Adblock

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adblock Plus
Developed by Henrik Aasted Sorensen,
Michael McDonald,
Wladimir Palant
Latest release 0.7.5.4 / April 9, 2008
OS Cross-platform
Genre Mozilla extension
License MPL
Website http://adblockplus.org/
Mozilla Firefox
(category)
Contents
Origins and Lineage
This box: view  talk  edit

Adblock is a content-filtering extension for the Mozilla Firefox and Mozilla Application Suite web browsers. Adblock allows users to prevent page elements, such as advertisements, from being downloaded and displayed.

Due to stagnation in the upstream development since 2004, a forked version called Adblock Plus has risen to prominence. It features improvements to the user interface, filter subscriptions, and element hiding. It has become one of the most popular extensions with more than 4 million daily users.[1]

Contents

[edit] Adblock Plus

Adblock Plus focuses on usability with many new features being added. Its main window has menu items at the top. Also, the list of blockable items is integrated as a panel at the bottom which can be detached from the main window. Element hiding can be used in addition to regular ad blocking. Other new features include filter statistics (hits counter) and the ability to enable or disable individual filters without removing them [2].

[edit] How it Works

Like Mozilla's built-in image blocker, Adblock blocks HTTP requests according to their source address and can block IFrames, scripts and Flash. It also uses automatically-generated user stylesheets to hide elements such as text ads on a page as they load instead of blocking them, known as element hiding [3].

[edit] History

Michael McDonald created Adblock Plus 0.5 that improved on Adblock by incorporating the following features:

  • Whitelisting
  • Support for blocking background images.
  • Subscription to filters with a fixed address and automatically update them.
  • The ability to hide HTML elements allowing a much greater range of images to be blocked.
  • The ability to hide ads on a per site basis instead of globally.
  • Memory leak fixes

McDonald discontinued development and transferred the name to Wladimir Palant, who released Adblock Plus 0.6 with a rewritten codebase in January 2006[citation needed].

[edit] Filters

Basic filter rules can include wildcards represented by asterisks (*). Sites and objects can be whitelisted with filters that start with two at signs (@@). Regular expressions delimited by slashes (/) can be used. Adblock Plus also supports a more-sophisticated syntax that gives fine-grain control over filters [4].

The following is a list of example filters for Adblock.

Blocks the donation banner on Wikipedia:

wikipedia.org#DIV(id=siteNotice)

Blocks ads in any directory called "banners", or any case insensitive equivalent:

 */banners/*

Whitelist a website:

 @@http://www.example.com/

Blocks ads on Yahoo!:

/yimg\.com(.*/adv/|/a[^u])(?!vision)/

[edit] Filter subscriptions

Users can add external filtersets. Adblock Plus includes the ability to use one or more external filter subscriptions that are automatically updated. Filterset.G is incompatible with this system (and Adblock Plus specifically recommends against using Filterset.G for other reasons as well [5]), but other filtersets can added by typing their addresses. A list of known Adblock Plus subscriptions is maintained on the Adblock Plus official website.

[edit] Awards

  • PC World chose Adblock Plus as one of the 100 best products of 2007.[6]

[edit] Criticism

A number of website owners, particularly those whose sites display online advertisements, argue that the use of ad-blocking software such as Adblock is cutting off their revenue stream, with some going as far as calling it tantamount to theft. The central argument against ad-blocking software is that advertisements allow website owners to pay for server upkeep and bandwidth bills to continue hosting their content for free. Some websites have taken counter-measures against ad-blocking software, such as attempting to detect the presence of ad blockers and informing users of their views, or outright preventing users from accessing the content unless they disable the ad-blocking software. There have been several arguments supporting [7] and opposing [8] the assertion that blocking ads is wrong.[9] Adblock Plus developer Wladimir Palant responded to this in his blog.[10] Many other bloggers have also expressed their opinions on this [11].

[edit] Detection

Some webmasters have used JavaScript to detect the effects of the popular Adblock filters.[12] This has been done by generating a honeypot-like URL and verifying its delivery and also by more advanced verification of the DOM after the web page is rendered in the web browser to ensure the expected advertising elements are present.

These methods do not detect the presence of the Adblock extension directly, only the effects of the filters, and are vulnerable to continued updates to the filters.

An attempt was made to detect the plug-in itself but that detection method was rendered unusable by the 0.7.5.2 update of AdBlock Plus [13].

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/statistics/addon/1865
  2. ^ Screenshots of various aspects of the user interface
  3. ^ How does element hiding work?
  4. ^ Adblock Plus Documentation - Specifying Filter Options
  5. ^ Adblock Plus FAQ - Do I need to install Filterset.G Updater?. Retrieved on 2007-12-07.
  6. ^ PC World - The 100 Best Products of 2007. PC World. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
  7. ^ Ad Blocking is Immoral
  8. ^ So, Blocking ads is stealing?
  9. ^ Firefox ad-blocker extension causes angst
  10. ^ Adblock Plus and (a little) more
  11. ^ Google Search
  12. ^ AdblockPlus Detection
  13. ^ Adblock Plus Release Notes

[edit] External links

Adblock
Adblock Plus
Information
Filter subscriptions
Commentaries