Forum:Wikia, I'm thoroughly disappointed

__NOWYSIWYG__

Wikia, over the years there's been furious debate about ad content here. First it was no more top banners because advertisers DEMANDED a 300x250 top right in the content area, as well as banners in the content area. We were told ads couldn't be "hidden" at the bottom of the page.

Then you revamped the skin again. With that revamp came a shift of ads OUT of the content area, however sites now feature at least 2 ads much larger than 300x250 in many cases to the right, as well as 2 box ads at the bottom.

Today, I find out that on top of all that advertising, checking my main page a huge banner pops up that follows content down on the screen. I've also observed popup ads, and now the final straw: the green-underline text Vibrant ads.

Previously, Danny described these types of ads as "Horrible...ugly and distracting, and it creates a direct link between what contributors type and what advertisers sell," as well as "more aggressive than what Wikia plans to use." Wikia was described as having "fewer ads, and less aggressive ads" than other sites. Now, in 2011, this is totally false.

At what point did Wikia allow the advertisers to dictate the site content to them? Before it was effectively 'we just want this little corner or we're not interested.' Now it seems that they want every inch of wiki space possible, and Wikia is only too happy to provide that, especially when mobile ads are coming too.

For a company that has claimed in the past that you're "not happy about taking up content space," you do a fairly inadequate job of demonstrating that. In fact, I'm convinced that since 2008 advertising has significantly increased each year.

What happened to the "sacrosanct" principle of advertising not encroaching upon content? Is anything here sacrosanct?

When we're steamrolled with skin and editor updates that don't provide options, and ludicrous amounts of advertisements, I really don't think any principles exist. As a 6-year community member here, I can't stress my disappointment enough. I find it hard to take anything seriously any more. -- LordTBT Talk! 00:23, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * What are "green-underline text Vibrant ads"? What do they do? How are they bad? Can you link to a page with them. Maybe a screenshot. --Timeshifter 02:21, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * You can find them on just about any page. Basically, random text is underlined so it looks like a wiki link, but it's not, it's an ad. When you mouseover that link, an ad pops up, and clicking it goes to an ad site. This is a link before mousing over. This is what happens when you move your mouse over it. -- LordTBT Talk! 03:17, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * There are few things I hate more on the web than these type of link ads. I leave most websites right away when I happen to come upon these type of very irritating ads. If this continues I may have to reconsider whether to fork to another wiki farm. --Timeshifter 09:20, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * If it isn't the autoplay bandwidth draining ads, it's these intrusive link ads. And it's especially disturbing that they are within the content area of popular articles... I thought one of the points of Oasis was to remove inner content ads. It wouldn't surprise me if readers believed the ones who typed the content are responsible for these types of links. The links are suspicious and it makes it seem as if you have malware on your computer. There is no reason why advertisers should dictate a Wikia skin. We could have had larger content area by using narrow banner ads. -- Bunai82 (talk) 03:38, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * I don't mind ads as long as they are not in content space without my permission. I should have to click on an ad in order for it to expand into content space. --Timeshifter 09:20, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * If you hate ads, use FF and AB. 09:32, September 10, 2011 (UTC)\


 * I love FlashBlock. On-off Flash button for Firefox. It also has a whitelist. I allow Youtube.com videos. So they show up on my userpage and other places they are embedded. But all those bandwidth hogging and popover flash ads are gone. Except for a play button if I choose to see one. --Timeshifter 21:46, September 10, 2011 (UTC)

