o1bigtenor via Dng <dng@lists.dyne.org> wrote:

> Now if all that advertising was actually good for something except making rich
> people richer - - - -

Or simply paying for things that people want but don’t want to pay directly for 
?
The problem isn’t the advertising pe se, it’s the lengths advertisers (and some 
of the sites/programs that use them) go to in order to make their ad stand out 
more than the other garish ones served either side of it. IFF they were plain 
and static so we could ignore them, and IFF the noxious cesspits that serve 
some fo them could be trusted not to serve up malware as well, and IFF … well 
then there’d be no problem. But it’s this race to make them ever more difficult 
to ignore, and the evidenced absence of any morals in some parts of the 
industry that makes then a problem.

As someone else pointed out, my magazines are full of ads, in part that’s how 
they are paid for - but those are static, they don’t jump out of the page and 
hit you in the face. Without them the magazine (or society subscription) would 
need to be higher and then less people would sign up. And yes, I have over the 
years seen ads that fit the “ah, I’ve been looking for something like that” 
category.

Simon

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