Firefox Is Launching a New Test Pilot With Scroll To Pay Web Publishers (theverge.com) 65
Mozilla and Scroll have made an earlier-announced partnership slightly more official today with the wider release of a browser extension called "Firefox Better Web." It's part of Firefox's ongoing effort to combat tracking on the web, but with the small twist that it includes the option to sign up for Scroll. The Verge reports: Scroll, if you don't recall, is the $5-a-month service that stops ads from loading on certain websites. It's not technically an ad blocker, but rather lets publishers know they shouldn't serve them in the first place when you visit. For a limited time, the subscription will cost $2.50 per month for the first six months. The Mozilla partnership essentially builds Scroll into a package of tools that Mozilla offers as a test pilot. The idea is to see how far Firefox can go blocking trackers and other malfeasance (short of full ad blocking) without fully breaking the web or de-funding publishers.
The extension includes Scroll and also a "customized Enhanced Tracking Protection setting that will block third-party trackers, fingerprinters, and cryptominers," according to Mozilla. It will work across different desktop browsers, but of course it is designed primarily to be used with Firefox. The deal with Mozilla should get Scroll a much larger userbase, but neither company would disclose any financial terms. Scroll takes a 30 percent cut of your subscription fee and pays the rest out to its partner publishers based on your web browsing habits. It tracks those habits automatically, and the company tells me that it will soon offer users tools to delete their data -- on top of a pledge to never sell that data. Scroll also pledges to make it easier for small publishers to sign up through an automated system soon.
The extension includes Scroll and also a "customized Enhanced Tracking Protection setting that will block third-party trackers, fingerprinters, and cryptominers," according to Mozilla. It will work across different desktop browsers, but of course it is designed primarily to be used with Firefox. The deal with Mozilla should get Scroll a much larger userbase, but neither company would disclose any financial terms. Scroll takes a 30 percent cut of your subscription fee and pays the rest out to its partner publishers based on your web browsing habits. It tracks those habits automatically, and the company tells me that it will soon offer users tools to delete their data -- on top of a pledge to never sell that data. Scroll also pledges to make it easier for small publishers to sign up through an automated system soon.
This must pay a lot (Score:2)
I mean, for them to add it twice to Firefox, the payments must be worth it!
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Command-delete. Now it is removed from your auto complete.
But for Mac / Safari you must follow this 5-step process: https://apple.stackexchange.co... [stackexchange.com]
Re:This must pay a lot (Score:5, Insightful)
Chrome is a Google hunk-o-shit. You are not supposed to type URLs. You are supposed to search using Google.
In the near future you will not be permitted to enter or see URLs in Chrome at all. It will just be a "Tab to Google".
sorry, but... (Score:2)
...clearly you do not know what you are talking about
pocket doesn't do anything if you do not use it. only if you pocket some url, it will send that url to the pocket server, until then, in the worse case, take a little of ram to display the icon and the menu option.
Go check the source if you do not believe, it is open source!
Automatic updates, yes, it is possible to disable (just search updates in the preferences), but it is not something you want to do. Past experiences show that people fail to update bef
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Holding security updates hostage so that "designers" can force random UI changes on you is one of the evils of the modern internet.
This should be the default. Ordinary users should not be living w
I prefer addons that block all ads. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't even begin to pretend how people can use browsers without ad blocking.
When I see someone else with something like edge just clicking happily away waiting for things to load, I just don't understand it.
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This probably goes along with the new Apple "Safari Smart Tracking Protection".
I do not know about anyone else, but I have been using Absolute Complete Tracking and Cookie Prevention, Ad Blocking, and Malicious Code Execution Blocking (all remote code is inherently malicious until proven otherwise) for about half-a-century. It is not "smart". All miscreants are blocked. There are no exceptions. If this means your shit doesn't work, that is your problem, not mine.
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Yep, this is just more evidence that Mozilla is still anti-consumer and in the pocket of the ad industry, just like when they killed do not track rather than used it to file GDPR cases against ad companies that ignored it because that was a clear GDPR breach as it clearly highlighted refusal to give consent for tracking of personal data.
