If all adblocks get deleted, would you still pirate?

XeryBlox@lemmy.dbzer0.com to Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com – -18 points –

i know this is extremely unlikely to happen, but imagine if both mozilla and google decides to remove adblock extensions in every way, if that happens, would you still pirate?

Some people might say about *arr aplications, but imo that wouldnt work, simply because without adblocks, the trackers would do something to stop it.

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lol, what? Ad Blocking doesn't protect you from being discovered committing piracy, VPN's do

i have no idea what connection you think there is between piracy and adblockers. if anything, wouldn't killing all adblockers encourage more piracy, not less?

For people who pirate because they can't afford the increasingly more expensive games, how does the removal of adblocks change anything?

There will always be adblock in some form, it can't be removed.

But even if it somehow happened, I don't see how that would affect my pirating. Sure, some torrent sites might be a bit harder to navigate, but that's just an inconvenience.

They can remove adblocks all they want.

Private DNS will still exist, there's at least two that have noads DNS, Mullvad and LibreDNS.

They work in most browser's/devices etc.

And if, a browser will be forked that can still use the extension interface.

I believe Proton also has the ability to block ads via DNS.

That doesn't work if the ad is served from the same server as the website

Blocking ads its not piracy.

I think it's a qoute from some sitcome, I don't remember where I heard it. But it's "Not watching the ads is like stealing TV!". And it's about just changing the channel during an ad break. It's clearly a joke, too. But maybe some people actually believe that.

I pirate cause the companies that produce what I want are greedy shit bags not because of ads.

Ads have never stopped me. Reasonable pricing to access content stopped for me for several years tho. Fuck you, Zaslav.

@XeryBlox The first thing I would pirate would be a hacked version of Firefox that had ad-blockers in it.

If I can't get that then I'd think about abandoning the web for Gemini.

You don't even need a hacked version. Just use an older version. Besides, Firefox is open source, I'm sure someone would fork off an adblock allowed version.

It would just bring back street crime and physical boosting and robbery. Same thing for blocking porn.... all the creepy 70/80/90s shit would come back...

I really hate ads, too. But I don't think I would be turning to street crime because of them.

Idk I guess I mean like boosted vendors. In 90s and early 00 I used to go to expos or even certain street vendors and they would have boosted or ripped movies and software.

And in terms of porn I mean sex spots scattered around cities and towns.

But why would this happen because of ads?

I don't see this direct link between adblockers and being able to pirate stuff.

"OH they put ads everywhere and won't let me hide them? Looks like it's time for me to become a domestic terrorist"

@XeryBlox most people who pirate a lot have automated setups that auto download every. The software stack that's commonly used is *Arr.

Sonarr for TV, Radarr for movies and lidarr for music.

There are also no ads when you go to the trackers directly via the API. Same for usenet indexers

I mean, there are still private, adfree trackers and things and I've been pirating before even Napster was a thing and the Internet was rife with malicious ads and popups. If anything, I'd pirate harder out of spite.

Even if they do remove them from the official stores, you can always go straight to the source and sideload it.

Many of us was already a pirate before Mozilla, Google and adblocks were created.

yes, if pirating were more of a pain in the ass because of ads, I would still do it.

Not much of a pirate, but I do like blocking ads. In that situation, here are some browsers I believe would still have ad blocking capabilities.

Firefox-based browsers:

  • Librewolf (privacy-focused; comes with uBlock Origin)

  • Tor (don't know much about it, but it probably would have ad blocking still)

Chromium-based:

  • Vivaldi (it appears they have built-in ad blocking; closed source though)

  • Bromite (mobile; not sure if still continued)

I would just use an /etc/hosts blocklist for adblock. Impossible for that to go away as long as ads are served over the internet