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posted by martyb on Sunday July 19 2015, @09:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the averse-to-adverts dept.

Australian Broadcasting Corporation carries a piece of analysis/commentary on the societal ethics of advertising. I found it fascinating by the depth of arguments (true, there is a bias, but it's likely that most of us soylents share it); do take your time to read it in full, my attempts to summarize it below is bound to fail:

Advertising is a natural resource extraction industry, like a fishery. Its business is the harvest and sale of human attention. We are the fish and we are not consulted.

Two problems result from this. The solution to both requires legal recognition of the property rights of human beings over our attention.

First, advertising imposes costs on individuals without permission or compensation. It extracts our precious attention and emits toxic by-products, such as the sale of our personal information to dodgy third parties.

Second, you may have noticed that the world's fisheries are not in great shape. They are a standard example for explaining the theoretical concept of a tragedy of the commons, where rational maximising behaviour by individual harvesters leads to the unsustainable overexploitation of a resource.

A classic market failure

The advertising industry consists of the buying and selling of your attention between third parties without your consent. That means that the cost of producing the good — access to your attention — doesn't reflect its full social cost.

...Since advertisers pay less to access your attention than your attention is worth to you, an excessive (inefficient) amount of advertising is produced.

...It's a classic case of market failure. The problem has the same basic structure as the overfishing of the seas or global warming. In economics language, people's attention is a common good.

Why now?

First, as we have become more wealthy our consumption decisions have become more valuable...

Second, a shift in social norms has made it more acceptable to sell other people's attention.... Anyone in a position to access our attention, like the managers of pubs or hockey arenas, will be approached by multiple companies offering to pay a fee to install their advertising screens, banners, or cookies...

Thirdly, technology has made advertising even more intrusive. Not only is it now possible to print advertisements on grocery store eggs and to put digital displays above pub urinals.... Every moment we spend on the internet or with our smart phones is being captured, repackaged and sold to advertisers multiple times...

Counter-counter arguments: How economists defend advertising and why it isn't enough

  1. The direct value of advertising First is that advertising gives consumers valuable information about the sellers and prices of products they want to buy. The favoured example here is the classified ads section in newspapers.... Perhaps it was the case in 1961 that consumers struggled to find such information for themselves. But it is hard to see how this can still be the case in the internet age...

    Advertising can be used to reduce competition: high spending by rich established players drowns out information from smaller newer competitors and thus creates an entry barrier, converting markets to oligopolies...

    Second is the counter-intuitive claim that brands communicate their trustworthiness by their conspicuous expenditure on advertising not by what it actually says....[but]Companies wanting to demonstrate their confidence in their products don't have to waste so much of our time to do so. There are all sorts of more constructive ways of spending money conspicuously.

    Third, is the social status that advertising can confer on a product and its consumption. What's the point of buying a Rolex or Mercedes unless the people around you know that it is expensive and are able to appreciate how rich and successful you must be? The business logic here is sound, but not the moral logic.

  2. Financing public goodsAdvertising is the financial model for many pure public goods like terrestrial television and radio, as well as club goods like newspapers, Google's search/email and Facebook... Advertising provides an alternative revenue source that makes it possible to profitably provide such services universally at the marginal cost of production — that is, zero.

    There are alternatives. If these things are so valuable to society there is a case for supporting them from with taxes — grants, license fees (many national broadcasters) or payments for ratings. This is a well-established system for funding public and club goods...

    Alternative models, like that of Wikipedia, are sometimes possible and are more socially — that is, economically — efficient. Wikipedia's value to consumers is in the hundreds of billions of dollars while its annual operating costs are only $25 million...
      Obviously Wikipedia's operating costs are so low, like Mozilla's, because of its volunteer labour force. But that fact just makes one wonder why we couldn't have a "democratic" Facebook too, and whether that would not be superior from a social welfare perspective to the current "farming model" of extracting maximum value from its members-cum-livestock.

The right to preserve our attention

Advertising is a valuable commercial opportunity for businesses with access to consumers' attention, or their personal information. For the companies that buy and sell our attention it is — as all voluntary transactions must be — a win-win. But advertising lacks the free market efficiency that is claimed for it. Advertising is made artificially cheap, like the output of a coal burning power station, because the price at which it is sold doesn't reflect its negative effects on third parties — us.


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by TheMessageNotTheMessenger on Sunday July 19 2015, @10:57PM

    by TheMessageNotTheMessenger (5664) on Sunday July 19 2015, @10:57PM (#211198)

    During my commute I have to walk past moving advertisements that also make sounds, in the form of large TV screens.

    I think the sound is a step too far. I can look away if I'm not interested, but the effort required to not hear the advertising is too much. Do I plug my ears every time I walk past? Do I put in earbuds and crank them high enough so I can't hear the ad anymore? That's trading a nuisance for ear damage and seems like a shitty deal.

    TV and Radio have their ads, but those can be avoided by bringing your own music or video. Storage is cheap! Legal and ad-free streaming alternatives are also growing in popularity.

    E-mail spam is bullshit but spam filters are very good nowadays, so that's also easy to ignore. I haven't seen spam advertise something that isn't a scam, so I'm not sure if there's any legitimate reason for it to remain.

    Web surfing has its ads, and they're become quite reasonable over the decades. They don't animate, they make no sound, they don't do popups. Easy to ignore. (there are still exceptions). Unfortunately they track you between websites (as do social media buttons) and there's no effective opting out. On top of that, compromised ads delivery networks are often used to spread malware. Safer to block them until they solve that problem.

    The worst kind of advertising is when I don't know it's an advert! A shilled story, youtube review, discussion thread. There is no reliable way to recognize these. The only clue is that the badly done ones tend to give a very one-sided view of things.

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  • (Score: 2) by penguinoid on Monday July 20 2015, @05:15AM

    by penguinoid (5331) on Monday July 20 2015, @05:15AM (#211291)

    I think the sound is a step too far. I can look away if I'm not interested, but the effort required to not hear the advertising is too much. Do I plug my ears every time I walk past? Do I put in earbuds and crank them high enough so I can't hear the ad anymore? That's trading a nuisance for ear damage and seems like a shitty deal.

    Maybe you can raise a stink, file a public nuisance complaint -- although no doubt they bought permission. Maybe pee in their speakers?

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    RIP Slashdot. Killed by greedy bastards.