Can GPT-4 block ads better than humans? We put an AI-powered ad blocker to the test
Everyone knows ChatGPT, an AI chatbot based on OpenAI’s latest model, GPT-4. But beyond OpenAI’s own products, GPT-4 has been integrated into many applications and services, from learning and payment apps to Microsoft’s Bing AI and now ad blocking.
A Chrome extension with a rather straightforward name GPT-AdBlocker was launched in April this year on Product Hunt. It is developed by a company called In5 Tech, based in Dubai, UAE. The extension claims to use GPT-4 technology to block all kinds of trackers and ads, including sponsored content inside YouTube videos that your typical ad blocker cannot block. The GPT-AdBlocker team describes the extension as “the ultimate all-in-one solution.” As far as its accuracy goes, they say it’s “very accurate” in detecting ads in videos but “some errors” may creep in. So far, the extension is available only for Chrome, but the team behind it plans to deploy it to “multiple other browsers.”
Intrigued by the new kid on the block, and the AI-powered one at that, we decided to give it a try.
The ideal outcome: achievable or not?
Before we present you the results of our experiments with GPT-AdBlocker, let’s talk a bit about the extension’s features and how it should work in an ideal world.
GPT-AdBlocker has a very clean, if not ascetic interface and only two switches: one for regular ad blocking and one for AI-powered sponsor blocking, which is what we are interested in today. Of course, you can turn off the AI mode and use it as a regular ad blocker, but that’s not what we’re here for. It is with both of its modes enabled at the same time that GPT AdBlocker is supposed to be at its most efficient.
So, in its ideal implementation the GPT-AdBlocker should allow you to skip sponsored content in videos, which are the segments that brands usually pay the content creator directly for.
We imagined it would look something like in the example below, where we used a graphic editor to manually cut the Destroying My RTX 3090 Ti With Incredible Minecraft Graphics YouTube video to remove a sponsored segment.
Some of you might wonder why we had to cut the video manually to demonstrate a ‘near-perfect’ example of how the GPT-AdBlocker is supposed to work. But let’s just say that the results of our interaction with the actual extension to skip sponsored ads were… a very mixed bag. And now we will show you why — with receipts, of course.
The challenges of AI ad blocking: choppy cuts & incomplete sentences
We wanted to test how well the GPT-AdBlocker works on different types of videos that feature at least one sponsored segment. One of these videos was the one that we had manually edited before — now let’s compare it with the version that the AI-powered ad blocker produced.
The difference is not huge, but it is noticeable and not in favor of the extension: after the sponsored segment is skipped, the video resumes abruptly, in the middle of a sentence. However, this by no means a catastrophe and the content is still watchable.
The same cannot be said about videos that feature multiple product placements throughout, which is very common with tutorials, where showing tools, whichever they are, is an inalienable part of the content. When we watched a makeup tutorial with the GPT-AdBlocker on, we counted five skipped segments. The cuts were usually rough, some product placements were removed, some were not. As a result, we missed important parts of the content, which made the video unwatchable. See our compilation of cuts by the extension below (fade in and fade out are done by us).
Sometimes the issue would be just a jagged cut, which made you wonder whether anything valuable was skipped or if it was just how it was supposed to be.
Sometimes it would be just a few words missing, with the video stopping and resuming mid-sentence as in the example below — though, one could argue that even a few words can make a big difference.
Generally, the problems started when the sponsored segment was not a separate part of the video, but an integral part of it. Like in the example below, where AI cropped the video in such a way that the key part of financial advice is missing (we would not weigh in on the merits of that advice, but you get the point).
Oftentimes the extension would not remove the sponsored segment in its entirety, but only parts of it, which is, however, probably still better than removing too much.
Ethical dilemma
In our express analysis on YouTube’s potential ban on ad blockers, we mentioned that content creators are increasingly relying on brand deals, in addition to donations, to support their work. The ways of YouTube when it comes to monetization or demonetization of certain videos and entire channels are generally unsearchable; besides, YouTube takes about 45% of the creators’ ad revenues. Brands, unlike YouTube, pay content creators directly, usually better, and that pay is more stable.
Granted, sponsored segments can be annoying, sketchy and feel too long — but they are still part of the content, so blocking them entirely raises an ethical issue. And as far as we’re concerned, it’s probably unfair to take an axe to all that brand money. Content creators who are transparent about sponsored content in their videos and clearly label it, make it pretty easy to manually skip it. On the other hand, there are plenty of YouTubers who promote junk, but should honest content creators suffer for the unscrupulous ones?
In a nutshell: what we think about AI & ad blocking
The emergence of an AI-powered ad blocking extension is an intriguing and a potentially transformative development in the field. The goal of the extension is to detect and remove sponsored segments from videos, and it does that, but not all of them, and not completely. Sometimes it leaves “leftovers” of sponsored ads, sometimes it cuts the video rather crudely. Sometimes it works nearly perfectly, but rarely.
The approach is interesting and will shape the future of ad blocking to some extent. AI is permeating all areas, and ad blocking, like ad creation, is no exception. However, the current implementation of this technology, exemplified by the GPT-AdBlocker, falls short of providing a reliable and comprehensive solution. Moreover, while the integration of AI into ad blocking is promising, it’s possible that even with additional fine-tuning it won’t be a panacea for all ad-related challenges due to the intricacies of content creation.
In cases where sponsored segments or product placements are seamlessly embedded into a video, GPT-AdBlocker may render the content unwatchable. For example, content genres such as makeup tutorials (or any type of tutorial) can suffer significantly when key segments are omitted.
Nonetheless, AI is already impacting the advertising industry, and it’s only natural that the ad blocking industry will take advantage of its capabilities. The debate is not whether we should use AI, but rather how we should use it.