Use a PC. On mobile it's hopeless - on top of garbage scripts that sometimes lock up even a recent flagship phone, the service does aggressive lossy compression that's hard to work around. If someone uploads an image (whether PNG or JPG, doesn't matter) that has small details like text, forget about discerning them from the blurry mess imgur sends your way.
For single images, imgur will redirect from /<id>.png to /<id> which requires the ton of javascript (you see a message about javascript required to run). Just re-add the extension to the end of the url and you'll access the image directly.
Seeing these big sites with no ads is strange. CNN, NYPost, etc. This is going to be wildly expensive for Google.
Anyone internal know what's going on? We started seeing GAM not returning responses about an hour ago, yet their status page and accounts were silent till 10 minutes ago.
I've been using ad blockers for many years, so for me it's the opposite: it would be extremely strange and unsettling seeing any ads on my own devices at all.
I think some people are so annoyed or afraid of tech that once they’ve got something that at least somewhat works they avoid making any changes in fear that it’ll break their workflow.
Ads lower the barrier of entry to the web by paying for content. By blocking them and encouraging others to as well that on-ramp becomes weaker, motivating producers to pack more ads for what audience still sees them.
Funny thing though, I worked in ad-tech for ten years at a small player (outbrain). They're present on most major news sites around the world, which means I got to dig into the source of many of these sires. Easily 90% of their source was dedicated to serving ads or tracking behavior for campaigns. And we're talking a ton of code. It's like they're in an arms race with themselves where their site is an expensive nightmare to maintain so they add ads which makes their site an expensive nightmare so they add more ads.
yep... I've started loading pages I want to send to my mom with adblockers turned off just to check how bad they'll be because somehow despite turning them on every time I visit by the time I get back they have been turned back off...
- Lack of experience or awareness that running an ad blocker isn't something weird or niche, but is in fact basic hygiene when on-line.
- Sites that ask, demand, beg or cajole visitors into turning your ad blocker off, many of which provide detailed instructions aimed at non-technical people; your mom may have needed something from one of such sites, and didn't bother or remember to turn the adblocker back on. If I were to bet, I'd pick a link to an interesting article on a news site that employs this technique.
- Perhaps your mom uses one of those cashback extensions to get some money back when shopping on-line? They're somewhat popular and regularly advertised by vloggers and influencers. Disabling ad blocker is AFAIK necessary - for technical reasons - for the service to award you cashback.
My wife uses one of those cashback services, but we did some research on their inner workings and business model first, to be sure she's taking advantage of it, instead of being taken advantage of herself. And she follows a strict routine: she disables uBlock before visiting a participating e-commerce store, does the purchase, and re-enables it immediately afterwards.
I used to browse without one when I worked on an ad-supported site and had to implement and make sure they were working correctly. Gotta assume it's a similar situation here?
I worked at one of the top ad networks for a decade and blocked them the entire time. Would usually just open a separately configured browser window for testing.
Damn I tried turning off my adblock just to see but it's probably been years since I've seen those sites _with_ ads so I have no way to relate to this experience
Anecdotally it feels like all of these sites are super fast right now. I even reinstalled the heinous Weather Channel app and it’s working wonderfully. With ads that app is essentially unusable on an iPhone 14.
There are definitely a thousand people here more qualified on this stuff (I write Fortran lol) but I thought JavaScript was all asynchronous now? Shouldn’t the actually desired content load independently of the ads?
It's always weird when something like part of Google goes down. I just don't expect it because of how massive Google is and how much money they put into their site running reliably. I guess it's interesting to be reminded that Google can go down just like any other website, it's just a really big one.
I, for one, are caught red-handed on this. It is so weird that Google's money-maker has been down, especially that I never have remembered when was the last time it was down (maybe practically never?)
Would love to know why the title of this story was re-written to majorly soften it (it was the number 1 story when published as Google Ads are down worldwide)
“Ads down worldwide” was and is not accurate. The currently disclosed scope of this issue is Ad manager clients, which tend to be large publishers with significant direct ad sales.
I'm not sure where to divide the line. All Google properties still have ads on them, but despite using a vanilla Chrome I cannot get ads* outside of Google, so it is indeed larger than just large sites.
* Okay, I can get Taboola and Outbrain ads, is this counted for this discussion?
Taboola/Outbrain are the only major players that don’t run through Ad Manager (DFP) because they build their own stack from scratch outside of the standardized IAB formats. All others must kiss the ring and pay the toll to Google. Facebook bought and killed Atlas, it’s only credible competition.