Unfortunately, browsing Wikia when logged out is akin to being on a porn site. The problem is not that we have to see the ads, it is that the content we spend so long on is presented to the majority of viewers after being whored out and covered with ridiculous adverts that look a lot like malicious software. I remember the ads for the film "priest", where ninja death stars flew all over your computer screen even outside of your browser, completely obscuring the content of wikia as well as anything else on your monitor. I don't know what else would cause someone to leave a website quicker. I made a complaint to special:contact, and my feedback was "passed on", but lo and behold those sorts of ads prevail. It's a stupidly short-sighted tactic, because these ads will drive wikia's reputation down and lose lots of traffic. And the adwords masquerading as wikilinks are just as bad, attempting to trick people into click on them--Acer4666 10:15, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * At first I did not understand this thread because I never see any advertisements here at Wikia. But then, when I read Acer’s comments immediately above, I realized that this is what occurs when one is either not logged in, or has ads turned on in preferences. Imagine how awful this must be for wikis like the Runescape Wiki where the vast majority of their visitors are IP-only editors! One would expect that these in-content ads would drive people away from Wikia. I also think that Bunai had a good point when he wondered if visitors think that those content contributors listed in an article’s revision history created the advertising links. Sheesh! — Spike Toronto  10:32, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * On top of all that Acer, it's the fact that Wikia community members were misinformed and basically lied to about all of this, and I struggle to see why anyone should trust any Wikia pronouncements going forward. -- LordTBT Talk! 16:59, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * Of course, if Wikia corporate has a profit-sharing scheme with its employees, then there’s an even greater incentive to pack in as much advertising per square centimetre of screen space as possible. More advertising “clicks” means more revenue which means greater contribution to the bottom line which means more profit to be shared, again assuming the existence of such a scheme. Don’t get me wrong: I’m all for profit-sharing schemes that enrich front-line workers (e.g., the techies and the support staff that are our interface with them). It’s just that, as old and jaded as I am, reading this earlier today still came as a shock — not to mention the shock at seeing that my home wiki is exactly the same when not logged in. So, these are more stream-of-consciousness comments than they are complaints (although I can see how those in-content, Vibrant ads could drive people away.) — Spike Toronto  23:19, September 10, 2011 (UTC)

As with many things about wikia, my position is: just move your wiki somewhere else. I did it, it was simple. 17:18, September 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * How simple? --Timeshifter 21:37, September 10, 2011 (UTC)

Wikia is really going downhill. I'm thinking of trying to get a large group of wiki's together and moving over to Shout Wiki, they actually seem to listen to their community--Soul reaper 07:51, September 11, 2011 (UTC)

I am using a library wiki - and the banner/floating 'ad for particular wikis' is overlaying the rest of the text - most un-user friendly. And - what happens if 'company X' decides to sponsor a particular wiki and then demands editorial input? (Or several companies, making conflicting claims) I am not against external funding - but one can see the issues. Jackiespeel 16:10, September 13, 2011 (UTC)
 * Restrict ads with AdBlock or personal CSS if they disturb you. No comment. 16:24, September 13, 2011 (UTC)

LordTBT: we've had Vibrant ads for (I think) about two years now. And in that time, yours is something like the third complaint about them... in total. Which suggests they haven't been too intrusive.

On the other hand, we did get complaints about the Priest ads. So we have changed our guidelines to make that type much rarer. Acer, your feedback was part of that decision.

Complaints are not the only factor of course, what the advertisers want to buy, and what we see in terms of clicks/interactions also matter. Some of our ads come to us via intermediaries, which can make them harder to control (although we recently stopped doing business with one of those until they stop sending us game-gold ads!). The way our direct ad sales work means that we sometimes have commitments for some time ahead. Agreements for movie or game ads can be made as much as 8 months before date the ads will be shown - you can imagine how that can make it tricky to get all the pieces in place, especially if we change our selling guidelines. But as far as I know, there are no Priest-type ads in the pipeline.

SpikeToronto: There is definitely not an incentive to pack ads in to the exclusion of everything else. That would mean less people coming to the site, and so would be totally counter-productive. We're constantly trying to get the balance right; juggling agreements, ad spaces, changes to the site, experiments in different ad types, and so on. We have regular meetings with a group of senior staff every week to talk about this stuff and set the policies for the future. The overall goal of all this is to make sure that Wikia is stable, successful, and long-lasting. That's what everyone here is working for. -- sannse http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb32675/wikia/images/e/e9/WikiaStaff.png (help forum | blog)  17:31, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 * Sannse, one of the reasons that there are no complaints is that the only people who knew they were there were unregistered. They would've just run off at the first sight of the things and/or never contribute to discussions. Manga (talk &bull; contribs) 17:38, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 * I guess the lack of complaints is because: I) Logged-in users don't see ads and II) Logged out users that see ads doesn't care about complaining, or they just close the page --Ciencia Al Poder (talk) -WikiDex 18:05, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 *  Sannse : Thank you for your comments! They were very informative. I do have one question, though, and it’s a re-hash of the one that Jackie asked that must’ve got missed among all the other questions and comments on the page. Let’s suppose on WikiTea, where Jackie is doing the lion’s share of the work, Lipton decides it would like to sponsor the Lipton Tea article. From that point on, can they exercise editorial control? Can someone from their P.R. department re-write the article as a puff piece? If so, would the rest of us then be locked out of the article with a level of protection akin to Wikipedia’s Staff-level protection? Again, I really appreciated your comments above. They truly clarified the issues. I look forward to a reply to this last, inadvertently overlooked query. Thanks! — Spike Toronto  19:09, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 * No, such decisions remain with the community. Any attempt at this by the staff would likely not go unpublished, and you would hear about it.


