In my settings I've selected Not interested in jobs
but I keep seeing ads about Python jobs
Is this intended? Why show me jobs if I'm not interested in one?
In my settings I've selected Not interested in jobs
but I keep seeing ads about Python jobs
Is this intended? Why show me jobs if I'm not interested in one?
Beyond the fact of ad blockers, which are always playing cat and mouse with revenue providers anyway, Stack Exchange has a broad range of sites to distribute all their third party interests to. The privacy policy has an above par clause of not sharing user data with third parties that don't share the same privacy policy, not just trusting they have their own.
Now, there are other reasons for wanting ads out of our way, such as screen estate or distractions. Perhaps it just looks less professional in your workplace. There is a certain perk for users who sign up and acrue a reputation 200: https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/reduced-ads Can you guess what that does? I certainly wasn't expecting it when reaching that threshold but it represents a balance point. The reduced-ads priviledge page states:
We want to emphasize that you should only re-enable banner ads if you want to see them, not because you're trying to support us financially.
It also states that side bar ads stay, but we're used to ignoring the side bar anyway, right?
In user preferences you may notice a button to Manage personalized predictions which allows you to download your stored data or opt in / out of predictions. Amongst the piles of random words there it's made clear:
It is not used to help other websites sell you pants, based on your interest in pant-based technologies here.
Huh. So your aggregated data is used to make jobs more relevant, not tracked advertising. Kind of makes me wish I was looking for a job. But in conjunction with the privacy policy it also means that anywhere that tracks customers outside of the site, aggregates interactions with Stack Exchange partners, or tries to use our precious Data Explorer against us, has the wrath of Jon Skeet to reckon with.
Look, dear fellow SO community. If we don't pay for the product we are the product. That's a hard reality.
There's no magic that makes electricity free for StackOverflow, or means their people don't need health insurance and all that. Our friends who operate StackOverflow have to pay their bills somehow. From where I sit they also deserve to make a decent profit.
They've done as well as any web property could possibly do at building an advertising system that's friendly to their product (that's us) and to their advertisers.
Plus, often the best candidate for a particular job is already happily employed. Hiring managers want to entice those folks. I'd much rather have my co-workers see ads on SO than get a lot of cold calls from recruiters.
If there were a way for me to pay for the product so I didn't have to be the product, I might consider it. A subscription fee might be helpful. But unless and until that happens, with respect we need to let SO pursue their business.