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Americans Don't Want Targeted Ads

itwbennett writes "A survey by the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology at the University of California Berkeley School of Law and the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania finds that US residents do not want to receive Web advertising tailored to their interests. 66% of those surveyed said they don't want tailored, or targeted, online ads and when asked if online ad vendors should deliver targeted ads by tracking customers' behavior across multiple Web sites, 86% of the 1,000 respondents said no. 35% of respondents said executives of companies that use personal information illegally should face jail time, and 18% said those companies should be put out of business. 'While privacy advocates have lambasted behavioral targeting for tracking and labeling people in ways they do not know or understand, marketers have defended the practice by insisting it gives Americans what they want: advertisements and other forms of content that are as relevant to their lives as possible,' the study said. 'In high percentages, [US residents] stand on the side of privacy advocates.'"

404 comments

  1. And.... by Drakin020 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you think the Marketers give a rats ass?

    --
    The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    1. Re:And.... by negRo_slim · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do you think the Marketers give a rats ass?

      Nope, and neither will consumers if advertisers can get something like this going under the radar. They'll just get used to it, like so many other things.

      --
      On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
    2. Re:And.... by sopssa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And if customers are going to get some ads, targeted are a way better - atleast its some interest to them then. Just aslong as the advertisement platforms dont break privacy too much. On that note, i'm not worried about Google's AdSense, but rather about their Analytics code being all over the web (which is *designed* to gather all the possible info about users)

    3. Re:And.... by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Funny

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    4. Re:And.... by MrMr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      targeted are a way better - atleast its some interest to them
      That's a common mistake, the problem is the targetting always seems to work like this:
      Hey you bought a PC yesterday; so you're in the PC buying demographic; so we'll serve you a dozen ads for the last thing you will need for the next couple of years...

    5. Re:And.... by clem · · Score: 1

      *golf clap* Well done, sir. Well done.

      --
      Your courageous and selfless spelling corrections have made me a better person.
    6. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You beat me to my joke, you rat bastard!

    7. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think the Marketers give a rats ass?

      Probably not.

      At least not until more people start "advertising" their cinder block companies, by putting ads of cinder blocks through the advertisers car and home windows :P

    8. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More importantly, do you think most Americans would still say this if they realized targeted advertising is what pays for all the free services they like so much on the Internet?

      Only the shilliest of corporate shills believes targeting advertising makes browsing better for the users on its own. But it still beats the alternative as far as I can tell.

    9. Re:And.... by ari_j · · Score: 4, Funny

      Marketers absolutely do care about this information. Now, they only have to figure out what types of ads to target to people who don't want targeted ads, and they can make billions.

    10. Re:And.... by nobodylocalhost · · Score: 1

      Ads or not, requirement for me to spend my cash is easy. As long as the product is good and cheap. That's why i use services such as slickdeals or woot. Yes, given the incentive, we actually go out of our way and find ads. What these people don't understand is the fact human beings are hunter/gatherer since the ancient times. We look for what we want, and when we get it better and cheaper, it gives us a sense of accomplishment. On the other hand, if it is simply dished in front of us, we'll just brush it off. When these ads force to catch our attention with no entertainment value or inappropriately use our private information, we usually find it offensive and/or annoying.

      --
      Where is the "Ignorant" mod tag?
    11. Re:And.... by Znork · · Score: 1

      atleast its some interest to them then.

      If it were perfectly targeted. yes. The trouble is, a system that can figure out what the viewer wants would figure out that what the viewer wants is to continue doing whatever they were doing, which, in many cases, was not watching ads or shopping.

      Of course, that means that the only place it actually makes sense (for most companies) to place advertisements are price comparison, consumer info and shopping sites, which in turn creates somewhat of a problem for newspapers, TV, radio, billboards and similar non-purchase related advertising outlets.

    12. Re:And.... by religious+freak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd go further and say consumers actually DO want this (i.e. the benefits it provides) - but just won't admit it.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    13. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what you would think but it is wrong. Targeted ads don't offer people what they want. They offer a stereotypical profile based assumption of what they might be able to use and afford on credit.

      Web programmers are the only people who convince themselves that they are providing a service. Everyone else knows that personal data will be collected, sold and used for far more than targeted ads.

    14. Re:And.... by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1

      Of course they don't care. While consumers give the obvious answer that they don't like things more targeted, the unfortunate truth is that these ads are more effective. Just ask anybody who runs contextual ads. If it performs better than people will continue to use it, period.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    15. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I've been targeted right out of the market.

