Comment by ๐Ÿš€ lars_the_bear

Re: "Is hating online advertising weird? I asked my son (25)โ€ฆ"

In: u/lars_the_bear

@darkghost : Wow! Just... wow. In the UK at least, traditional advertising in newspapers and on billboards is subject to at least some level of regulation. You can't advertise cures for cancer, unless you can back up your claims. On the web -- who knows? I presume that UK advertisers still have to submit to regulation but, to be honest, I'm not sure.

We should be teaching our kids not to trust advertising. We probably are, but the advertisers are better funded than we are.

๐Ÿš€ lars_the_bear [OP]

Mar 02 ยท 2 months ago

11 Later Comments โ†“

๐Ÿš€ stack ยท Mar 02 at 17:47:

It's actually worse than just saying "Don't trust advertising", or even believing that you don't trust advertising. Because your meatbrain is highly suggestible, and those jingles get stuck in there and with spaced repetition form solid connections. Then, when shopping, you will say to yourself: I have this great idea to try Tide, or buy a Ford truck...

๐Ÿฆ aven ยท Mar 03 at 02:41:

Advertising is a prime example of market failure. It's the only industry that aims to maximise waste. They create artificial needs instead of meeting exitsting needs. Why waste money making a better product when you can spend half as much on a huge psyop campaign to gaslight people into thinking your product makes them healthier, sexier, more socialy connected, respectable, etc. Supply and demand fail when demand can be purchased as a product. This is why society has become so consumerist and why the 100x productivity increases of the last 50 years of technollogy has not led to us working any less.

๐Ÿš€ stack ยท Mar 03 at 04:17:

What's even more profitable is bribing some politicians with a few million to get billion dollar contracts and not have to peddle crap to individuals at all

๐ŸŽฎ jprjr ยท Mar 03 at 15:30:

@lars_the_bear in the US - supplements are basically unregulated. There's a few small exceptions (like prenatal vitamins) but yeah, you could go into a drugstore and buy some supplement. and there's no oversight into safety, how effective it is at actually doing anything, etc like we have for medications.

This results in lots of scams involving supplements. You'll see ads that use non-specific language like "helps with" and other weasel words to imply a supplement is a treatment for something without outright claiming it is. You're basically just buying snake oil.

๐Ÿš€ stack ยท Mar 03 at 15:44:

If government oversight were helpful, the US population would not be predominantly obese, diabetic, and taking Ozempic or whatever the new miracle drug is being advertised non-stop today.

๐Ÿš€ lars_the_bear [OP] ยท Mar 03 at 15:54:

@jprjr : supplements are basically unregulatd in the UK, too. But advertising -- at least in its traditional form -- is regulated. So I guess unproven medical treatments are more advertised in unregulated places.

๐Ÿ‘ป darkghost ยท Mar 03 at 17:58:

Try feces for all that ails you! Cheap and readily available! Now my lawyers tell me I must utter the magic make this legal phrase. "These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."

๐Ÿš€ thoughtterminatingcliche ยท Mar 03 at 18:02:

I am like this. The only weird one annoyed by any ad in my surroundings. I also demand people mute commercial breaks, LOL. It is the compressor my friend. Some evil wizard pays up those guys to dial the fucking compressor all the way up. When the commercial break kicks in all hell breaks loose...

๐Ÿš€ stack ยท Mar 03 at 18:21:

Fecal transplants are not entirely without merit, given what we are learning about gut-to-everything connection.

In amateur setting, a messy disaster.

And yes. The wall of noise.

๐Ÿ‘ป darkghost ยท Mar 03 at 19:45:

@stack This is something I worked on in the past. A facial cream made of the stuff will not, however, make you younger and sexier. For the latter it is most surely the opposite.

๐Ÿš€ stack ยท Mar 03 at 20:08:

@darkghost, no way! A shit face cream?

Original Post

๐Ÿš€ lars_the_bear

Is hating online advertising weird? I asked my son (25) how he can bear to watch videos on YouTube, when they're interrupted by advertising every few minutes. He looked at me is if I'd just laid on egg. That, apparently, is just how things are -- he didn't find it odd at all. He found _me_ odd for objecting to it. Do you have to be old, like me, to find online advertising objectionable? The popularity of ad-blockers suggests not, but perhaps only the old folks use them? Is viewing the world...

๐Ÿ’ฌ 53 comments ยท 1 like ยท Feb 28 ยท 2 months ago