Chrome Ad Filtering In Action: The first examples of ads being blocked on sites with intrusive ads
Chrome Ad Filtering In Action

Chrome Ad Filtering In Action: The first examples of ads being blocked on sites with intrusive ads

On February 15, 2018, Chrome's local advertising filtering was launched. Google announced this move last year and it certainly attracted most site owners' attention (especially driven by ads). But let's face it, and the condition of the ad is losing control. The main Google algorithm writes about aggressive, deceptive and fraudulent statements as many times as I've seen while analyzing updates. So any measure of Google's motion in the right direction (whether Chrome's ad filtering is targeted only for the most useless advertising types across desktop and mobile).


When it comes to sites that run intrusive ads on D-Day 2/15/18, most people are wondering how the ad filtering will appear in the forest. We've provided examples from Google, but no one has seen it yet.


I've collected a list of sites that violate Better Advertisements Standards based on various types of advertising that may violate site infringement. In the past few months, my list has grown significantly. So I tested those sites immediately after I broke on Don 2/15. Google is continually releasing Google add a filter, as documented in the recent New York Times article. As of this morning, I did not see filters in the stable version of Chrome on sites that are in violation. Until I got little help from Canary.


Chrome Canary - Ad Blocking is active

Many people do not know about Chrome Canary, but it's a version of Chrome that provides new features that are not in Chrome's stable release. So you can see what to do by testing in the Chrome Connery. By the way, there is a desktop and mobile version.


In Chrome Connery, there is a choice to turn on advertising filtering in the browser's desktop and mobile versions. When activated, Coronary Ads will remove the Better Etheral Standards sites that are infringing (sites that use only the most unofficial advertisements). Well, I've tested some sites on my list this morning and see them blocking in advertising.


Below, both desktop and mobile have provided two examples of this work. It's important to understand that desktop and mobile experiences are specially organized. So the site may be a violation on the desktop, but mobile (or vice versa).


I plan to update this post over time with more examples of sites affected by Chrome's Ad Filter. I'll give you more details when Chrome's stable version starts filtering ads.


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