It garbles advertisers’ data as a result, but you must disable uBlock Origin to run it; they can’t work simultaneously. I recently moved to it and, so far, am never looking back!

  • zecg@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    That’s the stupidest thing I’ve heard, you’d have to be deranged to want an extension clicking random shit.

    Edit: I’ve actually read it now and while not so bad, I still wouldn’t use this on a computer that has my stuff on it.

    • shneancy@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      it doesn’t actually click on stuff. it “clicks” so that the advertisers’ and your digital footprint’s statistics get messed up, but you never see the results of the clicking, nothing pops up, nothing gets downloaded

      • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        It also adds noise to the site metrics and recommendation algorithm making them less valuable overall.

        It’s like the application that will watermark images with digital noise designed to throw off AI training that uses that image.

        You’re no longer a user who is able to be profiled (because you ‘like’ things completely at random). If everyone was using a plugin like this then advertisers wouldn’t be able to serve targeted content because they wouldn’t know what content types work best for each user because every user clicks ads randomly and so there is no detectable signal, just noise.

        You get the same effect, but reduced, if less people are using it.

        In addition, if half of the users on a website are using adblockers and suddenly those users start clicking ads, then it costs twice as much to advertise while not providing any additional customers which makes spending money on web advertisement less attractive.