Brave blocks third-party ads and trackers (which are not only harmful to users, but often make up more than 50% of all data loaded).
Brave is testing an optional digital advertising model which operates via local (on the user's device) machine-learning to match ads. If a user opts into this component, they will earn up to 70% of the ad revenue.
In the future we will offer publishers (websites) the ability to partner, permitting Brave to display ads on their pages. In this arrangement, publishers will receive 70% of the ad-revenue (far better deal than what most see today), and users will receive 15% for their attention.
In either model, the user must first consent to see ads.
I'm not sure how that post is misleading. And your responses are either evasive or does not contradict what is originally being claimed.
>Brave blocks third-party ads and trackers (which are not only harmful to users, but often make up more than 50% of all data loaded).
Considering "replacing" ads involve removing the original ones, I'm not sure how this this disproves mswift42's post
>Brave is testing an optional digital advertising model which operates via local (on the user's device) machine-learning to match ads. If a user opts into this component, they will earn up to 70% of the ad revenue.
>In the future we will offer publishers (websites) the ability to partner, permitting Brave to display ads on their pages. In this arrangement, publishers will receive 70% of the ad-revenue (far better deal than what most see today), and users will receive 15% for their attention.
There's still 30% and 15% left, respectively in those examples. Is brave taking any % of that? if so, they're making money off of replaced ads.
>In either model, the user must first consent to see ads.
I fail to see how consent is relevant to a post about what Brave's business model is, especially one that's making a statement without any moral judgement.
Brave blocks third-party ads and trackers (which are not only harmful to users, but often make up more than 50% of all data loaded).
Brave is testing an optional digital advertising model which operates via local (on the user's device) machine-learning to match ads. If a user opts into this component, they will earn up to 70% of the ad revenue.
In the future we will offer publishers (websites) the ability to partner, permitting Brave to display ads on their pages. In this arrangement, publishers will receive 70% of the ad-revenue (far better deal than what most see today), and users will receive 15% for their attention.
In either model, the user must first consent to see ads.
Sampson Developer Brave Software