      I've had it. I can't take any more advertising. Television, radio, magazines, billboards, even the Internet for Christ's sake. Everywhere. Why do they keep targeting me? I never did anything to them. I don't even buy anything! They're wasting their time! Fast food makes me feel like shit, soft drinks make me dizzy, candy is disgusting, chips make my stomach hurt, I don't smoke, and any band that has ever been advertised anywhere sucks unequivocally. I eat tortillas and vegetables, I drink tap water. I ride my $40 bike for entertainment. I buy a new pair of Dickies at the army navy store every year and I get all my other clothes at Costco in 3-packs. My car works fine, I use my Internet connection for long distance, I've had the same boots for three years and re-sole them when they wear out. As far as booze goes, well, as long as it's wet.......

      So why do they keep attacking me? Why are they filling every square inch of every available space in my life? Above urinals, on concert tickets, underneath the ice at hockey games, on blimps, in video games, as props in movies, plugs in rap songs, on shitty Web Sites (No, I will not visit your motherfucking sponsor. If you're not in it for the love, and you can't figure out any better way to pay for your site than by slapping some ugly, corrupted banner across the top of your pathetic work, then fucking close up shop, kill yourself, and leave the Web to non-polluters). They'd advertise on the backs of my eyelids if they could get away with it, and I can't hack it anymore. They win. I lose. They succeeded. I failed. Like Brian Wilson, I just wasn't built for these times. I fold. Here are all my cards. Keep the pot, keep my ante, keep the goddamn jacket on the back of my chair for all I care, I can get another at Costco. I'll be out in the parking lot getting drunk and yelling at cute girls because I can no longer stand the taste of tentacles. Marketing has poisoned everything worthwhile under the sun, so I'm giving it all up. Everything.

      But the way I figure it, there's no real loss. I've seen all of the episodes of the Simpsons 200 times each. Most of the good writing was done 100 years ago. I haven't listened to FM radio in years. I could play all my records beginning to end alphabetically and I'd be 76 years old when I got to the Zeni Geva. Online culture is a fucking yawn, only good for buying stuffed goats on Ebay and getting cracked copies of $1000 software. Movies always end up at the 99 cent video store across the street eventually, and you can fast forward through those commercials. My girlie's cute and the corner bar has Pabst on tap. What else matters?

      True, by shutting myself off to everything, I'm probably limiting my future potential as a 'community building' or 'bleeding edge' cog in someone's nightmarish vision of Internet profitability, but fuck, a simple read through my writing should've cured that anyway (Note to potential employers: The bidding starts at $120,000 a year with full dental).

      So I'm out. No more.

      I just feel bad for those of you I'm leaving behind. You'll be wearing your Slave Labor Nikes, sweating under a Third World Vest, listening to Everqueer or Fratboy Slim, your hair styled stupidly with gasoline and aborted pig placentas, trying to choke down a Double Meat Fuck Splattered Cow Testicles On The Slaughterhouse Floor Pus Coagulated Lactacious Secretion Yellow Dye #2 Deluxe. Man, will you be looking dumb. It makes me want to cry. You poor, oversugared demographic you. You're filling your apartments, your bodies, and your minds with useless junk. You stagger under your own weight, throwing money in random directions until you collapse and die, buried by a bunch of people who you failed to create meaningful human bonds with, who forget about you on the way home from the funeral.

      Maybe I'm just oversensitive, but I actually feel those fingers reaching out at me - cute little girl fingers, feeling at my face like a bind man, pulling at the loose threads all over m

    16. Re:And.... by Korin43 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd like it if advertisers would allow us to give them information that they can work with. I mean.. I told Hulu that I'm a 20-something guy. You'd think they'd realize I'm not worried about my "inadequate lashes" or wrinkles..

    17. Re:And.... by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Ok, have you -not- seen the targeted ads on Facebook? Most either say *insert exact age here* year olds needed for *insert testing for some believable product*, Or use your relationship status to do "Meet singles in your area", or other crappy spam. None of it is relevant. Ok, sure, perhaps it might be nice if it said "X band is coming to *insert town here* on *insert date that the concert was* reserve tickets now!" because that would be useful, but instead it either recommends bands that aren't even similar to what I'm listening to or "reserve tickets" even though the band might not even be touring in your country.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    18. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had that problem too? I actually checked to see what I said in my profile to make sure I didn't say I was female.

    19. Re:And.... by gnick · · Score: 1

      It probably depends on how you phrase it (TFA might mention it, but how would I know?)
      "Do you want targeted ads on web-sites you visit?" No.
      "Would you rather have ads tailored to your tastes or ads delivered at random?" Tailored.
      "If a site has ads, would you mind having them predict what kind of ads would be most suited to you as long as it didn't interfere with your experience?" No.
      "Would you mind having sites hide files on your computer that they can use to track your every Internet activity?" Yes.

      It's easy if you just feed them the answer.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    20. Re:And.... by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      MY FB target ads have been passably good. Not great, and a few errors, but reasonably good.

