ThunderCavalier said:
... Am I the only one that doesn't get all of the malware ads everyone keeps saying they get?
That or you're just lucky and didn't get hit by it. Even with my legitimate browsing (IE: No Pronz) I was served a milicious advertisement from a sidebar on a machinima site as well as one from Gamespot. Both of these I reported, but that was enough for me to want to clamp down on the whole issue. I'd much rather be safe than sorry when it comes to infections and vetting scripts is part of the whole case.
That said, I do want to support content I like, and part of that rolls into paying for the subscription I have on The Escapist. While it's a modicum amount of money once it's all split, I get to view the site without ads and as far as I can tell there's no qualms with that since I'm paying for the content I'm viewing. (Safe to say that overall Jimquisition is the reason I'm continuing to pay here.)
Other sites are a different story, and I white-list on a case-by-case basis. If I like the content and feel the content creator has done a sufficient job to earn some money (because let's face it, with the landslide of content on Youtube, we have the Steam Early Access problem there as well) I'll white-list the page enough to be served the advertisements provided they follow a few rules.
1)Advertisements cannot be longer (or bigger) than the original piece of content I am there to read or view.
2)Advertisements that are image-based SHOULD NOT automatically push audio.
3)Advertisements that cause a flag for any security reason will result in being blocked once more for the entire domain.
I understand the need for advertising revenue and I understand the frustration that has to be there for the guys that are responsible for making sure everyone gets paid, but ultimately the advertisers are the ones that have damaged their own business model by being 100% TOO DAMNED GREEDY and being unable to audit their security practices. Advertisers pushed too hard and not only annoyed users but put their systems at risk. Users then decided to defend themselves by blocking potential scripts and content that was a known source of difficulty.