Runs fine of the Windows version of Firefox. If you are looking for something similar at the OS level I don't know of anything.
There doesn't seem to be a version for Winos.
I've actually been looking for ways to drop Adblock Plus. It's a memory hog.
...or buy an adblocking appliance...
Adblock is poorly designed. It doesn't scale well with large numbers of rules, and you basically load another copy in each tab. If we weren't limited by the amount of memory that Firefox can address, I wouldn't be problem.It is, but that's why we have RAM in the first place. Internet advertising is an arms race and Adblock Plus (or Edge) is really the best way to stay ahead of the bad guys.
You could do hosts file blocking or buy an adblocking appliance, but I know from experience that at least hosts file blocking isn't nearly as thorough as anything that grabs a regularly updated Easylist.
Ads are still a fundamental problem.
1. All ads are intrusive. Even by taking space on my screen that could be used for content, they are unwelcome.
1a. I am fully aware that some web sites need revenue to operate. As an individual, I would rather donate or pay a subscription fee than see ads. I do make such payments. I suspect any amount of money that I give is more valuable than any number of ad impressions I might've created.
2. Ads carry a risk of malware. I have no reason to think any ad delivery network applies sufficient scrutiny to assure the security of the computers that I manage.
3. "Unobtrusive" ads are frequently misleading, being tangentially related to internet searches and usually ranked ahead of legitimate search results.
4. I have no obligation as a user to look at ads, any more than I have an obligation to view television commercials. I have tools to eliminate them, and I will do so.
1. False. There are non-intrusive ads. Web pages are, for better or worse, designed to have the ads in them. Eliminating ads often just leaves an empty space. So, nothing is gained.
2. False. The Internet carries a risk of malware. You do not block the entire Internet. Ads are no more inherently dangerous than the way that they are delivered, none of which are unique to ads.
3. False. You confuse "obtrusive" with "annoying." You find all ads annoying; that doesn't make them obtrusive (or intrusive, for that matter). Ads are ads; they don't have to be related to what you're doing.
Frankly, a website minus the ads often looks ridiculous. There really is nothing gained, and the awkward layout is distracting.If nothing else, white space is gained, making the page less crowded and easier to read. I'm still willing to call that a win.
I don't read CNN, as they're such a poor place for news; but I haven't found any large content website that doesn't use a number of external providers for services. If you trust a website not to cause you any problems, then you should trust who they trust; otherwise, you really don't trust them at all.Advertisements presented through typical ad networks might involve as many as five parties between the person creating the content and the device on which the content is delivered. For hosted non-local, non-ad content (e.g. .ISO files from Technet), there will be direct scrutiny of the data from its provider, but in the case of ads, you're asking that I trust that someone along the line took the time to ensure that the content being sent to clients is secure. I'm willing to trust that the nice folks at, say, CNN.com aren't going to do anything to harm my computer with their code, but I can't say I have the same level of Trust for CNN's ad delivery network's advertiser's ad agency's web development team's script guy.
Life is full of distractions. You do not block life.Visible ads separate from the content that I am viewing are most certainly obtrusive since they remove me from the thought process of scanning and comprehending that actual content. Yes, it's only a momentary distraction, but the fact that I'm being asked to deal with it at all is, by definition an unwelcome intrusion on my thought processes.
Too lazy; didn't read?tl;dr: There needs to be a better way for supporting the web because advertisements sure as hell aren't it.