Community Central talk:Advertising on Wikia

Advertising was added to Wikicities today. There are currently a few glitches. If you see the ads at the top of the page above all the content, please do a hard refresh of the page (ctrl and F5 for example), which should update it and move the ads to a column on the right. Please add any other issues below. We hope to have these resolved soon and apologize for these temporary formatting issues. Angela 21:51, 14 Jan 2005 (PST)

Macintosh users: Safari users, empty your cache -- that often does the trick. --DavidFeng 02:27, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * The problems reported yesterday with Safari seem to be resolved today. (I don't have enough time today to test much, but it looks good on the pages I've been to so far.)  -- RJ 07:59, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

More details on clearing your cache are at Wikipedia:Bypass your cache. Angela 18:34, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

Current issues
I can't even go to the bottom of the page when editing due to the problems with advertising. If there is no alternative to advertising I will simply have to close my wikicity.
 * I've replied via email since editing is a problem for you. Angela 05:44, 29 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * 1) The ads force right floating images and category entries to be shifted to the end of the page
 * 2) The ads appear above the edit box, so you need to scroll down too far to edit
 * 3) Public service ads are included, seemingly without reason
 * I have a comment on the PSAs, that's what google does when it can't figure out what to put on your page. You can, however, have a secondary adserver which google calls instead of putting in a PSA, which isn't a terrible alternative.  --Me at work 21:05, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * If the PSAs bring in no money, should we have them at all? Angela 18:34, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

- user:Jasonr made some changes to the placement and tested it in Firefox and IE on Windows at 800x600 and 1024x768 resolutions. Le t me know if you get any other formatting problems. Regarding the public service ads... Those are something Google is doing. It is my understanding that they will go away after a few days.
 * Can you get it so there's edges on the box then? The ads make the box not touch the side of the page, so it's like a box open on one end and it just makes my eyes hurt at the bad style :( --Me at work 21:05, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I agree. The missing edge is weird. Angela 18:34, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * There are still problems with everything coming after the ads under Linux/Konqueror 3.3.2; the column-content is sized correctly to fit the space, but it still appears below the ad - GreenReaper 05:11, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I tried adding style float:right to the column-google, but that shifted the content left as well without resizing it. GreenReaper 05:41, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * This page also has problems on at least IE/Windows - GreenReaper

OmniWeb and Safari on Mac OS X are rendering the pages with a massive column of blankness next to a right-aligned tower ad, followed by a shrunk text. Only the top tabs and the left navbar are still "normal". --DavidFeng 08:27, 15 Jan 2005 (PST) looks like it's fixed. --David

Also, google rules state (somewhere) that you can't put the ad on pages you can only see after you're logged in, so ads cannot (by rules) be on preferences pages or admin only pages. While it's doubtful they'll find out/do anything, I have heard of a user losing his account, but as that's FOAF, I can't verify it. --Me at work 21:05, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I think the ads should be more aimed at visitors, not editors, so removing them from user pages, special pages, and edit pages, might not be a bad idea. I don't know how easy it is to do this though. Angela 18:34, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

There's a problem here in IE6/Windows - the adverts go over the footer rather than extending the height of the page. - GreenReaper 22:21, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)

We're getting less space to edit and to put content as a result of this ad at the right side of the page. We used to have the rest of the screen to the right of the navbar to edit at will; we're now having like 20% that taken away, not just with the ad in its place, but even after the ad. An edit a few edits back (which BTW got the categories/edit problem where it was) made all the text come right after the ads. We should have it like that without the ad problems with that edit (sorry if I'm making someone around here confused). BTW, if USD 100 was all that was required for a year, I'd be more than happy to pony up the cash (maybe a bit more) :-) --DavidFeng 10:22, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * That Section Edits prob has been resolved. Thanks for lightening response. :) Do stuff on the fly with a Treo 650 so those come handy. Rman JackRman Jack 12:04, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

CSS Fix Suggestions


width: 120px; /* to replace the current 15% */ }   margin: 2.8em 125px 0 12.2em; /* push away from right 125px */ /* width: %65; // remove this accursed thing */ /* border-right: none; // remove this as well */ }
 * 1) column-google {
 * 1) content {

