▲ | jawilson2 7 days ago | |
> What about the ad for your kids' school fundraiser? My kids should come home with a flyer for it. > Or the ad for a used car that your cousin would love. I will actively seek out and research a car. > Or the poster for the concert at your local community hall. Presumably this physical paper poster doesn't give me malware/AIDS if I look at it or tear off a slip. My overriding personal objective is to be able to exist without being expected to consume and spend constantly every moment, waking or otherwise. In an ideal world, I should have to give consent to be advertised to, and should be able to operate in public without being bombarded with companies trying to take my money. | ||
▲ | koliber 7 days ago | parent [-] | |
> My overriding personal objective is to be able to exist without being expected to consume and spend constantly every moment, waking or otherwise We're fully aligned. The original point I was trying to make is that advertising can be done well, in a way that is compatible with this objective. Unfortunately, in many cases they aren't. > In an ideal world, I should have to give consent to be advertised to I thought about this a while back, and I think being bombarded with requests for consent is worse than being bombarded with ads. Cookie consent banners convinced me. > My kids should come home with a flyer for it. Fliers are ads. > I will actively seek out and research a car. Probably in some classified ads. |