You're viewing old version number 13. - Current version
Ghostery and website tracking, etc.
Jul 4, 2014 - PandoDaily - I just installed a tool which shows how popular websites are spying on me. The results are horrifying
When JavaScript is disabled, a website, especially a media-based site, loads considerably quicker. Instead of taking several seconds to load when JavaScript is enabled, the site will load in under a second with JavaScript disabled. And as long as the content of the article is displayed, that's all the matters.
If the JavaScript was used only to help the user, that would be okay. But a lot of the crap is ad-based, tracking-based, etc. Cruft.
Some of the JavaScript, however, is meant to improve the user experience, but too many sites are bogging themselves down with trying to create a native app-like experience in the browser. So on older machines, the heavy JavaScript sites use more CPU.
From the PandoDaily article:
What I didn’t know is how absolutely out of control the number of trackers on popular sites has become. It’s actually horrifying.Earlier today I met with an entrepreneur who is working on some neat-sounding software that allows us to improve our “related articles” recommendations for readers. To prove how many different sites already use his software, he showed me the results from a browser extension called Ghostery which shows which trackers are embedded in any given page.
Every site he visited contained at least one piece of tracking code, but some showed dozens. That’s dozens of different companies, or divisions of companies, watching you every time you visit a single web page. Those creepy ads that follow you from site to site, reminding you about products you once looked at? Yeah — that’s one tracker. Imagine how much a dozen trackers know about you.
https://www.ghostery.com/en/ - browser plug-in.
The browser that I use the most on my laptop is Chrome.
When I want to surf the web with JavaScript disabled, I use Firefox, since I have JavaScript disabled globally in the browser.
In Chrome, I have rules setup to disable JavaScript for a few sites, such as the ToledoBlade.com.
Reading the Blade website with JavaScripe enabled is a horrible experience. The Blade uses too many slide-down and slide-in adds. When copying text, it adds that "read more" crap to the copied text like many media sites do.
The Toledo Blade website will take several seconds to load with JavaScript enabled, even for an article page. It's terrible. It's piggish and bloated. But an article page will load nearly instantly with JavaScript disabled. It's a much better experience.
Maybe media sites should offer paying customers a version of their site without all the JavaScript crap. It might be worth a subscription fee if the org produced a pleasant reading experience. One possible design idea for an article page, read by a paying customer.
Jul 7, 2014 - Ghostery findings for the Toledo Blade home page with JavaScript enabled (23 findings):
- Adify - Advertising
- Advertising.com - Advertising
- BlueKai - Beacons
- Casale Media - Advertising
- ChartBeat - Analytics
- Criteo - Advertising
- Dotomi - Beacons
- DoubleClick - Advertising
- Facebook Connect - Widgets, Social
- Google Adsense - Advertising
- Google AdWords Conversion - Advertising
- Google Analytics - Analytics, Analytics
- Google+ Platform - Widgets, Social
- Lotame - Beacons, Analytics, Lead Management
- MediaMath - Advertising
- Pinterest - Widgets, Social
- Press+ - Widgets, Affiliate Marketing
- Quantcast - Advertising
- Rubicon - Advertising
- ScoreCard Research Beacon - Beacons, Analytics
- Turn - Advertising, Affiliate Marketing, Lead Management
- Twitter Button - Widgets, Social
- Zedo - Advertising
On an article page at one of the Blade's subsites, such as this,
http://www.ourtownperrysburg.com/local/2014/07/07/Perrysburg-expands-its-Dixie-Hwy-intersection.html
Ghostery detected 14 trackers.
For this Blade article:
http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2014/07/07/Police-think-2-shootings-hours-apart-are-related.html
Ghostery detected 34 trackers!! Again, this is probably a major reason why an article page takes so long to load when JavaScript is enabled. Here are the 34 trackers or findings from Ghostery:
- Adify - Advertising
- AdInterax - Advertising
- Advertising.com - Advertising
- Adzerk - Advertising
- AppNexus - Advertising
- BlueKai - Beacons
- ChartBeat - Analytics
- Content.ad - Beacons
- Criteo - Advertising
- DoubleClick - Advertising
- Facebook Connect - Widgets, Social
- Facebook Social Plugins - Widgets, Social
- Google Adsense - Advertising
- Google AdWords Conversion - Advertising
- Google Analytics - Analytics, Analytics
- Google+ Platform - Widgets, Social
- Lotame - Beacons, Analytics, Lead Management
- MediaMath - Advertising
- Newsmax - Widgets
- OpenX - Advertising
- Pinterest - Widgets, Social
- Po.st - Widgets
- Press+ - Widgets, Affiliate Marketing
- PubMatic - Advertising
- PulsePoint - Advertising
- Quantcast - Advertising
- RadiumOne - Beacons, Behavior Tracking
- Rubicon - Advertising
- RUN - Advertising
- Sailthru Horizon - Beacons
- ScoreCard Research Beacon - Beacons, Analytics
- Simpli.fi - Advertising, Segment Data, Behavior Tracking
- Twitter Button - Widgets, Social
- Zedo - Advertising
This section:
http://www.toledoblade.com/news
26 Ghostery findings.
The findings vary for some reason. This page:
http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2014/07/07/Coroner-April-death-ruled-a-homicide.html
has 31 findings.
Reloading this one again with JavaScript still enabled:
http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2014/07/07/Police-think-2-shootings-hours-apart-are-related.html
31 findings by Ghostery. What happened to the other 3? Maybe when visiting page for the first time, additional trackers are loaded.
Reloading the above page again, produces 33 findings or trackers by Ghostery.
Anyway, it's over 30 findings, and it takes at least 15 seconds for the page to load completely. And then once loaded, annoying ads, quite large and intrusive, will drift down from the top and/or from the left side, covering content.
Now with JavaScript disabled, this page:
http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2014/07/07/Police-think-2-shootings-hours-apart-are-related.html
fully loads in one second or less, and Ghostery detects only one item:
- Quantcast - Advertising
How to disable JavaScript in Chrome browser:
(pulldown menu) -> settings
-> show advanced settings
-> privacy
-> content settings
-> (pop-up menu)
-> Do not allow any site to run JavaScript
-> Done
To disable JavaScript in Chrome for a specific website, do the following:
- click the three-lined icon in the upper right corner of the browser.
- near the bottom of the menu, click "Settings."
- scroll to the bottom and click "Show advanced settings."
- underneath "Privacy," click "Content Settings."
- underneath "JavaScript," leave the radio button clicked for "Allow all sites to run JavaScript (recommended)" and click the button for "Manage exceptions."
- in the text input field for "Hostname pattern," add this text:
[*.]toledoblade.com
and then select "Block" from the dropdown. - click "Done."
- click "Done" again.
- close "Settings" browser tab.
- reload an article page or visit the website.
No more pop-ups. No more slide overs. You won't be able read Facebook comments on article pages, but I don't care about those anyway.
But the biggest change will be in page load speed. Article pages will load much faster without the bloated JavaScript. This I like.
If you want JavaScript working, try visiting their mobile site at http://m.toledoblade.com which is simpler and much less cluttered. It loads faster.
From JR's : articles
1103 words - 7534 chars
- 6 min read
created on
updated on
- #
source
- versions
Related articles
Media websites, JavaScript bloat, tracking, Ghostery monitoring - Aug 21, 2015
ContentEditable web browser editors - Aug 12, 2015
Tt post about article design - mon, sep 8 and tue, sep 9, 2015 - Sep 09, 2015
Tt post mon, jun 6, 2016 - a - Jun 06, 2016
Stories to Read - Mon, Aug 4, 2014 - Aug 04, 2014
more >>