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  • Thousands of people are uninstalling ad blockers after YouTube's big crackdown

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    • 2 comments
    • 440 views
    • 2 minutes

    Ad blocking companies say that YouTube's changes are hurting them.

     

    YouTube’s crackdown on ad blockers is having an impact beyond YouTube. Multiple ad blocking apps claim that thousands of people have uninstalled their products since YouTube started showing warnings to people attempting to watch videos with ad blockers enabled.

     

    One of the companies, AdGuard, told Wired that more than 11,000 people have uninstalled its Chrome extension each day since October 9, compared to 6,000 uninstallations per day before YouTube implemented the change. On October 18, 52,000 people uninstalled AdGuard, the company’s CTO Andrey Meshkov told Wired. However, installations of AdGuard’s paid version, which YouTube’s crackdown doesn’t affect, went up.

     

    Another ad blocking company, Ghostery, said that its usage was flat in October as it experienced three to five times the daily number of installs as well as uninstalls. Notably, the company said that more than 90 percent of its users who completed a survey about why they uninstalled the product said they did so because the tool no longer worked with YouTube.

     

    Since YouTube’s crackdown only seems to affect people who access its website through Chrome on laptops and desktops, some users also tried to use other browsers as a workaround. Ghostery told Wired that its installations of Microsoft’s Edge browser went up by 30 percent in October compared to September.

     

    YouTube ads are increasingly contributing more to Google’s overall revenue. The company sold more than $22 billion in ads on the platform from the beginning of this year through September. But the streaming platform is also trying to push more people to pay for YouTube Premium, which gets rid of ads, lets people download videos, stream videos in higher quality and access YouTube Music. Earlier this year, the company bumped up YouTube Premium’s pricing by $2 to $14 a month.

     

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    "Since YouTube’s crackdown only seems to affect people who access its website through Chrome on laptops and desktops"

     

    They haven't done much research, affects some other browsers and devices too. Safari on iPad for a start.

     

    People give up too easily, there's several workarounds that don't involve disabling adblockers or paying Google's ransomware demand for YouTube Premium.

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    Wonder what YOUTUBE would do if everyone turned round and said "can't use my adblocker, not using youtube.." and then all the billions of users just STOPPED.. how much money would youtube make then if 0 people are using it..

    Ads don't bother me.. i only use youtube to watch > the 10 most pirated movies.. trailers or the other one.. the new movies coming out in 2024..

    You want youtube to stop the ad's DONT USE IT.

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