A child mistaking an adult actress in an explicit ad for a popular YouTuber is yet another troubling example of YouTube's ongoing bad ads problem.
Typically, YouTube's non-skippable ads are capped at 15 seconds. However, Google appears to be bending its rules to combat users with ad blockers. In response to the recent Reddit post, Google confirmed its efforts to fight ad blockers and suggested that users should subscribe to YouTube Premium if they don't want ads.
YouTube ads are getting more frustrating, with some users reporting unskippable ads that are nearly an hour long. Are ad blockers to blame?
Google has offered an explanation for why these ads are happening and what users can do about it. Whether the explanation is satisfying?
YouTube users have reported encountering excessively long, un-skippable ads, with some lasting between 57 minutes to 3 hours. Screenshots shared on Reddit even show ads longer than the actual video being watched.
YouTube has become a bit of a joke when it comes to being an advertising platform. Several years ago, the company fell out of favor with a ton of
YouTube's ads frustrate users, with misleading and explicit content affecting both children and adults, despite Google’s claims.
Users reported about unskippable YouTube ads that are nearly three hours long, though there's a chance that it's an ad blocker malfunction
Ads can be pretty pesky and even irritating, but it's a whole new level of rage and fury when kids see ads they shouldn't see at all.
Upon closer inspection, in the second image below the video, you can see the option “Skipping ads,” which signals the use of an ad blocker (though the users themselves did not confirm this). It is quite possible that the ad blocker itself is affecting the displayed ad duration erroneously or hiding the “Skip” button.
A job candidate's final interview question took an unexpected turn when a simple verbal mix-up led to an awkward spiral that may have cost her the position. The incident, shared in a post on Reddit this week, has left thousands of users amused—and some deeply sympathetic.
Reddit’s 190.9% visibility surge raises concerns about Google’s ranking fairness, favoring user-generated content.