How Text Ads Tamed Ads on the Wild, Wild Web 278
securitas writes "In Sunday's New York Times, Randall Stross writes about How Google Tamed Ads on the Wild, Wild Web and how it is largely responsible for the demise of the odious pop-under ad. From the article: "Without intending to do so, the company set in motion multilateral disarmament by telling its first advertisers in 2000: text only, please. No banner ads, no images, no animation.... Google introduced these ads at the very moment when X10 ads were strewn like chewed gum on every square of sidewalk. X10's pop-unders were accepted at mainstream sites run by companies including Microsoft, Yahoo and The New York Times." Remember that "in mid-2001, X10's company Web site was the fourth-most visited" on the Web. Thank you, Google." I'd actually argue that while the text ads had something to do with it, the massive growth in pop-up/under blockers made as much of a difference, if not even more.
X10 ad museum (Score:5, Informative)
Re:X10 ad museum (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:X10 ad museum (Score:5, Funny)
Re:X10 ad museum (Score:5, Funny)
X10 ad nauseam (Score:2)
Funny how I read that as "X10 ad nauseam". While we are there, anyone remember "punch the monkey"?
I'm so glad my browser let's me block image animations, and that it does not have Flash.
Re:X10 ad nauseam (Score:2)
Hit the mailbox (picture a delinquent hanging out the car window as mailboxes fly by on the side of the road). This one tees me off a bit because it's advocating vandalism.
Hit Osama (he has hung his AK-47 on the wall and has put on a pair of boxing gloves). Very cliche.
Pretty sure there was one where you shoot at ducks (shooting-gallery style ducks). I've also seen half-a-dozen other variants that I can't remember off-hand.
Re:X10 ad museum - disappointed with product (Score:5, Funny)
Re:X10 ad museum - disappointed with product (Score:2)
Re:X10 ad museum (Score:5, Funny)
X10 not a bad company IMHO (Score:4, Interesting)
However, I did let them know that their ads tend to be very obnoxious and intrusive and they almost lost me as a potential customer because of it (they asked how I'd heard of X10-- who hasn't heard of X10 that's used a web browser??!). It's a shame when good companies alienate potential customers in that way. And it wasn't even one of their ads that got me, anyway. It was PriceGrabber or MSN Shopping or something like that. They happened to have the best price. My purchase was actually in spite of their ads, not because of them.
Re:X10 not a bad company IMHO (Score:2)
This shocked me- I am the type of person who if you call me out of the blue at 7 pm at home and are selling something, I won't even consider it, even if it is a great deal...
Although spam and annoying nets ads are far cheaper than telemarketing (usually), they must be getting enough sales to justify the
Re:X10 ad museum (Score:2)
The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Insightful)
I see... so Google saved us all from ourselves did they? I seem to remember that even though Google was much talked about in 2000, it had yet to become the preminent search engine it is today.
Perhaps this has more to do with it: Results 1 - 10 of about 7,590,000 for Pop-up blocker software. (0.20 seconds). Taken from Google itself. Pop-ups weren't simply replaced, they were stamped out. They still exist, but not at the staggering, nauseating level they were once.
Does anyone know anyone who ever bought one of those X10 cameras?
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Interesting)
Google sells non-popup ads, and provides users with a blocker for popup ads. Personally, I can understand the valid, intelligent reasons for doing both - both giving consumers what they want.... but put together, it looks pretty damn evil.
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Interesting)
Google's toolbar rose at the same time as Firefox did (along with a lot of other third party toolbars. Lots of pop-up blocking toolbars preceded Google in the IE space, for instance): Google doesn't need to be thanked for implementing something so obvious, and they were far from first.
Of course for the people in t
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:2)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Insightful)
Without ad-blocker turned off. (though Firefox is set to block ads), I still get 2-4 pop-unders per session. I wonder how many Firefox itself is blocking.