For a full decade Google has own the display ad server wholly, Ad selling and buying tools for automated and manual transactions, the lions share of web analytics traffic, most of the display, video, mobile, and search inventory on the entire web, and first and last bid option on all auctions against their competitors. Don’t forget the myriad of ways they collect exclusive purchase, behavior, demographic, and location data with meaningless consent. All of that data is used to multiply the value of ad sales, and is otherwise unobtainable.
If you look at their business models abstractly, you’ll see what it looks like to have Horizontal and Vertical integration, regulatory capture, price control, and centralized censorship powers. The amount of influence and operational responsibility that Google has for various aspects of US government+military would shock most cynics.
If there is justice in this world, most of what they have been doing will soon be illegal and should have been the whole time. It’s a dangerous duopoly with all non FAANG publishers and tech fighting over the remaining 10% and still getting fabulously wealthy from it.
All of froth from the quarter trillion it makes each year has flowed into AI for at least a decade. It has all of the ingredients to have an exclusively owned AGI, and may have had one for several years already. I’m now well into the realm of speculation, but I submit that the AGI has or will have access to the worlds largest corpus of human knowledge along with intimate accounts of individual human behaviors. All to sell fucking ads.
Disclaimer: I was in Google Ads, but a long time ago, so this may be outdated. In particular, "Ad Manager" is not a term that means anything to me.
Nonetheless, there was:
AdWords (ads in Google Search, the big money maker, which stayed up, and I tried it),
Display Ads (which I guess was down), and
AFS (ads that appear on third party search pages, like Target or Walmart, or Google properties other than Search).
Display Ads (or DFP) are the blinky things everyone's complaining about: ads on third party pages other than search pages. I never really worked in that area so I don't know much about it.
If Search Ads stay up, the Google Money Machine is still running, just not on all cylinders.
"Ad Manager is not delivering ads for affected users" is definitely a reasonable title, I am also curious on why it was changed into a vaguer title (which is very likely a mod edit).
Google is soft-balling the impact of this, and I think the watered down title doesn't do it justice. Google's ad server is behind nearly 90% of all ads served outside of the walled gardens, and the ad server has been down now for 3 hours.
But because the ad server is a part of GAM, and their UI and reporting are still up, they can call it a partial outage.
Don't take for granted how many ad supported sites and services you use :)
I have a website with several writers that serves almost half a million monthly pageviews and we are entirely ad supported. The only reason my writers have jobs and we are able to provide the recipes and information that we provide is because of ads.
So many viewers, why not start asking for voluntary donations? You could dial back ads, and thereby tracking, to the same degree you receive donations. Over time see how far it goes.
This is naive. If you don't try, you never know for sure : )
But that easy retort aside, there are many creators, who live off of donations. And as a matter of fact, it also cannot be correct, because I count myself as "people" too and donated to several projects/creators.
We aren't a "project" and we aren't individual creators. It works okay for certain types of audiences, but does not work for my type of audience. I know my business model well and there is a reason none of my competitors ask for donations either - it doesn't work.
I like to think that at a certain point, more “hands” doesn’t help solve the issue faster (maybe even counter productive), so that in both circumstances the outages get the same amount of hands — the maximum.
P0, page everybody.
But their incident response planning and training is on point so there’s one incident commander and everyone doing individual tasks reports to them. I suspect not more than a dozen cooks are in the kitchen as it were. Any more and people would be getting in each other’s way.
I seem to recall that ads runs on one of the largest distributed MySQL instances on the planet. That’s probably the most complicated component at play here. Then again everything has to have active, secondary and tertiary so maybe it’s something upstream like dns dos protection or cdn.
> Google Cloud brought in $6.3 billion of revenue, a 35 percent year on year increase compared to Q2 2021’s $4.6 billion revenue. But the $858 million loss was 45 percent higher than the $591 million deficit recorded last year.
You might ask: "how is that possible, with those same margin-intensive prices that AWS and Azure use?" I have no clue. It makes no sense, given the prices they charge.
What is or isn't cloud is different at every company on top line but especially bottom line. For example how far down the stack are engineers still considered cloud when they are supporting both cloud and internal products? Investors are fine losing money on growing cloud and also love to see ad margins up? Then everyone is cloud.
I don't think salaries are the driving factor behind GCP's balance sheet, but that's just my opinion. I obviously can't wave a magic wand and find out for sure either, but my own back of the napkin math can't see that reasonably working out. They brought in billions of additional revenue, but their losses also increased.
