
Google has revealed that the ad blocker it has
been planning to build into Chrome will go live in February.
The tool will
automatically prevent several “annoying” and “intrusive” types of ads from
appearing online, on both mobile and desktop.

It should vastly
improve the web browsing experience, and force website operators to clean up
their act.
Google has now revealed that the ad
blocker will start working on 15 February 2018.
It won’t target all ad
types, instead focusing on those that the Coalition for Better Ads group considers
to be unacceptable.
“The Coalition’s
extensive consumer research identified the following types of desktop ad
experiences beneath the Better Ads Standard: pop-up ads, auto-play video ads
with sound, prestitial ads [those that block the content you actually want to
access by loading first] with countdown and large sticky ads,” the group wrote this week.
“For the mobile web
environment, the following types of ad experiences fell beneath the Better Ads
Standard: pop-up ads, prestitial ads, and ads with density greater than 30%,
flashing animated ads, auto-play video ads with sound, poststitial ads with
countdown, full-screen scroll over ads, and large sticky ads.”

Google, which makes the vast majority of its revenue
from advertising, has said its ad blocker will penalize non-compliant ads even
if they’re “owned or served” by the company.
It has also confirmed
that Chrome will remove all ads from sites that fail to meet the Coalition for
Better Ads’ standards for more than 30 days.
Sites can find out if their ads are compliant by
using the Ad Experience Report, which is designed to help them spot and
fix issues.
“These frustrating
experiences can lead some people to block all ads – taking a big toll on the
content creators, journalists, web developers and videographers who depend on
ads to fund their content creation,” Google wrote in June, explaining its
plans.
However, though a
dedicated ad blocker will almost certainly improve the web browsing experience,
the move has also raised fears that Google, which is a member of the Coalition
for Better Ads, could be about to gain a lot more control over advertising.
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