Yandex has added a ‘complaint’ button to its browser so users can flag obtrusive or low quality advertising rather than install ad blocking software.
The Russian developer says the use of ad blocking software on its platform has risen by a fifth in the past year as users become increasingly irritated by adverts.
Many use ad blockers because they find ads intrusive while others believe some creatives slow down system performance, use excessive amounts of data and reduce battery life, while others hold security fears. A number of advertising networks have been used to launch malvertising attacks in recent times.
Every time an advert is complained about, it will be hidden from the user and a report sent to Yandex, which will then use its machine learning algorithms to learn more about users and help advertisers create more effective campaigns.
The ‘complaint’ button will first arrive in the alpha version of the Android Yandex browser and there are plans to bring it to desktop and iOS too, the company confirmed to TechWeekEurope.
“People don’t hate online advertisements in general – it’s the bad ads that are annoying,” argued Roman Ivanov, head of projects at Yandex browser. “Ad blockers, however, block almost all ads indiscriminately, which negatively impacts good advertisers and website publishers. This, in turn, has a negative effect on web users.
“Our goal is to identify what type of advertisement is unacceptable for our users so that we can block it in the browser automatically. To achieve this we will be analysing ad blocking reports received from every single user who blocks an ad on our browser, using our pioneering AI-based technology.”
Facebook recently said it would override ad blockers, echoing the argument presented by Yandex. One of the most popular pieces of software, Adblock Plus, accepts payments from a number of companies for their adverts to be ‘whitelisted’ so creatives are only blocked if users dictate so in the settings.
Tesla retreats from pioneering gigacasting manufacturing process, amid cost cutting and challenges at EV giant
No skynet please. After the US, UK and France pledge human only control of nuclear…
Microsoft's AI investments continue in south east Asia, after investments in Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia, as…
New chapter for LastPass as it becomes an independent company to focus on cybersecurity, after…
US FCC seeks to ban Chinese telecom firms at centre of national security concerns from…
Two updates to Anthropic's AI chatbot Claude sees arrival of a new business-focused plan, as…