 | . I thought NebuAD disappeared. They were put in a shit hole when all the ISPs started pulling out when the huge controversy started.
adblock plus. works wonders. |
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 | Their CEO jumped ship, and they bailed out of the spying-on-users venture, but I think the company itself hasn't disappeared yet.
And I concur on Adblock Plus. It wouldn't have stopped the NebuAD nonsense, but it's a great tool for blocking ads. And its greatest benefit is that it speeds up page load times, since the browser doesn't have to wait for the ad to be served up. |
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 funchordsHelloPremium,MVM join:2001-03-11 Yarmouth Port, MA kudos:5 | reply to swhitney2003 said by swhitney2003:I thought NebuAD disappeared. They were put in a shit hole when all the ISPs started pulling out when the huge controversy started. They said they were stopping -- but should you believe them?
NebuAd said that it was pulling back to a more traditional ad model, but it also earlier said that it required its ISP partners to provide "robust" notification to users prior to installing its hardware. (Out of about 20 ISPs that I know actually used NebuAd, I can't find any evidence that one did anything that would reasonably inform users -- most buried the facts into FAQs and policies that are -- if ever -- only read rarely after sign-up.) -- Robb Topolski -= funchords.com =- Hillsboro, Oregon More features, more fun, Join BroadbandReports.com, it's free...
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