Mozilla is the ad industry's best friend, and they fuck their users at every chance whilst still pretending to care. This is why you can't trust "freedom" and "privacy" from
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I don't use "ad blockers" either, but annoy me enough and I'll put your domain(s) in my /etc/hosts file. Yes I do that manually because I almost always only visit a few dozens websites. Since they rarely change their ad providers, it's pretty easy to block. I barely have over a hundred domains blocked and a few of those have multiple subdomains from the same ad company.
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I'll keep blocking ads too but I would be happy to tip sites I use frequently when I visit them.
Unfortunately Scroll is not a good solution. It relies on tracking which sites you have visited in order to distribute money. I want something where I can give the site an anonymous cryptographic token that the site can then use to claim cash from the fund I pay in to.
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Low-value cryptocurrencies could be used for that. There's Dogecoin which is popular enough, and Reddcoins which were created especially for that function. There's even a Chrome plug-in but AFAIK development hasn't advanced nearly enough so far.
Use free Privacy Badger from EFF. (Score:2, Informative)
What the fuck is this trash? (Score:1)
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I donated to Apple by buying a Mac. In return I got a good browser with amazing privacy features.
Re:What the fuck is this trash? (Score:5, Informative)
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Tried it, not impressed. Their ad blocker only blocks "abusive" ads, that they deem abusive, and it uses a blocklist they control.
First thing I do is load Slashdot and see an ad, find out that there's no built-in way to disable them, uninstalled. Done. 5 minutes.
So much for "you're in control" (what their website says). More lies.
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Yeah. Smart people would not even have bothered to download and install it before dismissing it. That's what I did!
Not no, but hell no. (Score:2, Funny)
“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled malware yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the cyberattacks, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!” This internet's greatness and true genius lies in its willingness to be utterly compromised."
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Uhm, how about not serving the fucking ads (Score:3, Informative)
How about NOT serving the fucking ads in the FIRST place FOR FREE. Gee, like maybe using of these plugins or replacements:
* Pi-Hole [pi-hole.net]
* Adblock Plus [adblockplus.org]
* AdBlock [getadblock.com]
* MVPS Hosts [mvps.org]
* etc.
It's not like we don't have options. [tomsguide.com] Nickeling and diming people for what is essentially a free server is gotta be a new low. Keep it up and their won't be any users to block ads for.
Re:Uhm, how about not serving the fucking ads (Score:4, Insightful)
You can use this new app IN ADDITION to blocking all ads.
Not using ad block is a sucker's mistake, of course. But I do see value in throwing some money to websites I visit.
No Tracking (Score:3)
Re: Uhm, how about not serving the fucking ads (Score:2)
I'm genuinely curious how you think most of the internet is actually paid for?
Not being snarky, really wondering.
I use ad blockers myself, but I recognize that universalizing that behaviour to everyone would compel creators and providers to put more content behind paywalls or other (more restrictive) ways to make their income from the activity.
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I didn't start using ad blockers until sites started playing animated ads. If you want to put up a static image that says "Shop Amazon" or whatever then it's no worse than reading a magazine or newspaper. But the second I see something flash to try to grab my attention, I block it.
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Same here.
Talking of which, all the damn planet is trying to save bandwidth but the fucking video ads are still auto-loading by default? Fucking morans.
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*Your* bandwidth costs is not _my_ problem.
That doesn't give you the right to disrespect my time, space, CPU, and bandwidth with your bullshit ads.
If magically ALL ads were suddenly banned on the internet then Nothing of value was lost.
If you can't afford to pay for your webpage without ads then you got bigger problems to worry about.
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HWGA (here we go again) (Score:4, Insightful)
Camps, please align. Prepare for the usual flag-waving and boot-clomping factions... here come our old favorites now: "ad-paid-content", "paywall content", "information should be free, man", and "well, except for /that/ information" and of course bringing up the rear of the parade: "wait...there's a tool for that?"
