Slashdot Mirror


TiVo Lets You Respond to Ads

WalletBoy writes "TiVo is implementing a new feature in their Series 2 recorders where viewers can choose to have their personal-contact information sent to advertisers when certain commercials air using just their remote control." This is actually exactly how I think advertising should work. If I want more information, I can press thumbs up and have my email address sent to the advertiser. It's opt-in. I'm sure it will work because they use the same concept for letting you record a show by pressing thumbs up when a commercial for it is airing. If only every commercial supported these functions. Now if only MTV would use the same thing to email me song info for videos I like instead of covering the screen in tacky text.

8 of 316 comments (clear)

  1. I'd like another button.. by TractorBarry · · Score: 5, Funny

    And for the vast majority of iniane advertisering wouldn't it be nice to have another button that lets me tell them to "fuck off" :)

    --
    Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
    1. Re:I'd like another button.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, I think they can continue the use of hand gestures on the buttons to signal approval or disapproval. I can guarantee it will not involve the thumb, however.

  2. What I'd rather have is... by clintp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I'd rather have is the "Thumbs Up/Down" buttons act as direct feedback to the advertizers:

    I like/Don't like this ad. You missed/hit your target audience. This ad was funny/offensive. That's cool/inane. More/no more Purple Pill commercials. That movie looks interesting/boring. Etc...

    But of course, I miss most of the ads anyway with TiVo. :)

    --
    Get off my lawn.
    1. Re:What I'd rather have is... by erlenic · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If they implemented this, I'd occasionally sit through commercials just so I can do this. If advertisers could make better commercials, maybe I wouldn't be so inclined to skip them, or at least not be as annoyed when watching live TV.

  3. This also just in. by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Funny
    > If I want more information, I can press thumbs up and have my email address sent to the advertiser.

    I, along with the article submitter, am all in favor of opt-in. I opt to provide the following feedback:

    1) Unscrew back of remote.
    2) Use X-Acto knife to cut the metal traces on the circuit board (or shave off the conductive traces on the plastic membrane) corresponding to the thumbs-up key.
    3) Replace the "thumbs up" key with a picture of my middle finger.

    > Now if only MTV would use the same thing to email me song info for videos I like instead of covering the screen in tacky text.

    That'd be a cool idea, and might actually return something of useful information to the viewer in exchange for his/her expression of interest in the content. Unfortunately for the poster, MTV last showed a "video" in 1997.

  4. All the more reason why micropayments are good by ShatteredDream · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the content cartels would invest in a real micropayment system, Tivo would be awesome for them. In fact, I bet it'd be more profitable than anything they've had before. Instead of watching ads, I'd pay $2/episode for something like Battlestar Galactica or Stargate SG1. After the series is over, people who have paid for half ofthe series should get a 25-30% discount on the boxed set for the season and people who paid for the entire thing should get about 60-70% off. If I've paid $40-$60 for the entire season already, that's real, guaranteed money in their hands. Then, if they play their cards right, as a loyal fan I can buy the entire series on DVD for $25 including S&H since I already paid $40-$60 for the series.

    The cost of making DVDs is really low now. If they pay only $1/DVD to make and it costs them $2 to make the box and shrink wrap it, a 5 DVD set like Stargate SG1 would cost $7 to make. They could realistically go to $15 before S&H if they were really gung ho about getting a paying fanbase going. Just think, right after you watch the last episode in the series, the TV channel popups up a message saying "Thanks for supporting this series with your micropayments, if you would like to own this series, because of your generous support we'll give you a 70% discount on the boxed set." They'd make a killing doing that for many series.

    The problem though, is that regular TV sitcom bullshit would probably be hit hard initially by that. Imagine people having to pay for an episode of Friends or Seinfeld? At any rate, if the Cartoon Network, Comedy Central and Sci Fi Channel offered this, knowing their audiences, it'd work like a charm.

  5. Re:Respond to THIS by saider · · Score: 5, Funny

    [on that note, yeah, it is excessive for tampon commercials to be piped into a house with 3 20-something guys as the only residents.]

    What shows are you watching? I never see those unless my wife is watching "Lifetime" or daytime TV.

    Really, you can get an idea for the target audience for a show by watching the ads. Watch late night TV? You must need psychic help so you can decide which work-at-home scheme you want to invest in. At home during the day? You must be an unemployed laborer who was injured on the job and got screwed by the insurance company or you're a homemaker that needs a lot of feminine hygene and cleaning products.

    I watch the History channel at night so I am a elderly toothless man, who likes pickup trucks. At least they got the gender right.

    --


    Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
  6. Re:Potential for abuse... by geckofiend · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you often have strangers in your home mucking with your Tivo for extended periods of time?