h a l f b a k e r yWhat was the question again?
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
There are many anti-pop-up techniques out there. The most popular involve a software program that blocks the ad from coming up on your system. That doesn't help the millions of people who don't bother or know how to install the program. Or people using a borrowed PC.
This method would involve
a small number of users downloading a program that constantly refreshed the URL of a Pop-Up ad. This would use up all the bandwidth of the the ad's web server - essentially bringing it down. The ad would have to be discontinued. Individuals with cable and DSL connections could have the program run automatically when they are not using their PC.
User's could submit the URL's of annoying pop-ups to be targeted. The URL wouldn't be "attacked" until several people submitted or through a manual process.
[link]
|
|
Killing pop-ups is a great idea, but (and I'm certainly no expert) are you sure they have their own URL's? I know my address bar doesn't change when a pop-up appears, so how do you tell the browser to refresh the ad, as opposed to the page that generates it? |
|
|
<Obligatory "use Opera" annotation /> |
|
|
Aren't DDOS attacks unethical? |
|
|
Not only are they unethical, but many sites now use measures to try and prevent them, so they might not even be effective. |
|
|
What you'd end up with is the marketing company making all kinds of money for the page views (<- not sure what you call the pop-under equivilent). |
|
|
Croissant for using sure fire in your idea title, chewed on croissant because you really don't need this tool. |
|
|
This program would be used to DDOS good sites. So no. |
|
|
As [alx] says - use Opera. But neither this nor your DDOS idea would stop popups created by Flash or via ActiveX controls. |
|
|
Wouldn't it be simpler to travel back in time and terminate the child who will eventually grow up to develop the concept of pop-ups? |
|
|
Or to travel back in time and terminate the child who will eventually grow up to be annoyed by them? |
|
|
...this latter suggestion would amount to genocide. The only people I've ever met who are not antagonistic toward pop up ads are the people who sell them, and the people who believe statistics about effectiveness given to them by the people who sell them. |
|
|
No I don't (but then I would say that, wouldn't I?). Pop-ups are annoying, sure; often they're extremely annoying, but they're adverts - they're a means of paying for something which would otherwise have to be paid for some other way. I don't like the ads on commercial TV, but I appreciate that if they weren't there, I'd have to pay to watch the programmes. The ads on the IBD are a bit annoying as well, but I'd prefer to have them on there than pay for the service. |
|
|
No, it would definately cause the advertiser to loose interest in doing pop-ups even if I dont actually beleive you're going to be 'bringing any servers down' |
|
|
In addition to whate everyone else said, if you DDOS a popup ad, you'll be DDOS-ing all the people who won't be able to load the sites they actually want because the sites are structured in such a way that the popup ad has to load first. |
|
|
Plus, there are a lot more popup ads than there are people willing to spend time and bandwidth DDOS-ing them, because popups generate revenue for someone, while DDOS-ing is a loss all around. |
|
|
Much easier to just use Mozilla and configure it to ignore popups. |
|
| |