital services tax
12 votes -
PSA: Internet Archive “glitch” deletes years of user data and accounts
34 votes -
Everlasting jobstoppers: How an AI bot-war destroyed the online job market
40 votes -
As digital innovation reshapes the toy market, Lego's chief executive Niels B Christiansen discusses why playing around is good for children, adults and business
19 votes -
Despite its founding promise to be ad-free, the Baldur's Gate 3 fan wiki is going to put up ads, because its creator thinks he can make a lot of money
47 votes -
Google halts its four-plus-year plan to turn off tracking cookies by default in Chrome
36 votes -
Google dropping plan to remove ad-tracking cookies on Chrome
22 votes -
The critical window of shadow libraries
16 votes -
"Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla disappoints us yet again
68 votes -
YouTube is testing "Premium Jump Ahead" (built-in sponsorblock)
43 votes -
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win
59 votes -
Queer Liberation Library offers free LGBTQ books in response to wave of US school bans
21 votes -
YouTube tests harder-to-block server-side ad injection in videos
72 votes -
How influencer cartels manipulate social media: fraudulent behaviour hidden in plain sight
19 votes -
UK's NHS computer problems put patients at risk of harm
5 votes -
How makers of nonconsensual AI porn make a living on Patreon
15 votes -
Reddit, AI spam bots explore new ways to show ads in your feed
61 votes -
Ontario family doctor says new AI notetaking saved her job
18 votes -
Chatting slow mo with Zack Snyder
4 votes -
Two popular Danish television presenters have reported Meta to the police after finding their images and words had been manipulated and misused in thousands of Facebook ads
29 votes -
Sweden's public sector has ditched Big Tech in the name of privacy as a major telecom provider unveiled a new secure collaboration hub
14 votes -
Discord to start showing ads for gamers to boost revenue
62 votes -
Facebook let Netflix see user DMs, quit streaming to keep Netflix happy
37 votes -
What libraries risk when they go entirely digital
6 votes -
A university librarian asks: How do we rescue the past?
14 votes -
Has anyone here received any benefit as a consumer from algorithmic ad targeting?
I always get ads for items I have already purchased and won't need again for years if ever.
40 votes -
Job boards are still rife with 'ghost jobs'. What's the point?
32 votes -
Millions of research papers at risk of disappearing from the Internet: An analysis of DOIs suggests that digital preservation is not keeping up with burgeoning scholarly knowledge
26 votes -
Packages seized by the Royal Navy from a Faroese cargo ship bound for Denmark during the Napoleonic Wars opened – previously hidden away in the National Archives
9 votes -
How the Pentagon learned to use targeted ads to find its targets—and Vladimir Putin
29 votes -
Google’s retiring of Internet archiving tool draws ire of China researchers
18 votes -
The majority of traffic from Elon Musk's X may have been fake during the US Super Bowl, report suggests
50 votes -
An archive of Wikipedia from Thursday, December 20, 2001
18 votes -
How Quora died - The site used to be a thriving community that worked to answer our most specific questions. But users are fleeing.
37 votes -
Japan to introduce six-month residency visa for 'digital nomads'
24 votes -
The ambitious plan to open up a treasure trove of Black history
8 votes -
JINZO Paint — vintage mobile drawing app
8 votes -
Is fandom.com actually getting worse?
I have been a frequent visitor of the various websites that are now under the Fandom.com umbrella, going back to when it was called Wikia. And if there's one thing that's been a consistent...
I have been a frequent visitor of the various websites that are now under the Fandom.com umbrella, going back to when it was called Wikia. And if there's one thing that's been a consistent irritation with the platform, it's just how intrusive and annoying the advertising is. (For a sense of how long this has been a problem, see here.)
But worse than the intrusiveness of the sites' ads, their biggest problem is their performance. They can bring Firefox to a crawl.
For a while, it seemed like Fandom had been making some improvements. I could visit, say, Memory Alpha without the CPU on my computer spiking like crazy. But I just tried to look something up on the Forgotten Realms Wiki and, good god, it was terrible.
(And before anyone says anything, no, I have no intention of using an ad blocker to deal with it.)
Am I imagining it or is the platform actually getting worse again?
57 votes -
Anime is going digital. Fans are wary.
21 votes -
Hackers can infect network-connected wrenches to install ransomware, researchers say
28 votes -
Sound maps that predict poachers' movements improve government deterrence and response
7 votes