Now, it does not look terrible! Edit: I did not miss anything else, just retested on a fresh. /:Edit I hope you like it/use it! --Me at work 18:25, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * I would also like the width to be corrected as above. When the user has a wide screen, it takes up too much space. When it is narrow, the ad overlaps the content. Which isn't good. :-) -- GreenReaper 00:18, 18 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * It appears these fixes have been implemented! Refresh if you don't see them.  :) --Me at work 09:19, 18 Jan 2005 (PST)

Alternatives and suggestions
There was a suggestion on peace-l to use the PayPal donation program on peace: as an alternative. Angela 09:15, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I think paypal would be good, too, if people actually gave the money . . . don't know how many would, though. But it could be another option. GreenReaper 10:17, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)

A suggestion was made on my talk page to use the button ads on edit pages. Personally, I don't think ads on edit pages are useful at all. If people are about to edit something, they ought to be allowed to do that without distraction. Angela


 * Yes, I didn't see talk:advertising yet, I guess that's because they're brand new. Ads are still on edit pages, but I was saying, what if i'm editing and i want to learn how to buy edited films for my family without swear words (actual ad i saw just a min ago) and maybe that's related?  just kidding... --Me at work 20:59, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)

A suggestion in an email to me was to allow wiki users to pay to have the ads removed. Angela 09:21, 15 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * This was my suggestion and I strongly recommend it. I would be most willing to pay a reasonable support for the wiki and the excellent support. I could manage up to $10 per month. Even if it had to be more than that and I couldnt afford, I would like to have the option. Josep


 * Following the Biz Model of countless other "Free" Net Services (like NetZero, for example) having the option to pay a reasonable fee would seem a natural progression. Ad-Free option would be sweet. Been here just 2-weeks & already fond of it. IMHO, best thing since indoor-plumbing, Net-wise.

I remember coming across an estimate last year that within a single day most are subjected to some 18,000 Ad images. Humans are really good at filtering-out the annoying or unwanted. This is why cutting-edge advertising is currently focused on the possibilites of what is called Memetic Marketing. Dare I say that a Wiki environment can be readily perceived as a prime candidate for such a technique which is taken as far less obtrusive, much more effective, & can actually be educational. Just a thought. Rman JackRman Jack 12:08, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)

Examples

 * http://creatures.wikicities.com/index.php/Norndoll
 * http://creatures.wikicities.com/index.php/Category:Creatures_games
 * http://creatures.wikicities.com/index.php/Hebe_Norn

Diff pages
The ads are very problematic of diff pages. They make the diff completely unusable. Is there a need to have them on every page, or would having them on content pages only suffice? (example) Angela


 * I looked into this problem, it is because the diff blocks are set to take up half the middle thing and don't auto adjust properly. You can see this attitude when you open a sidebar in firefox, they create a horizontal scrollbar because of the way they exist.


 * I suppose the real problem exists in the core code as it doesn't support a right 'toolbar', this is mentioned in the page when you try to switch the side that Monobook doesn't support it. If you got some real css smarties (lol) on the team to fix monobook, then I suppose the left side toolbar will be fixed.  Otherwise, all I can say is you're in a windowed mode or have a sidebar open...  The chance that this will happen to a normal user is rare...


 * Actually, this is a problem with tables too, as I'm looking at the dif rendering and there's nothing about table width in there, only table cell coloring. Create a page with tables and you'll get a similar problem.  I don't know how you'll get them to show up only on content pages, I was just going to suggest you drop a googlead button underneath the toolbox, as that was the original intent.  --Me at work 21:23, 16 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * This also appears to be a problem when looking at pictures. See Calgary:Image:The_Ranche.jpg for an example.  The page seems to size wide enough to have the ad to the right of the picture, but it plunks down the ad over top of the picture if the browser window is not big enough.  This is really annoying.  --JamesTeterenko 18:44, 20 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I just encountered this problem too. (Was trying to patrol a page.  Even after I did all kinds of adjustments to resize/rearrange the page, so I could see under the ad bar, the "mark patrolled" link did not appear to be there.  (I've had some occasions where that seemed to be inconsistent before, so it's possible this is due to some other cause.) --RJ 10:00, 21 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * This is even a bit of a problem on pages which use  tags... --Sgeo 13:37, 26 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * This is in response to the newly added 'example' link. I dislike example links.  That's like saying "This page has horizontal scroll!" and the original person is running at 800x600, while the person who checks into it says "Looks fine to me" and they have 1600x1200.  The problem will not show up for everyone, it depends on the width of the browser.  If you have a browser a mile wide, you can make it so you won't have the problem with the ad on the diff pages, while someone with an inch wide browser will (those are extremes as figurative language).  Please upload screenshots in the future so that everyone can see things the same way you do, thanks :).  An alternative to this is to specify specifics, such as "I'm running Firefox 1.0 fullscreen on my Mac OS X 10.3 at 1024x768", so that you can get something similar, probably by resetting the screen size for testing.  The reason I say include the OS, is because for some reason firefox for linux sometimes makes the text about 2 sizes too small... --Me at work 16:55, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)


