On Thu, 30 Sep 2010, Liam R E Quin wrote: > Possibly, but then you don't get the ads... which, like it or not, are > funding an awful lot of Web sites.
The business model of web site owners shouldn't be our concern, otherwise we should also stop using FOSS since it's all lost sales for proprietary software and we should stop reading news online since it hurts newspaper sales, etc. > There's always the myth that Linux users have no money, and/or just want > things without paying for them... It has nothing to do with money, it's about blocking annoying flashing ads, pop-overs, pop-unders, user-tracking scripts, etc. > Better to make AdBlock scripts easy to install (e.g. via > MageiaControlCentre?), and maybe include them (so no download needed) > but not enabled. Ok, we could keep it disabled by default, but it should be installed so that anyone can easily enable it, if desired. On the other hand we should keep the following two options in Firefox DISABLED by default, since they are nothing but Google tracking devices disguised as security features: Preferences>Security: - Tell me if the site I'm visiting is a suspected attack site - Tell me if the site I'm visiting is a suspected forgery With these two options enabled, Firefox contacts a Google DB for every site you visit, telling Google the site you are visiting (Google claims they don't use this info to track users, but given Google's attitude to privacy, I do not believe their claim at all). Also these two options are really meant to protect Windows users, on Linux they are fairly useless from a security POV.