I recently came across this message on the accuweather website:
The ad removal pass is managed by Google Contributor. The main URL redirects to "https://contributor.google.com/v/beta", which indicates it is still in beta mode, even though the current version has been available since June 2017.
From the website:
Sites that use Contributor - not very many, so far.
I like the idea of being able to support sites in an easy per-page manner like that, even if I don't visit them very often. But I don't like that it would require staying logged into a Google account.
Please allow ads to display for AccuWeather.com, and help us keep our weather news free.
- Allow ads on AccuWeather.com
- Buy an ad removal pass
The ad removal pass is managed by Google Contributor. The main URL redirects to "https://contributor.google.com/v/beta", which indicates it is still in beta mode, even though the current version has been available since June 2017.
From the website:
Each time you visit a page without ads, a per-page fee is deducted from your pass to pay the creators of the website, after a small portion is kept by Google to cover the cost of running the service. The price per page is set by the creator of the site. [Currently one cent per page, for the accuweather site.]
When you visit a site that you have added to your Contributor pass all of the ads will be removed.
It even plays nicely with other browser extensions.
You load your pass with $5. When your balance drops below $1 it will top-up by $5 automatically.
How Contributor works
After you add a website to your Contributor pass, ads are removed whenever you access that site while signed in to your Google account from your browsers and devices.
You can apply your ad removal pass to additional participating sites at any time.
Sites that use Contributor - not very many, so far.
I like the idea of being able to support sites in an easy per-page manner like that, even if I don't visit them very often. But I don't like that it would require staying logged into a Google account.
no subject
Date: 2018-11-03 10:23 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2018-11-04 12:27 am (UTC)From:Oh, I found it: From this list, click the "Add to your pass" link for any site, and then on the next page, scroll down a little and under "How it works", it shows how much that site charges per page.
It also said that when you're signed up for it, you can check your account to see how much has been paid for each site.
Maybe that list isn't up to date. It doesn't include Popular Mechanics, which is one of the only two listed on the main page - I was wondering why only 2 are listed there.
Unsuccessfully tried to find an ad-pass link from the Popular Mechanics site. If a site is going to implement infinite scrolling, they shouldn't put informational stuff at the bottom of the page, where you can never reach it.
no subject
Date: 2018-11-08 09:21 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2018-11-08 03:03 pm (UTC)From:Thing is, I like the idea of buying an ad-pass or something similar that would work for multiple sites, not to get rid of ads (because I already have them blocked), but to support websites that I use regularly. It seems a fair exchange, as I *am* blocking ads that would otherwise give them revenue. But that particular site is not one I use regularly, and this ad-pass implementation requires being logged into Google, which makes it problematic for me.