Labor costs to keep all of these features/servers/infra running is expensive. Google is probably charging less due to competition from AWS/Azure/Oracle.
Similar to how Amazon.com is subsidized by AWS. GCP is subsidized by the ad biz
GCP revenue losses from being down are approximately lower bounded by (downtime in seconds * revenue per second). Their costs don't decrease from being down.
Interesting question. I probably would not, which might mean I would spend less time on the internet reading useless stuff and more time outside on my mountain bike.
Yes. But I wouldn't subscribe to "content" that is used as a minimum skeleton to hand ads on, and I include the google search engine in that definition. I'm happy to pay for something I value. Most web content I value at $0 and may browse opportunistically but I would never pay for it, including by looking at an ad or providing my email
Ads are an enabler of bad products. If things required a subscription, half the shit on the Internet would be gone and for good reason. Also, often you get ads anyway regardless of the subscription. This is a false dichotomy.
All newspapers/magazines, VHS/DVDs, cable TVs etc. were are 'subscription' in the sense you had to pay for them. Ads were still there. If paying a subscription for websites was normalized then soon enough they would as well be filled with ads.
There's a New Zealand Journalist, David Farrier (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Farrier) and I actually subscribe and pay a monthly fee to be able to view what he writes. I think he's really awesome (some will disagree) but I just like him. He also has a TV series on Netflix called Dark Tourist if you're able to see that.
He has a new movie out at the moment that I really want to see, but his last movie Tickled was _crazy_ like... Tiger King type craziness.
So yeah - if I know someone who actually puts in the work to give me quality output I'd pay for it. Just like I do now.
There is this concept of supporting people you like without them having to charge people. The more you can read upfront, the more you can make an impartial judgement if you actually like them. A lot of people subconsciously convince themselves that they like something just because they spent money on it. If I like a project or open source software that I use then I go support the developers. A lot of other types of arrangements are basically signing a contract waiving your rights before you've even had a chance to form an opinion.
The conventional wisdom is that offering paid subscribers ad free experiences poisons the well for advertisers. After all, it eliminates the people that have enough disposable income to pay a nominal fee!
Not sure how this translates to targeted ads. Would offering such a thing violate Google’s TOS?
Because advertisers pay more to reach people they know are willing to pay for stuff. It's whatever the opposite of a virtuous cycle is... a race to the bottom?
I've spent hundreds of hours of my life contributing to Wikipedia pages and may spend hundreds more on open source projects. Capitalism has made us label any not immediately self-serving as illogical. We are not homo economicus
It always amazes me being reminded that the majority (vast majority? _overwhelming_ majority?) of Internet users do not have ad-blocking. Bless their hearts for subsidizing so many sites for those of us who prefer not to live in a real-life manifestation of Idiocracy.
Is the link to a description of the problem, or it is just an example of a dead page? (Not sure if I’m getting a dead page because of their issue or because my ad blocker blocked it, haha).
From their recent 10Q for investors, they list a revenue of $7.8 billion for "Google Network" in revenue for the preceding 3 months before September 30, 2022 [1] There are 90 days in 3 months, so their revenue for a day is approximately
$7.8 billion / 90 days = ~$87 million/day
$87 million / 24 hours = ~$3.64 million/hour
$3.64 million / 60 minutes = ~$60,740 thousand/minute
$60,740 thousand / 60 seconds = ~$1,012/second
And, depending on their agreements with their advertising partners, they might be liable for some of the profits lost by their partners.
I don't think that's the right number to look at, given search ads aren't down. You probably want just the "Google Network" line item, which is about 1/6th of that number.
It doesn't look like it's affecting their search ads (or if it is, it's not fully down for them), so not the full advertising revenue of GOOG. But it's still likely tens of millions per hour.
Doesn't immediately solve the problem of all the SEO spam that exists out there. But in the long term it could. I guess that's what it'd take to make google search good again. For google to die...
Google does not want anyone remembering their service can go down.
Traditional “tech news” sites won’t cover this either, as it’ll bring attention to the ads that power their properties and may inadvertently encourage people to get ad-block, if they call out the presence of ads.
Either way, Google’s PR team will be cranking out some distractions shortly.
back when radio stations played records, record companies would pay DJ's to play specific songs or albums [1]. I was a scandal at the time. It's almost quaint now.
https://i.imgur.com/9n7HuLu.png