Regulation
In March 2013, the Google Play Store removed the software the software named 'Adblock Plus' due to a possible security flaw. Adblock Plus, an application that added 'needed features' to Adblock was created in 2006. Adblock silently removes advertising and social buttons from websites. It initially began as a niche product and thus did not garner a larger amount of attention, but by 2009, it had over 2.5 million users and is the most downloaded Firefox addon.
The removal of Adblock brings up the issue of consumer versus producer rights in New Media. Websites have the technology to block users that block their ads, but viewing, what add-ons people use is viewed as a privacy violation and may hurt a website's image. The first issue that needs to be addressed is why consumers want to block advertisements. Consumers typically pay for their computers and their connection to the Internet, and thus may extend that ownership to the websites they visit.
A study by Cho and Cheon found the main cause if ad avoidance found in the study was perceived ad clutter. Advertisements were also viewed as interfering with goals. As the internet tends to be a goal, task, interactivity, information oriented medium in addition to entertainment, excessive advertisements could interfere with a consumer's interest needs. Consumers see Adblock as a right and blocking of it a removal of a fundamental right. Privacy rests on two principles, the right to be left alone and the right to control personal information.
The right to personal information applies to advertisements, as collected data, a privacy concern, is used to create target ads. The right to be left alone, includes a lack of unsolicited ads. Even if they didn't use information gathered from consumers. Ads may be malicious or misleading. Consumers may view Adblock use as a method of protesting disliked ads, and removing that program removes right to protest. Blocking software also brings up the issue of stifling innovation and consumer choice. People do not want groups like Google decides what gets made and sold.