May the Lord Bless Ad Filtering Software

Part of my lingering responsibilities for Feministe is putting together their new ad content. This has been a personal challenge — because if you surf the internet like I do the only time you click on an ad is on accident. It is a necessary evil, seeing that the hosting service was becoming increasingly unreliable and the alternative options for hosting are incredibly expensive. After several long discussions about how to monetize the site, I opted for increased BlogAds exposure and the addition of Google Adsense.

I have immense respect for BlogAds because they allow people to finance what they love to do, and additionally the host and the advertiser filter the ad content based on their own preferences, but Google Adsense seems to be more of a crapshoot. Google’s keyword advertising pulls keywords from the blog and pairs them with “matching” advertisements, some of which are really disappointing.

Tonight while optimizing the ad content and filtering inappropriate ad material, I discovered a few things:

One of the things that makes ad hosting so difficult is that advertising aims to hit the most common denominator, which means many advertisers rely on stereotypes and generalizations to hit their targets. This is obviously problematic on a site professing anti-racist and anti-sexist politics. The thing that makes it that much more difficult online is that the web-savvy can play the computerized system to their own advantage and thereby put gravestone advertising on all blog posts related to abortion on a pro-choice, feminist website. Which wastes my damned time.

3 Responses to “May the Lord Bless Ad Filtering Software”


  1. 1 Kyso K Feb 12th, 2008 at 9:39 pm

    I dunno, I for one still get a lot of enjoyment out of looking at the ads on Pandagon. At least I know immediately not to click them, whereas some ads from appropriately credentialed lefty sources trick me into clicking them, and I usually end up irritated.

  2. 2 Anne Feb 13th, 2008 at 12:55 am

    Ads? What ads?

  3. 3 r@d@r Feb 13th, 2008 at 2:47 pm

    your use of the colloquial “on accident” rather than the more formal “by accident” warms my heart. it reminds me of things i used to do on purpose to make my mom (who was a linguist) upset.

    i am amazed, and glad, to hear that there is actual ad filtering going on. of course, i may be the minority in this viewpoint, but nearly all adsense/blogads/similar content is anathema to me - it frequently crashes my browser, and sometimes my computer.

    but i don’t wish to appear to complain about its presence - i know that “blogging isn’t free”. thanks for all your hard work.

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