| ▲ | keerthiko 3 days ago | |||||||
I would argue that limiting the amount of unrequested product evangelism shoved into users' eyeballs is a valuable public and mental health initiative. I wish we could have seen the alternate reality where ad-revenue was not the most lucrative business model for the internet. | ||||||||
| ▲ | echelon 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Regulation is always too slow and too stupid. By doing this, you'll chase the ads into embedding themselves into the content itself. And that's just the start. Creators are already doing this, and now we're seeing tooling emerge to support it. Wait until the platforms get in on the game. I say this as a proponent of antitrust regulation against tech giants and a privacy advocate against tracking, storing, and correlating user activity. Everything needs to be kept in balance. Regulation is a blunt instrument and is better used to punish active rule breaking rather than trying to predict how markets should work. Break up Google. Don't tell content marketplaces how to run ads. They know their customers far better than old politicians do. If ads become onerous, alternatives emerge. Different channels, platforms, ad blocking. It's a healthier ecosystem that doesn't grow ossified with decades old legalese. Regulations that actively stymie the creation of new competition. Now every new video and social startup in Vietnam has to check a bunch of boxes. | ||||||||
| ||||||||