There are lots of cultural opposition movements online, like against work exploitation, consumerism, car culture, surveillance, intellectual property, etc. I can find communities on lemmy for all those topics. But regarding a more general opposition to advertisements and marketing, other than the occasional person telling others to use adblockers online (what about ads in every day life?), I fail to see organized attempts to challenge advertisements. There is a lot that can be scrutinized. Ethical concerns such as manipulation, lack of consent and just the simple fact your attention is for sale. The effects range from damage to environment, to our mental health, to harming industries themselves, lowering product quality and maintaining monopolies.

  • Cherry@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    Unfortunately people are too addicted to stuff and tolerant of the rich and greedy to push back. Ads are accepted, along with the many other ills of consumerism and overreach.

  • Dalacos@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    You’d have to advertise an anti-advertisement campaign. 🥲


    But seriously, I think most of this concern would fall under a subsection of a comprehensive Privacy Act.

    • Anonymouse@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I had to scroll way too far down the pageto find this (i trynot to duplicateanother’s comments). At the core of some of thescummy advertisements is profiling, enhanced by privacy violations. Remove the abikity to track you around the internet and IRL and advertisements become less obtrusive.

      The other side of the coin is that it costs so little to add adverts to a web page, so why not collect a little cash to help offset your hosting costs? Remove the profiling and Google & friends don’t have a leg to stand on, so then when you visit a cooking blog you see ads for kitchen utensils. No biggie. Looking for auto repair articles? Check out this awesome wrench! At least you now don’t go to show your mom some wedding venue you’re thinking about renting alongside an ad for ED meds from the dark market.

  • flamiera@kbin.melroy.org
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    2 days ago

    I’ve been pushing it for a while now.

    But, we need to start harassing marketers.

    We need to tell them “No, I won’t and haven’t ever subscribed to your shit. I’ve never bought your shit. You spend millions to shove your shitty product and service in my face, everywhere I go and everything I use. I will continue to use adblockers to spite you. I will shit all over your product and service in anyway I can. I will send back the shit you’ve sent me. And if anything, I will get personal with you because you’ve been harassing me and getting away with it for however long, just because you’ve spent millions to do so. I am making it even.”

    • sartalon@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      The marketers don’t make the decision. They’re underpaid wage slaves just reading script.

      • flamiera@kbin.melroy.org
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        2 days ago

        We know they aren’t. But the point is to make their jobs so discouraging, they wouldn’t ever want to do shit for these companies again. That’s only the beginning.

        Besides, a lot of them chose to do that job anyways. Don’t try garnering sympathy for these kinds of people.

  • Raffster@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I have become an advocate not only against ads but for mental integrity as a whole. No more deceitful manipulation of the mind allowed. No more disinformation or dark patterns accepted at all. I know it’s naive to think that possible, but why even try if we’re not aiming for the perfect utopia?

  • VoxAliorum@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Depends. Fediverse challenges advertisement. Adblockers challenge advertisement. People switching to piracy after amazon and netflix pushing for more adds challenges advertisements.

    Is there a united movement? No. But that’s partly because those that do care have an adblocker and rarely see ads.

  • FoundFootFootage78@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Advertisements are a thing where you can turn them off and basically suffer none of the negative externalities (escaping the tracking is a LOT harder). There’s no real reason to form a movement over a basically solved issue.

    • a9249@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      On your phone, browser, yes… Highway bilboards, gas pumps, mcdonalds screens, supermarket screens, eyedoctor appointments, clinic waiting rooms, public spaces, and … baiscally anywhere outside of home… littered with ads everywhere you turn.

  • fizzle@quokk.au
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    2 days ago

    I dont think the main stream will ever meaningfully turn against advertising. We’ve collectively demonstrated that we’re willing to accept advertising and trade our privacy in exchange for free content and services.

    That said, the worse the main stream web gets the better the “side web” gets. The good parts of the web will always exist, even if they’re not as popular as they once were.

  • loweffortname@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    People mentioned Ad Busters and others, but No Logo was pretty formative for me. It’s not exactly what you asked about (it’s a book, not a movement), but I think it continues to point that people have been acting against advertising for decades.

    Just, you know, they don’t have a ton of money…

  • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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    2 days ago

    I think the abundance of tools available to block ads online hints at a movement in itself. We don’t need a leader or a central committee.