ANNND HERE'S the kickoff from the OSI level 7 line...
if someone wants to send bytes to my computer because I clicked on a link, I have the right to build/buy scanners that filter the bytes however I like. If that breaks the content, boohoo, but I know I'm to blame. No website can demand the bytes get saved, the images must display, or the scripts must run. If you allow anonymous connections to your server and send data, you are giving that data away. There is no "must digest everything" clause to data, since any and all data can be deemed malicious by the receiver for any reason.
Roll 2d10+1 for Snark: IE7 is basically an ad-blocker now
but if you want to pay them.. (Score:2)
that would be different. however, I don't see how they can pay them 5 bucks and discount to 2.5 bucks at the same time. why discount a service that I would be only using to pay them money, just to pay them money anyways.
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> There is no "must digest everything" clause to data
Not that there won't be an attempt. If movie studios can ever get away with claiming that it's illegal to manipulate viewed movies to censor unwanted parts, because it alters the artistic intent and the producer has a right to have his movie viewed as was intended or not at all; I don't see much to prevent web-based distributors from making a similar claim. Add a token amount of stuff that makes doing so harder, and now suddenly they can accuse you of
Go ahead, look around (Score:1)
https://www.buzzfeed.com/ [buzzfeed.com]
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Oh noooo, websites like Buzzfeed aren't making enough money spewing garbage. Let's get together and help them make more money. Are you serious, Mozilla? https://www.buzzfeed.com/ [buzzfeed.com]
Judging by the content I'm seeing on there, that site doesn't deserve to make any money.
No (Score:2)
Oh, you want me to pay a subscription to use my browser?
Mozilla is obviously getting desperate for money. When they go out of business, will the code be maintained by the community, or will that just be the end?
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What do you mean? I'm using 4 different profiles in Firefox right now without any problems.
scroll to pay? (Score:1)
So if you open one of those pages in FF, in order to scroll down and read further you have to pay for the privilege?
Tracking, not ads, is the problem (Score:4, Interesting)
If they'd stop doing the tracking then I'd have no gripe with some random and/or article related ads.
Malware, not ads, is the problem (Score:2)
If they'd serve static content from their own domain, and not Javascript from a third party, then I'd have no gripe with some random and/or article related ads.
30% cut (Score:5, Insightful)
Scroll takes a 30 percent cut of your subscription fee and pays the rest out to its partner publishers based on your web browsing habits
I guess we can all thank Apple & Google for setting the tone for how much content creators get ripped off.
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There have been a lot of scams like this for many years. There are even Government run schemes like this. By the time all the intermediaries are payed and get new yachts there will be nothing left to pay whoever was supposed to be the benificiary of this plan.
The only win is not to play.
Market supply and demand (Score:2)
Sounds much like a racket (Score:1)
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It is called a "protection racket". This is where someone pays "A" for protection because if you don't pay then something awful will happen to you (usually at the behest of "A"). The defense against protection rackets in the physical world is to refuse to pay and armed self-defense killing "A" as expeditiously as possible.
On the Internet the defense is the same. Do not pay and defend against the attacker and kill them as quickly an expeditiously as possible (by blocking ALL third-party cookies, ALL adver
My easy way out. (Score:2)
1.) about:config -> yes you know -> search for "pocket"
delete all strings, change all booleans to false
2.) general -> "surfing" -> two lower check boxes "recommend extensions & functions" -> uncheck
3.) settings -> start pages -> empty pages
4.)settings -> start pages -> content of the start screen
-> uncheck all boxes
5.) Privacy -> data gathering
-> uncheck all boxes
6.) install "noscript"
7.) install "adblocker for youtube"
Does this work on mobile? (Score:1)
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extortion racket (Score:2)
Nice browser. Shame if it were to get some ads on it. You wouldn't want that, would you?
Scroll = cable TV company (Score:2)
Scroll sounds like they're bundling a bunch of "channels" we don't want and selling them all to you for a dirt cheap price - while they take a huge cut for themselves.
No thanks. Let us choose what ads we want to see. Make the ads valuable to us, and we'll come.
i have no cookies (Score:1)