 * I added a screenshot at first (see above), but then thought that was less useful since you wouldn't be able to check whether the bug had since been fixed without a link to what the screenshot was of. Angela 18:23, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * If that page is still messed up for you, that sucks. It looks fine to me in Firefox at 1280x960 in Windows XP.  I guess you're at 1024x768?  --Me at work 18:35, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * Yes. Angela 19:19, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * I don't know if this goes against your new advertising TOS which says you cant remove the ads, but here you go. Get "Nuke Anything", the Firefox extension (if you use firefox) and right click the google ad's top block to 'remove item'.  This is a one time occurance and the ad will reappear on a page refresh or whatever.  This would be useful when the ad gets in the way, while allowing you to
 * See the ad and possible things for you to click on if you want, it is context sensitive and such
 * Remove the ad from the page temporarily, after you have checked for anything you wanted to click.
 * Also, the google ads are currently telling me that I could get some "Political Advertising" "Negative ads, strategies, and high-profile campaigns" as well as get some "Republican Political Ads" "Learn why Stevens-schriefer has helped elect more GOP than any firm". I don't know if it's showing me USA ads because I'm in the USA, or because it'd show them to anyone.  :-/ --Me at work 20:16, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)
 * It's based on the content of the page, not where you are from. I'm not sure if telling people about Firefox features is breaching the TOU. I guess if you put this in the site notice and told every visitor about it, it would be more of an issue than telling editors about it on a page such as thing. Angela 21:28, 27 Jan 2005 (PST)

Message from Jason:
 * Fixed bug 62 - ads on diff pages. The diff pages were often unreadable because of the ads.  I had to do several things to make it work right. I had to change the main.css so that it included style info for content blocks with ads and those without, then I had to change the scripts to use the correct one depending on whether it was a diff page or not.
 * Bug creates new bugs (#content customizations must be duplicated to #content_withads right now). Suggestion: keep "content" the same.  The only thing different between #content_withads and #content is the margin, so why not make #content_noads and have it be the 'margin' for the current #content, this way you use two classes (content content_withads / content content_noads) and have a main class which holds the 'common' lines.  This would fix one main thing for me, the rounding of the borders that i had set up under #content.  Of course, the name _withads is bad for me, i would prefer _ads and _noads myself, but I am going with the standards already laid out.  I hope this fix can be made, as it would make things backwards-compatible rather well with the customizations at meta:user styles, such as User_styles. --Me at work 14:37, 30 Jan 2005 (PST)

Top versus sidebar
Since "the core code doesn't support a right 'toolbar'", I've been noticing lots of problems: backwards languages (as Angela is already aware), and also floating tables.

Maybe a better solution, if the agreement with Google allows for it, would be for an advertising space along the top margin of every page. At least this wouldn't interfere at all with text and flow of the article.Zabek 20:16, 8 Mar 2005 (GMT)


 * I think Jason has just got the toolbar to appear on the right (on he.miqra anyway). Having the ads at the top might be more annoying since it would force all of the content down, meaning users would need to scroll more often. Angela 20:25, 8 Mar 2005 (GMT)


 * In my Firefox the adds are still appearing over (covering) the righthand toolbar in Hebrew. Also take a look at en.miqra to see what happens when large tables aren't forced within the middle space.Zabek 20:37, 8 Mar 2005 (GMT)