In any case, I'm not focused on the ad but the little 'X' button to shut them off. I wonder how often it simply became uneconomical to advertise this way and how often would someone would return to an insignificant website that throws pop-ups or pop-unders around like that? It's a quick way to drive away your audience.
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:2)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Insightful)
I really hope that you are not actually surfing with Javascipt enabled.
<sarcasm>Because as we all know, javascript can't be used to improve site functionality or reduce BW overhead in page updates.</sarcasm>
I take it you've never ordered a plane-ticket online or used any site that actually uses javascript for good. For all you people saying javascript is all bad, I urge you to look at Gmail. That's a web-app at it's finest if you ask me.
For the record: I have javascript enabled, and I almost never get popups. The annoyance of a popup every now and then hardly constitutes going back to the pre-javascript web.
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Informative)
That's why you use NoScript [noscript.net]. You can selectively enable JavaScript for those sites that really need it and leave it off everywhere else.
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, it just makes it really funny when viewed under OS X or a Linux browser, where the windows look entirely different (OS X especially, since usually the red "close" button is sticking out on the left side of the browser, since they figure "hey, let's stick out a bit but
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:5, Informative)
BTW *never* click on the corner X, that's not safe since a popup's corner X is sometimes a disguised "OK" button for installing something Nasty. Instead, use ALT-F4 (or whatever keystroke your OS uses) to close the popup window. So far, that cannot be spoofed (far as I know, anyway).
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Informative)
Your concept for popup management is very interesting, and could be extended into the functions for selective blocking. Tho from what I've heard of s
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:2)
I hated the ads but almost bought one because they are cool. I had lots of dirty ideas, but would legitimately like one to monitor my car in my apartment complex garage.
Re:The Google-fication of the facts (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember that Google was the preeminent search engine (as far as effectiveness) for over a year before it left "beta" status--it had supplanted Altavista and Lycos well before then among the technically sophisticated. And then note that Google dropped the "beta" label in September of 1999. By then it was clearly the market leader technologically and possibly the leader by
I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:5, Interesting)
However, something which is much more annoying are those banner ads that use flash to make the ad creep out of the 400x80 banner and fill the whole browser window with a large animation for 10 seconds.
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:5, Informative)
for some reason that crap floats on top of the content, and doesn't go away. usually i just hit f12 and deselect java & javascript, then reload the page, i have considered disabling java[script] by default, but at least for javascript that would require pretty often pressing f12, so i leave it enabled for now.
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:2)
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:3, Informative)
These problems are solvable :)
Re:I think pop-up blocking browsers helped too (Score:3, Interesting)
I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd actually that while the text ads had something to do with it, the massive growth in pop-up/under blockers made a large difference as well.
( ignoring missing words and all. I have no room to talk in that dept )
Can we please attribute things to where they belong? google may be the second coming of Christ, who knows, but let's try to keep their achievements realistic.
Re:I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:2)
Re:I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:5, Informative)
Their achievements are all they are cracked up to be. They started with basically nothing, used Linux, redefined searching as we know it, AND were able to be advertiser supported with very unobtrusive ads. I'm not talking about their popup ads don't popup other ads, I'm not talking about not so annoying animated gifs. I'm not talking about not so annoying flash ads. They use all text based ads that are effective and not thrown in our face like billboards, or product placement ads in movies, just simple text ads that are often less than 10 words.
Oh, and to my knowledge, google does no direct advertising themselves. A real product doesn't need to.
I think we all owe them a good thank you, and I wish other companies would learn from their success.
Re:I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:2)
I'm not dismissing google's achievements, I am simply saying they should not get more credit than they deserve.
Oh, and the bit about real products not needing advertising: Don't be silly. If I make a widget that does x better than everyone else but I tell no one about it, how is that widget going to gain popularity?
They si
Re:I like google as much as the next guy... (Score:2)
Ever heard of word-of-mouth? Yes, it IS a form of advertising, but not one that the company itself participates in. (Usually, sometimes companies like Microsoft use astroturf campaigns, Google has not so far.)
