Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Has Tough Chance Against Ad Blockers: Indian-Origin Scientist

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Aug, 2016 11:01 AM
    A team of researchers who include an Indian-origin scientist has created an experimental ad that proves that Facebook cannot win against ad blockers on its platform.
     
    The social media giant last week said that it would make its ads indistinguishable from regular posts and hence impossible to block. 
     
    But soon, the developers of leading adblocking company Adblock Plus released an update which enabled the tool to continue blocking Facebook ads. 
     
    Now, Assistant Professor Arvind Narayanan and undergraduate Grant Storey from Princeton University have created an experimental ad "highlighter" for the Chrome browser to prove that Facebook's effort may not yield desired results. 
     
    "When you have 'Facebook Ad Highlighter' installed, ads in the News Feed are grayed out and written over with the words 'THIS IS AN AD'," said a report in MIT Technology Review.
     
    According to the Princeton team, Facebook can't prevent their experimental add-on for the Chrome browser graying out ads in the News Feed.
     
     
    “What's happening here is that Facebook's HTML code for ads has slight differences from the code for regular posts, so that Facebook can keep things straight for its own internal purposes,” posted Narayanan in a blog. 
     
    “But because of the open nature of the web, Facebook is forced to expose these differences to the browser and to extensions such as Adblock Plus. The line of code above allows Adblock Plus to distinguish the two categories by exploiting those differences,” he added.
     
    The “Facebook Ad Highlighter” looks at the parts of the Web page that are visible to humans.
     
    “We've created a prototype tool that detects Facebook ads without relying on hidden HTML code to distinguish them,” Narayanan wrote.
     
    “This is a simple proof of concept but the detection method could easily be made much more robust without incurring a performance penalty,” he added. 
     
    Facebook also asked its users to identify which ads they do not like to allow the firm to collect in-depth information for marketers.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    By 2040, 3D printed drone that heals itself, destroys missiles

    By 2040, 3D printed drone that heals itself, destroys missiles
    Imagine a powerful drone that heals itself, divides into smaller ones or knocks out missiles with direct energy.

    By 2040, 3D printed drone that heals itself, destroys missiles

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study
    US privacy group Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) has filed a formal complaint with the Federate Trade Commission (FTC) over Facebook's use of user data in its "emotion contagion" study.

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?
    Would you swap your close friend for a smartphone? For 17 percent of Americans, they would prefer losing a best friend rather having their devices taken away.

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study
    A scientific journal that published the Facebook study about how emotions spread across social networks has defended its decision to publish the research.

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study
    Have you noticed a drastic change in the behaviour of your hubby towards you since the day he joined Twitter? It is time to take cognizance of how much time he is spending on the micro-blogging site.

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you
    If you log on to your Facebook account while at work, you have now less reason to be apprehensive as researchers have found that top managers are the ones who use private social media most for personal purposes during working hours.

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you