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posted by janrinok on Monday August 15 2016, @05:35PM   Printer-friendly
from the whack-a-mole dept.

Don't want the new Facebook ads? In a brilliant demonstration of the arms race between ad companies and content filtering software, uBlock Origin already blocked them. This occurred hours after being introduced by Facebook.

The commit was here: https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uAssets/commit/773512c844ab0e92e0dbb1fd9c00291d1ae0ba38

And from PC World:

Thursday morning, Adblock Plus announced that a new filter for banning Facebook's ads has been added to the main EasyList filter list used by the extension. Here's how to force Adblock Plus's filter list to update if you want in on the adblocking action.

Update: Facebook already rolled out new code to break Adblock Plus's workaround, according to Techcrunch. And then Adblock Plus rolled out a new filter to block the new workaround. And then Facebook released another patch to break the new Adblock Plus filter. Whack-a-mole indeed.

But you might not rush to do so. Adblock Plus's blog post warns that the new filter hasn't been heavily tested and may block additional content. An initial response sent out by Facebook suggests it may indeed be doing so.

"We're disappointed that ad blocking companies are punishing people on Facebook as these new attempts don't just block ads but also posts from friends and Pages," a spokesperson told AdAge. "This isn't a good experience for people and we plan to address the issue. Ad blockers are a blunt instrument, which is why we've instead focused on building tools like ad preferences to put control in people's hands."

[...] If you see an ad in your Facebook News Feed, click the drop-down arrow on the top left of the ad, and then choose "Manage your ad preferences." There, you'll be able to see which topics Facebook thinks you're into, and advertises against. Deleting them all should eliminate hyper-targeted ads—though not all ads, and Facebook will repopulate the list over time. Blocking ads via ad blockers isn't possible in Facebook's mobile apps, only in-browser.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @06:19PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @06:19PM (#388308)

    Correction, they used to be blunt, it's just that ABP hasn't kept up. uBO and Adguard can block elements based on content. Facebook uses a div with the text " sponsored" and another div inside with the ad? Block able with almost no overhead. The real problem is the ABP-only whitelisting in easylist, which makes detecting an ad blocker easier but is necessary due to their lack of feature parity with competitors; almost all of which have specific filters to clean up the mess that causes.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @07:03PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @07:03PM (#388337)

    If they do dumb shit like that you can write the block yourself. I use self made block to filter linkedin feed and take out all sorts of nonsense, and I run it on interval so it kills any new things as I scroll down and additional items are loaded. If they want ads that cannot be removed they would have to step up their game, like editing posted images to add ad content directly to the image (not overlay) etc.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @09:38PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 15 2016, @09:38PM (#388410)

      While Ublock0 is my main ad auto decrapifier, many times end using Greasemonkey since also can quickly customize pages to my taste.