Who will win the ongoing battle between Facebook and Adblock Plus? The outcome will have sweeping ramifications for programmatic advertising, but it isn’t predictable.
We wrote last week of the opening salvos in this war, with Facebook
announcing they will block all ad blockers, but particularly Adblock Plus, the German-based leader. ABP quickly appealed to the open source community for a way to block Facebook’s fix, and we
are now in a series of amusing skirmishes between the two, as open source software guys come up with new ways to stymie Facebook, or Farcebook, as ABP minions call it.
If I had to
bet, I would say that Facebook will lose the propaganda war, even if they ultimately prevail with blocking ABP. Why? The answer is rooted more in sociology than in algorithms.
First, the Facebook user is overwhelmingly young. Of the over 1.71 billion monthly active Facebook users, about 30% are in that key demographic, 25-34. Note that this 30% adds up to about
600 million users in that demo, almost twice the population of the U.S. One estimate claims that 50% of 18-24 year-olds go on Facebook when they wake up, according to the Social Skinny.
That is a lot of young people. And many of today’s college and high school kids are the same young idealists who flocked to the Bernie Sanders bandwagon. They distrust big
corporations, and had no trouble with the Socialist label attached to their candidate. In any conflict between a big corporate entity like Facebook, and a young, seemingly altruistic outfit like ABP,
many younger users will side with the ad blockers. Moreover, using an ad blocker is “cool,” the kind of thing that young people admire. ABP plays this up big.
ABP
Knows Its Young Audience
The ABP spokesman is not some uptight, accented German, but an affable young American named Ben Williams, who blogs seemingly righteous stuff about freedom and
choice. His latest blog post is perfectly aimed. ABP knows its young audience: “We clearly feel like giving users control of their Internet experience is better than taking it away, and
it’s disheartening that a company like Facebook would abuse everyone’s experience of their site by forcing that experience into a one-size-fits-all, see-the-ads-or-else tube. The Internet
just doesn’t work that way. At least it shouldn’t.”
Even conservative outlets like the Wall Street Journal seem to back up this conclusion, with its
headline, “Facebook Will Force Advertising on Ad Blocking Users.” One can almost hear Ben Williams echoing, “Exactly.”
Facebook and others can counter all
they want that ABP’s whitelisting practices amount to blackmail, that argument doesn’t reach most youth, who think Facebook makes obscene profits anyway.
By contrast,
Facebook’s arguments sound like corporate spiel because it is corporate spiel. On August 9, it posted this: “For the past few years at Facebook we’ve worked to better understand
people’s concerns with online ads. What we’ve heard is that people don’t like to see ads that are irrelevant to them or that disrupt or break their experience. People also want to
have control over the kinds of ads they see. As a result of what we’ve learned, we’ve introduced tools to help people control their experience, improved how we decide which ads to show and
created new ad formats that complement, rather than detract from, people’s experience online.”
Notice how this concedes half the points made by ad blockers, that some
ads are irrelevant or disruptive? Telling young people that Facebook offers good, rather than bad ads? Will that work? Remember that ABP itself wants to appoint a committee that will decide on
acceptable ads, not let Facebook do it. It may be perfectly obvious to any MediaPost reader that there would be no Facebook without some kind of ad revenue, but that doesn’t matter to the young
audience that has racked up 300 million Adblock Plus downloads.
We downloaded ABP software last week, and have been using it since, with a Safari browser. It took about 30
seconds.
Sticking It To Corporate America
This comes down to an almost existential question that all MediaPost readers should ask themselves. We work in a world
supported by ads. We are writing about advertising, and we see it as a vital industry (if not the most popular one in America). At least Don Draper was cool, right? But, given the choice, would you
use an ad blocker if the thought occurred to you? Is your decision to not download one a statement in favor of our industry, or are you just lazy?
Hundreds of millions of Facebook
users have no qualms about disrupting Facebook’s revenue stream. As a matter of fact, it’s probably the safest, most legal way to stick it in the eye of corporate America, other than
shoplifting.
We think much of the publishing community does not understand what is going on here. In a bizarre piece, The New Yorker weighed in on this August 12. The point
seems to be that Facebook is moving against ABP now because it will give them a further huge advantage over most online publishers, who lack engineers who are good enough to foil the open source
community. This could have something to do with it, but we think it’s more about taking a stand now, before advertisers start voting with their feet. P&G told the WSJ recently
that it was going to cut back on Facebook advertising. That could have set off alarm bells.
The New Yorker itself, and Condé Nast in general, clearly lack the
resources to fight ABP. If you go to newyorker.com with an ad blocker, the slots for ads are replaced with magazine subscription links. That sounds like defeat to
me.
Online publishers want to believe that ABP will lose this war. We note Fortune’s piece
August 12, “Here's Why Facebook Is Always Going to Win the Ad-Blocking War.” The author claims that because Facebook has unlimited engineers and resources, they can make ads that look
precisely to an algorithm like Facebook content, and ABP and others won’t know what to block.
But if one compares Facebook’s resources, with the clever and seemingly
endless abilities of the open source community, which came up with a work-around for Facebook’s first effort in only a few hours, I am not so sure. Think of those clever hackers out there who
can access the DNC’s email and who knows what else. And then think about all those people you know who think Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are such big heroes. In that light, the inevitable
victory of Facebook is not so pre-determined.