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4 answers

Yes, I did notice that. They are getting better at that.

2007-11-08 07:12:37 · answer #1 · answered by Tony M 7 · 1 0

Just knowing something as simple as a website visitor's location is crucial for success, and customers are increasingly demanding enhanced targeting of their campaigns in order to reduce wasted impressions and deliver measurable results. That’s why top players including renowned websites, online advertising networks and savvy digital marketers use something by a company called Digital Element; Digital Element's industry-leading IP Intelligence to geotarget their ads to the city-level (IP city) worldwide and serve ads to visitors based on more than a dozen other parameters such as visitor's connection type, ISP, domain name, company name, home or business and more. So follow the leaders and get the de facto IP Intelligence data necessary to target campaigns in new ways, such as serving rich streaming video ads only to those users with a high-speed connection or offering a competitive ad to a user, based on their domain or company name.

2007-11-08 06:55:13 · answer #2 · answered by Sri 4 · 0 0

No, I use FireFox, have disabled Java 'by default' (it's enabled only for some specific pages) and installed 3 or 4 different "ad blockers" ..

I have a 'generic' one that is similar to email spam blocker (it gets an updated list of ad servers every day and automatically blocks everything from that source ...

However the best one allows me to click on an advert and select "block everything from this source" or "always block this frame" ..

2007-11-08 07:20:31 · answer #3 · answered by Steve B 7 · 0 0

perhaps you can try and have some fun and confuse them everynow again.

But in the mean time clean your cookies regularly.

2007-11-08 13:23:27 · answer #4 · answered by ipodfloppy 6 · 0 0

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