Companies increasingly aim to control how users interact with their content online, threatening user freedom. As more companies crack down on browser exten...
Unfortunately, no such payment network exists, or at least no such system is popular.
Adding that not all people can’t affort to pay a monthly fee, maybe to one or two newspaper, but it’s absurd tto create dozends of paid accounts to be informed. Worst in the case of research papers in some sites. That means that people have to pay a fee to dozends of sites or they remain ignorant abot important succeses in the world and maybe important informations for their studies.
I’m from Spain and it’s absurd for me to pay to Washington Post, NY Times and others for an ocasional consult an monthly fee. I’m an old retirée and need making money sudokus to reach the end of the month, paying already a lot of money, simply for the access to Internet. Fine for you when you can pay for every newspaper you visit for an information, but I have no regrets skipping the paywalls for an occasional piece of information.
make an account, enter personal info, and pay a monthly fee
be tracked across the Internet by advertisers, who’ll try to manipulate you into buying stuff
That’s a crappy set of options, so it’s no wonder people opt for ad blockers since both alternatives involve sharing personal information (which is likely to be exposed in a breach).
Instead of that, I want these choices:
microtransactions through my browser that pays for content I access (with a monthly cap)
privacy respecting ads served by my FOSS browser based on local browsing history (doesn’t talk to the Internet)
Advertisers still get relevant advertising, but they don’t get the personal information, just data about which ads were accessed due to which categories. Users could choose which sites to pay for directly, and which to pay for via ads, the only change is that privacy is preserved.
Adding that not all people can’t affort to pay a monthly fee, maybe to one or two newspaper, but it’s absurd tto create dozends of paid accounts to be informed. Worst in the case of research papers in some sites. That means that people have to pay a fee to dozends of sites or they remain ignorant abot important succeses in the world and maybe important informations for their studies. I’m from Spain and it’s absurd for me to pay to Washington Post, NY Times and others for an ocasional consult an monthly fee. I’m an old retirée and need making money sudokus to reach the end of the month, paying already a lot of money, simply for the access to Internet. Fine for you when you can pay for every newspaper you visit for an information, but I have no regrets skipping the paywalls for an occasional piece of information.
That’s totally fair.
That said, the current choices are:
That’s a crappy set of options, so it’s no wonder people opt for ad blockers since both alternatives involve sharing personal information (which is likely to be exposed in a breach).
Instead of that, I want these choices:
Advertisers still get relevant advertising, but they don’t get the personal information, just data about which ads were accessed due to which categories. Users could choose which sites to pay for directly, and which to pay for via ads, the only change is that privacy is preserved.