Today, another PPC contender comes along with great ideas. The biggest difference I can see so far is the significantly lower minimum payouts. Here are the pubMarketplacebasics:

PubMarketplace PubTools

“PubMarketplace PubTools” are a series of small, easily configurable elements that can be used to feature PubMarketplace.com ads on blogs, websites and social networking pages. Users can easily build their own customized PubMarketplace PubTool in as little as one minute.

Basically another name for widget ;)

Payment

adMarketplace will pay you within 45 days after the end of each month in which you served clicks by the payment method you selected in your pubMarketplace account

Minimums: $25 by check or $10 by PayPal

Screenshots (click to enlarge):
5-22-2009-9-27-36-pm0
5-22-2009-9-21-36-pm0

I can’t count how many posts I’ve read about peoples’ poor experiences with AdSense regarding their high minimums. Many a blogger can tell you that they’ve had $80 or $90 sitting in their account but may never see it because of recent market conditions’ effect on PPC and other advertising methods. There are also more than a handful of posts by similar folks that have had even worse experiences such as mine where the big G has essentially stolen large sums of money from hard working bloggers and others. I have high hopes for pubMarketplace, so much so that I’ve already applied and placed a nice little tag cloud ad box in my sidebar.

apbvnoscript
Wladimir Palant wrote an interesting post on the Adblock Plus blog yesterday that explains some details of an relatively unseen war going on between Adblock plus and NoScript. Both of these Firefox extensions are on my “Always installed” list, and I’ve never had anything bad to say about either one until now. Here’s a small excerpt of Wladimir’s post that highlights the issues ABP has with NoScript

… And to make sure that somebody sees these ads it goes pretty far. For example, it opens the changelog webpage (full of ads of course) on every single update of the extension, even though the NoScript FAQ claim that it happens only on major updates (yes, if you dig into it you will find the preference to disable this behavior – but how many people do that?). And updates coming roughly each week ensure that this page is opened fairly often. A problem is of course that NoScript will usually disable scripting and consequently also most advertising. That problem is being worked around by putting NoScript’s domains, Google AdSense and a few others on NoScript’s default whitelist (again, the overwhelming majority of users won’t go hunting for bogus entries in their whitelist). Given that NoScript proudly calls itself a security extension this means putting users at risk — for example, a while ago I demonstrated how an XSS vulnerability on a NoScript domain can be used to run JavaScript from any website, despite NoScript. This was countered by implementing anti-XSS measures rather than removing anything unnecessary from the whitelist.

As a web guy with more than a few ads, I can fully understand where the NoScript guys are coming from. What I don’t understand is the lengths they are going to make money here. They aren’t paying for the extension download bandwidth, in fact the only costs they are incurring are from forcing the update page to load…. Basically, they are just being greedy here.

And it gets worse:

What followed was a small war — the website would add various tricks to prevent Adblock Plus with EasyList from blocking ads, EasyList kept adjusting filters. Then, a week ago a new NoScript version was released. A few days later I noticed first bug reports — apparently, Adblock Plus “glitches” were observed with this NoScript version, especially around NoScript’s domains (but not only those). When I investigated this issue I couldn’t believe my eyes. NoScript was extended by a piece of obfuscated (!) code to specifically target Adblock Plus and disable parts of its functionality. The issues caused by this manipulation were declared as “compatibility issues” in the NoScript forum, even now I still didn’t see any official admission of crippling Adblock Plus. Clearly, NoScript is moving from the gray area of adware into dark black area of scareware, making money at user’s expense at any cost.

NoScript released an update as I wrote this:

v 1.9.2.6
NoScript now automatically removes the controversial “NoScript Development Support Filterset” deployed with NoScript 1.9.2.3 and above on startup, permanently and with no questions asked.

Amazing what a few hundred Diggs will do for your cause, eh?

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