Hell, Google gets basically free product placement on some TV shows and in some movies, altho
Pop-up ads are coming back (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm waiting for someone who has the skill to update Firefox so plugins cannot overwrite areas of the screen already used by text and graphics. Either that or put in white space for the part of the screen the ad will eventually take over, so the ad doesn't obscure the real content.
Re:Pop-up ads are coming back (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pop-up ads are coming back (Score:3, Insightful)
CBC Sports [www.cbc.ca]
CBC Hockey [www.cbc.ca]
Re:Pop-up ads are coming back (Score:3, Informative)
The second greatest plugin for Firefox, Adblock being the first
Re:Pop-up ads are coming back (Score:2)
AdBlock [mozilla.org].
Google ads are some of the few I don't block: They aren't annoying, in fact, sometimes they're even interresting.
But anything that flashes, moves, makes sound, pops up or under, or worse: Loads VIDEO in a banner, freezing my browser and all it's tabs while doing so, is blocked. That last one is what pushed me over the ethical conundrum of wan
Google doing banners too (Score:5, Interesting)
I think what killed the old style banner ad was not so much text ads, but the fact that the Google text ads were well targeted compared to the moronic "hit the monkey!!" banner ads. I know many ad publishers also became annoyed at the banner ads which seem specifically designed to get a low click-through rate, thereby getting maximum branding exposure for the advertiser at minimum cost. I reckon any ad publisher is forever grateful to Google for revolutionising this system.
Re:Google doing banners too (Score:2)
Re:Google doing banners too (Score:2)
Crazy pop-up/under ad blitz is alive and well... (Score:4, Informative)
Turn off your pop-up blocker, turn on flash and check out PWInsider [pwinsider.com] for a great example. If you have access to a Windows box check it out with IE, it's mind boggling...
Obviously, they are including tons of ads not for the purpose of gaining ad revenue as much as they are including tons of them to get people to buy a membership.
Capitalism at work? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Capitalism at work? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Capitalism at work? (Score:2)
I think there are still alot of people around that 'prefer' (or, are tempted more) to click on those silly animated banners, than the text-ones by Google though.
Re:Capitalism at work? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think it would be fair to say that the Slashdot crowd as a whole has always had higher average bandwidth access than the masses. This difference probably is much more narrow compared to a couple of years ago.
People did demand those blockers and my customers seemed to not be so much bothered by the fact of the ads themselves, it was the nightmare of navigating the web at 28-56K and often downl
I couldn't use text ads (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I couldn't use text ads (Score:2)
Re:I couldn't use text ads (Score:2)
There's this myth that there is no such thing as bad publicity.
Clearly, the publicist that came up with that one must be worshipped by his peers, but frankly, there are a number of businesses that will never get a dime of my money because they believed that lie, and they harassed me with bad publicity.
Other ad annoyances (Score:3, Insightful)
Not just Google (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody but the parasuits liked them. Everyone savvy enough to know how to turn them off did so. I'd wager some people even quit web browsing over them.
Google didn't want them because 1) they slurp bandwidth and B) they can't be tracked for content and $) because they don't fit the Google "no evil" culture.
Those reasons pretty much coincide with how the rest of us saw them, too. Except for the pervs, that is. (Camera to spy on wife in shower? Ooh, baby!)
Re:Not just Google (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not just Google (Score:2)
Then I closed the Refinance Your Mortgage popup ad and it was magically replaced by a "NHL Lightning versus Flyers" popup ad.
So I guess they're not quite as dead as this article tells us.
I'm a Mac user, so this wasn't spyware.
