I upvoted your question. You raise some valid points.
Stack Overflow certainly has changed. It is more oriented on making profit and that has affected the user experience. There's been a lot of focus on creating revenue and a neglect of the main Q&A site. This has been discussed ad nauseam.
I'm hoping (I've said this a lot) that they're focusing more on our site.
Many people do not adapt well to change and the site is changing. Some is good, some is not good. Ads on the internet annoy the stuffing out of me. I always use an ad blocker. On one developer survey there was a heavy focus on ads. I said in the survey - "you better not disallow ad blockers" - as it was clear they were ramping up for more advertising.
So the new user experience, without ad blockers, is clearly different from the registered and rep bound users (is it 200 rep we need to start not seeing ads?). So simply this aspect of your issues is easily solved by ... erm Logging in.
The whole notion of having people register and earning moderation privileges with reputation is to curate the site. A kind of ironic point at this stage of the site's development. To have a community run site, that is now heavily mandated by the business. (*)
For the parts of your question that are solvable by the community I agree with this answer. So without repeating these points I'll add to them.
Flag Flag Flag
You mention in the comments:
The entire value proposition of SO is not having to sift through information. However I find myself regularly having to sift through comments (which don't show up in activity anyways) and random answers to find meaningful answers to questions. I can sort all by "active" but nearly all questions have newer crappy spammy answers on them that aren't useful. Or "good try" answers that are technically answers to SO prevents people from deleting them. This is especially prolific for popular questions. – enderland
I have been a great advocate of the transient nature of comments and cleaning them up. Flag to have comments or comment threads cleaned up. Moderators are happy to vacuum these up from the site. It's very easy to do.
We have some users who faithfully curate their tags and flag repetitive answers. They go through long threaded posts and carefully flag answers for deletion and why. This is time consuming, for the flagger and the moderators, but that's our job and we're happy to support people in the community striving to improve the site. It's this type of dedicated user (the flagger) and the content contributors that are the backbone of the site.
Comprehensive custom moderator flags help most problems on the site. Meta posts are not always required. We have an incredibly strong moderator team and are on top of the flag queue all the time these days. It's reasonable to say to people. Bring on the custom flags if you want to seriously curate the site. Be reasonable. Be clear.
Whilst it doesn't solve every concern, it certainly does aid in making quality content more readily available.
(*) although there's things I do not like about the site, I respect the employees. Much (most, if not all) of it is out of their hands. I strongly urge people to be respectful of the employees, as they have their heads on a chopping block coming here delivering, often, unpopular messages. The site is now very much a business and it's something we need to accept. We don't have to like it.
I’m not for a moment saying people have to stay. I’m saying it’s clearly out of our control the direction the site is going.