Starting tomorrow,Watch Believer Online Feb. 15, Google's web browser Chrome will start automatically blocking overly intrusive ads, which might mark a huge (positive) change in how we view the web.
In a blog post Wednesday, Google has explained exactly how this will work.
SEE ALSO: Chromebooks may soon have Google Assistant standardUnlike certain ad blocker programs, Chrome will not block absolutely every ad you encounter. Instead, it will only remove ads that do not follow "Better Ads Standards," a set of standards for acceptable and unacceptable web ads created by a coalition of organizations and companies including Facebook, Google and Microsoft. The idea is that users don't hate all ads, only overly intrusive ones, and if everyone gets rid of those, both users and publishers will end up happier.
So from now on, when you open a web page in Chrome and it contains one of the ads that are not up to these standards, it'll block them. This includes pop-up ads and overly large sticky ads on desktop, and flashing as well as full screen, scroll over ads on mobile. Check out the illustration below to see the rest.
Chrome will also help evaluate sites according to the types of ads they use. If a site violates the standards outlined above too many times, it might get a "failing" status. The other two statuses are "warning" and "passing." If a site stays non-compliant 30 days after being notified of its violations, Chrome will start blocking its ads.
Every time Chrome blocks an ad, it will show a message indicating that it happened; the user will be offered to "always allow ads" on a specific site.
Google claims that this initiative is already yielding results, as 42 percent of previously failing sites have already started removing annoying ads to better conform to the Better Ads Standards.
Topics Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Save $20 on Amazon Echo Show 5
PSG vs. Liverpool 2025 livestream: Watch Champions League for free
Puerto Rico hurricane crisis: Here's why this could be Trump's Katrina
Best Sonos deal: Save $50 on Sonos Era 100
Scientists find supercolony of penguins on the remote Danger Islands
Best AirPods deal: Save $50 on AirPods Pro 2
This new app is like Shazam for frogs
How an Australian VR gaming studio scored a gig with Boeing to train astronauts
Best tablet deal: Save $45 on Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet
SXSW 2025: How 'Territory' is revolutionizing VR accessibility with aesthetic access
Best Amazon Fire TV Cube deal: Save $30 at Amazon
'Severance' Season 2, episode 7, explained: What is happening to Gemma at Lumon?
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。