1,250 posts
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Post by joem on Aug 26, 2017 21:40:55 GMT
...so why are many websites insisting you have to register on them even if all you want to do is have a browse? Pathetic really.
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3,578 posts
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Post by showgirl on Aug 27, 2017 3:17:21 GMT
Presumably in the hope of selling stuff to you or selling on your data - or both?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 27, 2017 5:36:24 GMT
That annoys the hell out of me. I think part of it is so they can boast to advertisers about how many members they have while keeping quiet about how many registered for one visit and never came back. I also hate sites that allow you to see the content but fill a large part of the screen with a "register to keep up to date with our site" form, which never achieves the effect they want because it means I'll try to avoid their site whenever I can.
Another thing that annoys me is when you search for something using your favourite search engine and it gives you a link to the page you want, but when you try to follow that link the site redirects you to its main page so it can show you some special offers or features and then forces you to try to search again to locate the page you wanted to see.
A lot of websites seem to think they have control over their visitors as if they'd just walked into a physical shop, but what they don't take into account is that there are many other similar websites and those sites are only a click of the mouse away. If they throw any obstruction into my path that is going to take me more than a couple of seconds to pass then it's quicker for me to get past it by going to a rival site.
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Post by Jan on Aug 27, 2017 9:32:11 GMT
...so why are many websites insisting you have to register on them even if all you want to do is have a browse? Pathetic really. Because nothing on the internet is free but users have got it into their heads that it should be so providers have to find ways of making it look as if it is. Why should you be able to browse something for free that has cost someone else something to provide ?
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950 posts
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Post by vdcni on Aug 27, 2017 10:01:32 GMT
They need to sell your data so advertisers can target you directly with appropriate products based on your demographics and browser history.
If you're not being directed to the right page then that's really poor. Any company that is doing that doesn't have a very good search account set up.
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19,787 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Aug 27, 2017 16:51:28 GMT
I hate when I visit a website for a browse, shopping or flights or something, then leave without buying and later get bombardrd with emails of the "we noticed you were looking at flights to Madrid" etc. Very intrusive.
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Aug 27, 2017 17:49:27 GMT
Yeah, all that Big Brother stuff is creepy. But occasionally one is amused. I let my grandson look up the football results on my iPad so 'my news' is all footie results.
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7,189 posts
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Post by Jon on Aug 27, 2017 17:54:32 GMT
I hate when I visit a website for a browse, shopping or flights or something, then leave without buying and later get bombardrd with emails of the "we noticed you were looking at flights to Madrid" etc. Very intrusive. Private Browsing all the way!
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950 posts
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Post by vdcni on Aug 27, 2017 19:00:37 GMT
Yeah, all that Big Brother stuff is creepy. But occasionally one is amused. I let my grandson look up the football results on my iPad so 'my news' is all footie results. Yeah one of the main weaknesses of the whole system. It's device rather than user based so it gets confused like that. Of course another major reason for registering/logging in is to try and distinguish between users as well as to follow you between devices. It's also not very good at figuring out when you've bought things hence why you still get followed by ads for things you've already bought.
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5,062 posts
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Post by Phantom of London on Aug 27, 2017 19:29:17 GMT
What website makes you register before you can use it?
I hate sites such as B.A. Where you have to proof you are human and then have to select correct images - even before you can check on fares and times? Could understand it, if they did this before you go to final check out though, but they don't.
Also I have just started using Twitter, so hope you guys can help me out? Keep getting hit by adverts on my timeline and I block the user, am I doing the correct thing, or by blocking am I confirming I have read the advert? So will get bombarded with more other adverts. Also I get the same repetitive message come up, which I have read and understood, is there away I could stop that message coming up again, without totally blocking the user?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 27, 2017 20:44:38 GMT
I hate sites such as B.A. Where you have to proof you are human and then have to select correct images - even before you can check on fares and times? That's probably to prevent software scanning the site to get a copy of all the fares.
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1,064 posts
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Post by bellboard27 on Aug 28, 2017 9:09:48 GMT
I use the same hotel booking site for a lot of work travel. If I check out, for example, hotel availability in Berlin, a couple of days later I always get an email asking if I am still looking for a hotel in Berlin with some suggestions. The stupid thing is that it still does this even if I book a hotel.
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950 posts
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Post by vdcni on Aug 28, 2017 11:35:17 GMT
Yeah booking.com does that to me all the time even for trips to Australia. How many times a year do they think people pop over there!
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Post by Deleted on Aug 28, 2017 11:39:45 GMT
My personal favourite is AirBnB suggesting I might like a holiday in Cardiff...something gone a bit wrong in your algorithims there dudes!
Phantom- blocking those ads won't make more appear, it posisbly won't make less either but it certainly won't make it worse.
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3,578 posts
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Post by showgirl on Aug 28, 2017 16:22:33 GMT
Also I have just started using Twitter, so hope you guys can help me out? Keep getting hit by adverts on my timeline and I block the user, am I doing the correct thing, or by blocking am I confirming I have read the advert? So will get bombarded with more other adverts. Also I get the same repetitive message come up, which I have read and understood, is there away I could stop that message coming up again, without totally blocking the user? I only see ads when I'm using free wifi, e.g. at a cinema or theatre. I suppose that's the price you pay, but I resolutely block every damn one. None is appropriate to me anyway as I chose what I thought was a gender-neutral user name but everyone seems to think I'm a bloke.
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1,250 posts
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Post by joem on Aug 28, 2017 17:25:57 GMT
...so why are many websites insisting you have to register on them even if all you want to do is have a browse? Pathetic really. Because nothing on the internet is free but users have got it into their heads that it should be so providers have to find ways of making it look as if it is. Why should you be able to browse something for free that has cost someone else something to provide ? Because I actually wanted to buy a compact disc record from their site? The only information they are providing is the records they sell and their prices and incidental information. If I buy from their site they cut out the retailer (if there is any retailer left, the last one please switch off the lights) and thereby increase their profit. So I would have thought it is in their interest to allow people to view their wares? Can you imagine a high street shop which stops you at the entrance ans insists you register with them before you can go inside?
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Aug 28, 2017 17:42:16 GMT
Doesn't Costco do that? Though I guess it's not a High St shop.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 28, 2017 17:50:41 GMT
Doesn't Costco do that? Though I guess it's not a High St shop. MVC used to do that back in the day. Specifically so you could buy a Compact Disc. But you'd get a quid off for sigining up to a card. (What that was my Uni job and it was the BEST job in the world. Especially when we got a shipment of Snoop Dogg porn. True story) On the subject of slow things, my new laptop has spent most of today updating itself with various things. Yawn.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 29, 2017 7:57:31 GMT
My "favourite" thing the internet does is not load an entire article when I initially open it. I'm not talking about articles that needlessly spread themselves over several pages to presumably increase their ad revenue, but the ones that display the first paragraph, then a faded second paragraph with a "Read more" button on it. As far as I can tell, clicking that button doesn't cause anything new to load, it just makes the rest of the article visible, so why have it? Surely the fact I've opened the article in the first place is indicator enough that I'm going to want to read it?
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