

Adguard protects from trackers ( tracking is knowing all your searches and visits on the web ) and later confront you with advertisements in areas you might be interested in. This is where tools like Adguard for Mac comes in. Unubstructive browsing is what I call it. We all like to earn money but we should be able to have control over the things we want and the things we don’t want to see. The purchases will then either climb or remain dormant.Browsing the web nowadays is not without showing unwanted advertisements and being tracked by advertisers. Readers will then decide from other's experiences. The testers will then post reviews and potentially purchase.

Everyone wants a taste before they buy the dinner. The reason why is that there is no such thing as a paying bleeding edge user.

This developer started providing apps in 2015 and from what I can tell he's not selling much of anything. But I don't have $3.99 to spend on an experiment. I'd very much like to TRY OUT the anti-tracking features of AdBlocker XustoPrivacy. I very much appreciate having another anti-tracking app available! 'Cookie' needs competition (and 'Cookie Stumbler' barely qualifies). So why pay $3.99 for some mysterious alternative? This problem is compounded by the fact that Mac web browsers already have remarkably and persistently effective AdBlockers for free. There are the broken English descriptions, but what is the customer actually buying? There have recently been so many thoroughly bogus apps (think MacKeeper), why would anyone spend money on a potentially worthless POS? But the overall impression I get is that he has no concept of effective exposure/marketing of his software.
