I've been blocking ads for so long that actually seeing them feels perverse

Corroded@leminal.space to [Outdated, please look at pinned post] Casual Conversation@lemmy.world – 1237 points –

I use ad blockers and open source privacy focused software whenever I can but occasionally I have to use computers that don't belong to me or an older phone where my usual applications aren't installed and seeing all the advertisements just feels dirty and dystopian.

I think the worst ads are the text to speech ones that say "Download this app today". The unblinking energenic people saying you can make a living at home are probably a close second.

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Lots of the web is still run by advertising revenue. I know a few of the sites I like to go to rely on advertisting. I certainly don't consider them parasites like you do, they're just working within the system, because the alternative is to not exist, and I'd rather not have that.

That or force a subscription to use which I think nobody really wants

I don't think that's true at all.

If advertising didn't exist then content producers and content consumers would embrace an alternative funding model because everyone wants content.

Enough to pay for it? Nope. I've been on the other sides of this equation, that is a very naive take.

Enough to pay for it ... if it's good enough to be worth paying for.

It's that last part that kills most content creators. There's people whose work I'll idly browse as long as I don't have to pay for it (even with ads: I love my ad blocker!). But you're right, 99.44% of content creators whose work I idly look over would not get a single red cent out of me from direct payment.

So maybe it would be good to switch to payment-only schemes. That would kill off the crap creators and leave those behind who make something people think is worth paying for.

I mean ... I still pay for books and music. I do pay for content. Just not shit content.

Enough to pay for it … if it’s good enough to be worth paying for.

I'll give you an example. I use a site called lacemarket which is a buying/selling site for a niche hobby of Japanese street fashion. It will never be popular enough that enough people would be using the site in order for them to make enough to pay for hosting the site.

So they're forced to run ad's cause they have no other way to keep the site up. The owners are also not taking a percentage of people's sales so they can continue to bring in people who want to use the site. But in order to not take money from the sellers, the only other option they have to keep the site running is ad funding.

It sucks but its too niche to do it any other way.

If it is that niche, it is not a self-sustaining business model (with the evidence for this being that they instead have to sell their users to third parties).

Perhaps it's just better left to die than to propagate an economic model that commoditizes human beings who aren't even part of the business?

no, its a hobby community and its been running since at least 2014. There is a demand for it but only in that community.

So letting it die wouldn't be an option. It's not a ton of people but I can think of lots of communities that have like 300 ish people in them who would be fucking livid if that site went down.

  1. And 300 people couldn't find the resources to keep a small server up? For the equivalent of $1 per month each the very first VPS provider I found on a search gives you more than enough horsepower to support that small a community. https://www.nexusone.com.au/products/services/hosted-servers/vps-virtual-dedicated-server-detail

That's the very first result I found.

And you need ads to support this!?

No, only like two people run the site.

The groups I'm talking about are the people who use the site to buy and sell the clothes on there.

I understand that. And those people buying and selling clothes on that site can't afford a buck a month?

They probably could but getting them to is another story. The ads are just easier.

I'm happy that the total destruction of the Internet into a Hellscape of graffiti and malware is helping your 300 people save a buck a month.

I mean, tell those girls that. They'll dox your ass but I'm sure it'd be worth it to make a point about advertisers.

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You mean you're a content producer that couldn't get people to support you directly? Did ad revenue solve the problem?

If advertising didn't exist other funding models would be embraced.

You just think that because advertising exists as an option. If that circumstance was different, everything else would be too.

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