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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 5, 2022

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you don't like ads (or certain forms of ads) don't go on sites that use those ads. It's perfectly possible to avoid them.

It is indeed. It is also perfectly possible to manipulate my experience on the web to be very different than the ones the creators intended.

That's actually the lovely thing about the internet, I can format the incoming information any way I want to suit my preferences. I'm doing it right now with custom CSS for this website. The website I'm viewing is probably quite different than the one you are, in aesthetic ways, even if we read the same words.

So here's a question. If I'm accessing a given website and I'm running scripts to change the way the information is presented to me, why can't I do the same with the ads?

Would it be acceptable to, instead of blocking the ads, to reformat them so they are shrunk down to a 50x50 pixel square and shunted off to the right side of the screen so they don't interfere with my viewing the content? What if instead it saves every single ad that would have loaded, and then when I am ready to view them, I request that it play all of them at once for me so I can consume them more quickly in one sitting?

Both of these are fundamentally possible. How much can I screw around with the ads being served to me before it becomes an ethical breach?

I'm not trying to be a dick with this, I'm genuinely trying to see where you draw your line, because the internet, as a pull medium, lets me walk RIGHT UP to the line you draw and tickle it gently without going over it.

Am I obligated to accept every ad that is served to me in the exact format it is served? And if so, does this also apply to the rest of the content?