I don't use a popup blocker because I want the sites we visit to be able to gain legi
Re:Not just Google (Score:3, Interesting)
Sort of. When Google started, it was a graduate research project. At that time, the commercial search engines were inudated with graphical ads and were quite slow because of it. Google didn't have any ads and, as largely because of that, was much more responsive. A lot of people really liked that. Google remained ad free long after it became a compan
Text ads work (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Text ads work (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Text ads work (Score:2)
When i'll turn on all the flashing lights this things have on them for christmas, the whole town will bow before me, haha.
Re:Text ads work (Score:2)
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Re:Text ads work (Score:2)
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Re:Text ads work (Score:2)
but check some stats (Score:2, Interesting)
but i'm pretty that annoying ads, even tricky pop-under ones, never had the kind of click % that google ads to.
Tamed? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tamed? (Score:2)
Block them, and write to the website operator to let them what you are blocking and why.
When I do so, I make a point to mention that I still see the google text ads, since they don't SCREECH in my ears or get in the way of what I'm trying to read.
The behaviour of these ads would get you punched in the face if you did it in person, do it on the web and you get blocked. Deal. (you might want to be more polite, les
X10's pop-unders were accepted at mainstream sites (Score:2)
Kompressor (Score:2, Funny)
girl is naked, take a movie
girl is looking, picture cutie
you buy thing from pop up banner
you get wallet, purchase camera
we must destroy x10, we must destroy all internet ads
we must destroy x10, we must destroy all internet ads
window pop up on the screen
taking control of my machine
making all internet user insane
x10 profit goes down the drain
girl is naked, take a movie
girl is looking, pi
Multilateral disarmament my ass (Score:2)
Re:Multilateral disarmament my ass (Score:2)
Adblock (Score:5, Insightful)
True enough though, for a while I couldn't be bothered to filter Google's ads. Nowadays I find RIP and CustomizeGoogle keep the interface nice and clean.
Useful links for those that like to make their own mind up:
http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/ [mozilla.org]
http://www.customizegoogle.com/ [customizegoogle.com]
http://rip.mozdev.org/index.html [mozdev.org]
http://adblock.mozdev.org/ [mozdev.org]
http://www.pierceive.com/ [pierceive.com]
And for those that might bleat "without advertising, many sites would fail" I say Good. Let those sites fail. Give me micropayments and an honest relationship.
Re:Adblock (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, you don't really have to care.
You're in a Prisoner's Dilemma situation with everyone else visiting those sites. You may choose to block, or not to block.
If you block, and everyone else blocks, you don't get bothered by ads, and the site soon fails. Bad.
If you don't block, and everyone else blocks, you get bothered by ads, and the site STILL fails. Awful.
If you don't block, and nobody else blocks, you get bothered by ads, and the site survives. Good.
If you block, and nobody else blocks, you don't get bothered by ads, and the site survives. Great!
Now, since Everyone Else will make their own choices, and you cannot significantly influence them in that choice, you might as well please yourself. You may therefore block ads with a clear conscience.
Re:Adblock (Score:4, Insightful)
If you don't shoplift, and everyone else shoplift, you spend a lot of money, and the store STILL fails. Awful.
If you don't shoplift, and nobody else shoplift, you spend money, and the store survives. Good.
If you shoplift, and nobody else shoplifts, you get free stuff, and the store survives. Great!
Before anyone gets all pissy, I'm not trying to equate adblocking with theft, morally speaking. But the cause/effect situation is similar. One person shoplifting is not going to significantly affect the bottom line of a business, and will probably not cause prices to go up. But that doesn't mean shoplifting is OK. This is where the tragedy of the commons comes in - if we all block ads/shoplift/let our cattle graze on the commons, then there will be nothing left for anyone and we all lose. That's the flaw in your argument - just because you have a small impact doesn't mean you have no impact.
Re:Adblock (Score:2)
Meh -- doubtful that it was pop blockers (Score:2)
How many times have you clicked on a link in a site to have a pop-up appear? Legit? Not? You have the option to approve every single freak'n time... or just use the block-on-load/close blockers (Opera has the options 'unwanted' which will only open pops when you click on a link or a button, I don't know about others).