    The wrinkle I see here is that a generalized ‘everybody’ hates ads but ‘everybody’ is also aware of the fact that they finance a large swath of stuff that we would have to pay for otherwise.

    • unwarlikeExtortion@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Honestly, advertising is very dystopian. Online tracking being the obvious first example.

      But that’s not all. How should I block physical ads in the city? Not only does it ruin the view, but roadside billboards surely caused at least one death by distracting a driver, and ads can get quite distasteful.

      Also, it’s not just roadside - they’re plastered everywhere! Buildings, bus stops, right in the middle of the sidewalk. Some are classic paper, some are of the TV screen type. Some are quite small and inconspicuous, but a lot are huge enough to be seen from at least half a mile away.

      Physical ads don’t finance anything. They’re just obnoxious. I don’t know how succeptible to ads other people are, but for me it takes an actually good offer to entice me - and usually that’s heard on radio or seen on TV (as far as ads go).

      • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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        2 days ago

        Chose your own dystopia. Where no ads exist and everything is pay per view/read/report/etc. Or the one we’re in.

        The bigger problem with traffic deaths is that we developed a system of transportation that relies heavily on cars that are mostly driven by humans. Removing billboards is not going to improve on that that much. But underwear model billboard pileups are a thing. But so are those caused by drivers on their phones and my guess there are way more of those.

        Tracking and selling of information has gotten out of hand, no doubt. It is political decisions or a lack thereof that got us here.

        Btw everybody thinks they’re immune to advertising. And we’re not.

        The unofficial wisdom of marketing is that half of any advertising budget is wasted. They just don’t know which half. So they continue. This whole thing boils down to the fiduciary responsibilities to provide as much value to shareholders again, the bane of capitalism. They cannot afford to check which half is wasted.

        And just for some context here: personally I don’t mind billboard ads to be honest.

        • ɯᴉuoʇuɐ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          Chose your own dystopia. Where no ads exist and everything is pay per view/read/report/etc. Or the one we’re in.

          Ads being a replacement for paying applies to internet services (social media, news sites, etc. that you can use for free). When you have billboards on the side of the road, you still have to pay the road toll. When you see ads in public transport, you still have to pay the ticket. When ads are shown on a TV channel, you still have to pay the subscription.

          Online ads, as insufferable as they are, are still more clearly justifiable from the end user’s point of view than traditional ones.

          • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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            2 days ago

            You could argue my take is too accepting of the current situation and I would agree with that. At the same time, I would argue yours is simplifying things quite a bit. Subscription TV channels came after free-to-air channels with commercials. This may depend on where you live in the world but most places have at least one local station or a selection of them broadcast through the air, not cable or satellite, and not subscription based. Financed through commercials or in some countries also through a license model (like in the UK). Cable/satellite/subscription channels are iterations on the model brought to you by capitalism. Ads in public transport can lower ticket prices. Billboards can help lower rental rates in buildings and their revenue adds to the tax intake of the community they’re in. If you think it already takes too long to get potholes fixed, it would take even longer without them. Not all roads are toll roads. I get it: you don’t like billboards. You’re going to get all these unintended side effects if they were banned tomorrow.

            Online ads are insufferable. I’m running 3-4 plugins to avoid them. I’m also normally watching broadcast TV on DVR so I can skip through the commercial breaks. I bail on any subscription service that adds ads.

            The problem online is the cause of the problem. It’s the simplicity with which data can be collected and the lack of regulation. It’s also generally still paying off a debt incurred when in the early days of www users got accustomed to getting everything ‘for free.’ Traditional media has lowered the price dramatically of its own offerings to get new eyeballs online while older streams of income still paid for most expenses, like the income from TV commercial revenue or sales of printed paper. And as these traditional sources of great rivers of money decreased over decades, the ones that replaced it were digital trickles in danger of drying out. That brought about a “militarization” of online ads, ever more targeted and annoying. This problem needs a multi-pronged approach including regulation of data collection and new financing models for media in general.

    • FritzApollo@lemmy.today
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      2 days ago

      I think “most people” would tolerate advertising if it wasn’t so predatory and invasive (especially for apps/sites that a person values). So the solution to the “wrinkle” has been hiding in plain sight for years.