> blaming the current miasma on "advertisers" is so short-sighted.
I'm not so sure. Do you work for an advertiser? (Quote marks are not for emphasis, by the way.)
Morally, advertising is bankrupt at a minimum, and adversarial/predatory when taken to extremes.
Advertisers will take any surface, real or virtual, which can host advertisements in a cost effective way but does not, and place advertisements on that surface, gleefully. They simply do not care what happens to the thing they place advertisements upon, and they do not care if they ruin it. They see an untapped source of revenue and they wish to tap it.
Advertisers did that to the Internet. Browse on mobile for a few minutes without an ad blocker to see what has happened. To an advertiser, you the reader are a source of funds, and absolutely nothing more. Twenty years ago you were considered a crass advertiser at best if your advertisement animated or even moved in any way. Now we have full-page interstitials and half-page ads which slide in and slide out, and even auto-playing videos which cover a third of the screen. To top it all off, advertisers are upset that the ability to block ads is even possible.
They say they're "losing money" when people use ad blockers, when in reality they are simply not gaining as much money as before. The motive of an advertiser is money, and money alone. Morally advertisers are bankrupt at best, and malignant and predatory at worst.
I'm not so sure. Do you work for an advertiser? (Quote marks are not for emphasis, by the way.)
Morally, advertising is bankrupt at a minimum, and adversarial/predatory when taken to extremes.
Advertisers will take any surface, real or virtual, which can host advertisements in a cost effective way but does not, and place advertisements on that surface, gleefully. They simply do not care what happens to the thing they place advertisements upon, and they do not care if they ruin it. They see an untapped source of revenue and they wish to tap it.
Advertisers did that to the Internet. Browse on mobile for a few minutes without an ad blocker to see what has happened. To an advertiser, you the reader are a source of funds, and absolutely nothing more. Twenty years ago you were considered a crass advertiser at best if your advertisement animated or even moved in any way. Now we have full-page interstitials and half-page ads which slide in and slide out, and even auto-playing videos which cover a third of the screen. To top it all off, advertisers are upset that the ability to block ads is even possible.
They say they're "losing money" when people use ad blockers, when in reality they are simply not gaining as much money as before. The motive of an advertiser is money, and money alone. Morally advertisers are bankrupt at best, and malignant and predatory at worst.