The decrease in the attempts to utilize these more obviously invasive ads comes from somew
Text ads just more pervasive (Score:2)
I almost dread the pop up blocker functionality, it just made the approach for direct sell advertisers get that much more insidious, with splash ad pages and ads that fly around within the content of a page. That's alot more annoying to me than being able to just click out a window....
What's that, a Google PR stunt? (Score:3, Insightful)
Smart Advertisers Bought into Text Ads (Score:2, Insightful)
Pop-up blockers boosted Firefox more, Google also (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? the Netscape browser was dying, IE Version whatever was the buggy, proprietary, virus-target of the day only other thing out there, and because MS is also in the advertising game via MSN, etc., they weren't about to give users the ability to turn off a specific class of advertisements without making it odious.
Then Firefox declares war via pop-up blocker, and within a short time the early adopters (who are really the most important predictor of future technological trends, methinks) were moving in droves away from IE, and I don't think I was more than a few days behind them.
Same time, Google's model saves me bandwidth and eye strain, and --ka- boom!!-- between the two the 'Net returned to being a useful tool with one tenth the amount of pain.
Everyone can earn money (Score:2, Interesting)
But hold on Google Adsens offers Onsite Advertiser option too i.e. If some one likes your site they might able to advertises it via Google Adwords program. It is an extension of Google site
Money (Score:3, Insightful)
fortitude of the right recipe (Score:2)
There were countless IPO prospectuses in the 1998-2000 touting how internet advertising was going to make them lots of money. But most of these failed because they were "before their time" or the wrong mix of components.
More invasive (Score:3, Insightful)
There was some research done recently showing that the sheer number of (non-internet) adverts we see every day has just caused people to develop better ways of filtering them out.
X10 forth most visited? (Score:2)
Hmm, I may have been "benchmarking" their web server around that time.
Google ads vs blockers (Score:2)
I'd guess that far more users are met with Google text ads than the users of MSN Toolbar + the ~10% users of non-IE.
I can honestly say... (Score:2)
Pop-unders in Firefox (Score:2)
Lately I am getting loads of pop-unders in Firefox, whereas before(let's say, two months ago) they were never there: Anyone knows a solution to this (besides turning off Flash and Javascript) ?
Re:Pop-unders in Firefox (Score:2)
Anyone knows a solution to this (besides turning off Flash and Javascript)?
I think I've seen only one popup-ad in the last 3 months.
All hail Proxomitron! (Score:2)
There were proxomitron filters for geocities, xoom, etc. Too bad the author died and never released the code. I still miss the alter-headers feature where I could change the outgoing HTTP headers.
What Pop-Up Blockers? (Score:2)
How common are pop-up/under blockers, really? For the longest time, MSIE didn't have them, and I'm sure there are still many users who run versions of MSIE that don't have ad blockers. Sure, you can get them third party, but none of the people I know who haven't taken the step to axe MSIE have taken the step to install an ad blocker (or a tabb
FasterFox Blocks Some Ads (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't know if this stops X10's ads or not but you can try it.
Google's impact was very important (Score:3, Informative)
Their emphasis on the user was applied to ads as well. They recognized that text ads are less visually intrusive than image ads. So their refusal to allow banner ads in their results was great for users. But the real importance of this move was made important when advertisers began migrating to Google in droves. They discovered that text ads actually provide better long-term results than banner ads. Google forced advertisers to examine an approach web interface experts had been advocating for some time.
Yes, all this excitement about Google's role seems like deification, but Google really did change the landscape. They did it with a user-centered approach, which the prevailing players at the time simply did not have. Whether Google will continue to keep the interests of its users in mind is an open question, but their advertising model has radically altered the playing field in a good way.
Obligatory Aqua Teen Reference (Score:4, Funny)
Wwwyzzerdd. Three ws, two zs, and two ds.
Re:X10 (Score:2)