A friend just pointed out:
"ADHD creates impulse control issues and, consequently, advertising takes advantage of a disability. Ergo, ad blockers are assistive devices and interfering with their operation for commercial gain constitutes a willful violation of the ADA."
Let’s do this.
@tek OMG YES THIS PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE.
@tek
YES! this is a huge issue for me. ADHD diagnosis escalated my exhausted annoyance at flashing ads and wiggling UI elements, up to an indignant outrage at the arrogant robbery of my precious limited attention. it very literally impairs my ability to function with digital interfaces — and i'm an information technologist! i can't imagine surviving these days without uBlock Origin's element zapper rules.
@tek
I've been calling advertising a form of psychological warfare for years. Can we get advertising executives and executives of ad-funded big tech charged with crimes against humanity and tried in the ICC?
It's too bad you can't try a corporation and give it the death sentence, because there's a good case to be made for doing that to advertising companies, including Google and Facebook.