Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by jazzypants 49 days ago
In 1999, hostile websites would pop up endless new windows full of advertisements that you were powerless to stop unless you simply held down "ALT+F4" or "CTRL+ALT+DEL". Part of Mozilla Firefox's appeal is that it came with a pop-up blocker. [0]

Do you know anything about the Browser Wars? People literally had to put up images telling you which browser to use if you wanted to actually experience their website the way it was intended. Otherwise, it was just broken. [1]

[0] https://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/19/business/as-consumers-rev... (sorry for the tracking code, but this is a "gift" article and it was the best source I could find on popup ads)

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_wars

2 comments

Hostile pages did that. Today, nearly every page has a dozen tracking scripts, starts off with a cookie popup, probably pops up a "please log in" or "please give me money" after you scroll half way down, still has ads that even more effectively mimic the site topic and design to trick you into clicking them, pops up a newsletter or cupon code popup if your cursor leaves the viewport, might be secretly running experiments on you by A/B testing titles, images or testimonials...

The assault on your attention is way worse these days, it's just (mostly) contained to the viewport.

In 1999, most websites were not hostile because they weren’t chasing diminishing returns from ad-tech companies. Most of the companies I worked with were trying direct revenue models getting people to buy things or subscribe directly, and the ad market paid a lot better for less obtrusive ads - the whole real-time bidding process to run arbitrary JavaScript was yet to come.

Now almost everyone has pressure to find new revenue streams and maximize income while Google and Facebook have sucked up most of the revenue, so you see more and sleazier ads everywhere and sites which rely on you reading or watching are on a much more aggressive treadmill trying to constantly give you new things to see ads on so the experience is more frenetic.

It feels not unlike how in the mid-20th century people left work at work when they went home and only extraordinary circumstances would result in phone calls home, etc. whereas in this century it’s just expected that everyone carries a smartphone and checks email/Slack. More efficient in some ways, for sure, but a lot of stress ground out of people for no extra compensation.