Talk:AdNauseam

Latest comment: 4 days ago by Sammi Brie in topic Did you know nomination

Did you know nomination

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Created by Newslinger (talk). Number of QPQs required: 0. Nominator has fewer than 5 past nominations.

— Newslinger talk 10:12, 22 December 2024 (UTC).Reply

References

  1. ^ Pangburn, DJ (25 April 2017). "How Google Blocked A Guerrilla Fighter In The Ad War". Fast Company. Retrieved 15 December 2024. Rather than just concealing them, the app sends noise into the system by automatically clicking on ads in the background, muddling efforts by advertisers and ad networks like Google's to determine your preferences and your identity as you browse the web. [...] In its most recent update, AdNauseum permitted sites that complied with the Do Not Track policy to display ads to users, and refrained from clicking on those ads. (Because Google does not comply with DNT, the app blocked Google resources such as Doubleclick.net and Google Analytics.)
  2. ^ "Lying to Facebook could help protect your data". CBC Radio. 13 April 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2024. One example is the browser extension AdNauseam, which will simulate clicking every ad that appears on a page many, many times.
  3. ^ Pangburn, DJ (25 April 2017). "How Google Blocked A Guerrilla Fighter In The Ad War". Fast Company. Retrieved 15 December 2024. In early January, the artist and technologist Daniel Howe opened an email from Google informing him that his three-year-old ad-blocking app, AdNauseam, had just been banned from the company's Chrome Web store.
  4. ^ McGuigan, Lee (6 January 2021). "This tool lets you confuse Google's ad network, and a test shows it works". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved 22 December 2024. Google filtered out clicks on our site by the automated browser that ran for three days. But it did not filter out the vast majority of the other clicks, either by ordinary AdNauseam users or even in the higher-volume automated tests, where browsers were clicking upwards of 100 Google ads per day.