Advertising on a Free Wireless Network?
Mischievous0ne asks: "I had an idea yesterday, and I wanted to run it past the Slashdotcommunity. Would you use a honeypot (free wireless access point) that covered a large downtown area (3-4 blocks of restaurants, coffee bars, an iceskating rink, a small park, and general hangout) if you had to have a framed banner ad at the top of every page you visited while on the network? Do advertisers still pay for banner ads? Are banner ads, effective? I live in a college town in Indiana, and I know there are wireless users here, but the campus wireless network is severly limited. I'm also not sure how people would react to the banner ad space in exchange for free access."
This brings up a good point.
As wireless networks become more and more common, how long will it be before we have a lawsuit involving the content on those networks?
Can't you imagine some litigation happy jerk finding porn on a shared drive and suing for distributing the content?
"We must protect the children! My son say porn on my neighbor's hard drive over the wireless network!"
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Step 1) In a major metropolitan area, set up a huge wifi network. Name it "GCN $50/mo 555-1212" where 555-1212 is your phone number and GCN is the name of your ISP.
...
Step 2)
Step 3) Profit!
That's what some folks are doing in Mendocino, and it seems like it'd be a great service. I opened up my laptop in a friends house, and saw I was getting wifi access. I'd have paid them $10 for the weekend, easily.
There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
Offer paid subscribers the option of turning off the ads. That way, the cheapskate users can't complain too much.
Neat GPS tie-in: click on an ad for a nearby coffee shop, send them your GPS coordinates with your order (paid by credit card or PayPal), and they'll deliver for a fee based on your distance from the shop.
OK, maybe that's a bit too geeky...
2 questions
1) do you remember alladvantage?
2) where are they now?
people don't give a shit about web banners... however there was one critical factor they forgot-
local ads.
people are way more receptive to hungry howies pizza down the street than than lowermybills.com
if you advertise local stuff, local companies would be willing to pay.
go outside the area tho and you'll shoot yourself in the foot.
don't force advertisements either. show people what they're willing to see.
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But those were done on a much larger scope than what is being tried here. The funds generated from the banner ads weren't enough to back the cost of multitude of users. Now a wireless network with fewer users in a local area won't need the same kind of monitary backing. I think that if he gets local people to advertise, and perhaps a few larger corporations to advertise, then there is a rather good chance that it will work.
Xaotik Designs
Hey, you may have just hit on something there. Obviously, the closer you are to the business, the better the banner ad works, but I think this would have some appeal for businesses across town. Your banner ad could even offer directions to the store from the viewer's general location.
He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.