 * Absolutely what Monchoman45 said. It is against our policies and our values to turn any wiki, whether a staff member started it or a regular user, into some sort of paid content fluff. Even if working with a wiki and adding content based on a campaign, our content staff are just as aware of their professional obligations to the wiki readership and do not try to take over the leadership of the wiki nor exercise editorial control. --daNASCAT http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb32675/wikia/images/e/e9/WikiaStaff.png (help forum | blog) 20:00, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 * Are not Vibrant ads paid content fluff? They are in content space. I never saw them because I only turn the ads on in preferences for a quick look, and then turn ads off quickly because they hog bandwidth. That slows down my editing, and so I turn the ads off soon.


 * That means I don't have much time to run my cursor down the page much, and then run into Vibrant ads. That is almost the only way to find them, unless one knows they exist. Then one can look for special underlining, double underlines, etc.. On other websites I usually leave immediately because they are so irritating, and they slow down reading greatly. I know I am not the only one. So Wikia is losing readers, and may lose editors and wikis once the word gets around. It won't effect Wikia much, but invasion of content space is the last straw for many people. The most intelligent editors will leave, and Wikia will descend further into fluff wikis. --Timeshifter 20:40, September 13, 2011 (UTC)


 * Sannse, first thanks for responding. I always appreciate when staff do in fact respond. Here are my issues: 1. As others have noted, most registered users have ads turned off. I have ads off, and an adblocker because internet ads in general have gotten out of control with their browser resource abuse. I had no idea the Vibrant ads were occurring until that post. 2. If they've really been in effect for 2 years, this does not help improve Wikia in my eyes. That means they've been in effect since some point in 2009, which was only a year AFTER Danny stressed the only ads advertisers wanted to buy were 300x250 AND only a year after Danny stated those ads were "more aggressive than what Wikia plans to use." So was Danny lying? Were the advertisers? Someone was lying here and it's disrespectful to the community. The phrase "fewer ads, and less aggressive ads" is just not something defensible any longer. I'm more inclined to second Acer's 'porn site' analogy...I mean honestly is this a friendly welcome ? -- LordTBT Talk! 00:41, September 14, 2011 (UTC)

Manga Maniac and Ciencia Al Poder: On logged out users being the only viewers: that's true of almost all ads, but we do get feedback sent to us. Either people do what I do, and view ads so as to understand the reader experience, or they see them when browsing logged out, or they write to us even though they don't have an account (it happens :) So less mail about this particular type of ad is significant

SpikeToronto: Sorry for missing that question, I tried to pick out the top points to reply to :) The situation you describe on the Tea Wiki is not one I can imagine happening.  I can picture a company creating an "official" wiki here (the button is available to anyone after all), and even us agreeing to build that official wiki - but that is not a service we currently offer.  As for an established wiki being asked, or told, to change content to please an advertiser.... no, I don't believe that will happen.

Timeshifter: no, I don't consider that the same thing. I consider the Vibrant ads to be pretty much the same as the sponsored links, or other ads. And on losing readers: that's not what we are seeing on the visitor stats, and these ads have been around a while now. But, as I said above, we do record and consider all feedback on ads - including all of the feedback on this page.

LordTBT: adding to the forum is not generally the best way to get us to reply. As it says in the intro for the forums, we don't monitor this fully - it's mostly for people to help each other. When we don't reply, it's more likely to be that we are busy elsewhere or haven't noticed a thread than an intent to ignore.

Danny certainly was not lying. The market for ads can vary drastically from month to month... let alone from year to year. 300x600 ads are still an important part of what we have available for advertisers, but there have been many changes over time. I've learned over the last 5 years to be very careful about making any definitive statements, because what I know to be true today may not be in the future. But what I do know, is that we'll keep having those regular meetings to try and get the balance right. -- sannse http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb32675/wikia/images/e/e9/WikiaStaff.png (help forum | blog)  01:02, September 14, 2011 (UTC)


 * Thank you Sannse and daNASCAT for taking the time to clear this stuff up for us. @ LordTBT : Is that a real screencap or a mockup? I hope it’s the latter! — Spike Toronto  01:57, September 14, 2011 (UTC)