      They've got my hobbies marked off well enough, as I will often see ads for diving vacations or cheap gear. Clearly contacts shows up a lot too, but that's probably because I'm a "fan".

      The "meet singles" is a little odd since I'm married, as are the "get a flat stomach" ads, for much the same reason.

      (I actually HAVE a flat (not ripped) stomach; my wife doesn't care.)

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    21. Re:And.... by gnick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not necessarily how it works - At least not if the folks serving ads are worth their salt.

      "Hey, you bought a motherboard yesterday - Do you need a graphics card?"
      "Hey, you bought a DVD player yesterday - Would you like a Netflix subscription?"
      "Hey, you bought a tent yesterday - Would you like a lantern?"

      It's slightly more complicated than "Sell PCs to the guy who buys PCs," but it's not rocket surgery.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    22. Re:And.... by qwijibo · · Score: 1

      The reason they're called targeted advertisements is that you're considered to be the victim(or target), not a potential customer who may be interested in certain types of products.

      I still get a bunch of junk mail from various merchants based on a single purchase of a wedding gift, from a registry, over 5 years ago. I can guarantee that none of those merchants carry anything that would ever be of any interest to me. I will never make a purchase from any of them, but they will keep sending me catalogs and such because someone else sold them my name as someone who buys that kind of stuff.

      I don't mind rating stuff that I buy or look at on Amazon because it helps them direct me to things that may be interesting, based on what I've already shown an interest in. I don't mind rating all of the movies I watch on Netflix because it helps them make suggestions of things I may wish to watch and therefore continue to use their service. There's nothing wrong with using information to help the company and customer benefit from suggestions. Targeted advertising doesn't care about customer preferences unless each customer takes the time to complain and ask to never be contacted again.

    23. Re:And.... by bit01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd go further and say consumers actually DO want this (i.e. the benefits it provides) - but just won't admit it.

      "Targeting" means that 2 ads in 10,000 is "useful" instead of 1 ad in 10,000. "Targeting" is a scam, just one way marketers try to rationalize their pathetic, parasitic existence.

      ---

      Marketing = information pollution.

    24. Re:And.... by holt · · Score: 1

      Actually, I found out about a Smashing Pumpkins concert in my area right due to those targeted ads. I'm not sure I would have found out otherwise, so I was pretty happy about it. The quality of the targeting seems to have gone down of late, though. It seems like all I see any more are ads for Catholic singles, which is weird, because I never told facebook whether or not I'm Catholic.

    25. Re:And.... by Kuroji · · Score: 1

      If that's the kind of writing I can expect from you, point me somewhere that I can get more. That's quality.

    26. Re:And.... by aywwts4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Indeed, everyone including the original article has a strong bias against targetd adds, but lets ask the question in a different way. They asked would you like this concept, the proper method would have been to do a blind trial, show untargeted ads to one group, show targeted ads to another, and quiz them on their annoyance rating, all ads are annoyances, its the tradeoff for free content, some much much more annoying than others. Something tells me the results would be the opposite of this studies findings.

      Dear Slashdot, are you annoyed at the constant advertising for Trucks and SUVs that make claims about fuel efficiency that hurts your brain? Being pitched the newest speed/caffeine cocktail not yet banned by the FDA marketed as a diet miracle? Bling it, Bling Anything!, BILLY MAYES HERE with Oxycut, you snort it and forget it. Tampons are great, I can go biking in a summer breeze! Coming up next on The Saddest Loser, Watch 10 contestants eat human feces for fifty thousand dollars. Step into fashion at the arbor day week long sale the Savings* are incredible. (*)people who can factor compound percentage discounts need not apply.

      Don't you wish instead of seeing 6 commercials this break you could see two, you just have to tell NBC you are a well paid male college educated nerd who makes IT purchasing decisions, enjoys SciFi and Video gaming on PC, Wii and Xbox?

      Then you get advertised by Intel, Sun, HP, IBM, Battlestar Galactica on Bluray, Nvidia, New games, etc, etc. If a new blade server comes out, it might be good to let me know. They don't need to advertise the newest smartphone with pop music and Whoopee Goldberg going 'Wow, you can the internet on this!' But instead talk about processing power and ram and what the latest firmware can do and how fast it's GPS can get a positional lock, and that it allows tethering etc.

      I spend a Lot of money on gadgets and electronics, the fact that I need to go out looking for new gadgets instead of having them fall into my lap strikes me as odd, people who buy trucks are always informed about the most recent ford truck, but tons of cool devices fall under my radar all the time.

      Nerds spend a ton of cash, just on completely different things, we are just smaller than the majority and therefore not economical to advertise in unfocused mainstream media. We aren't the only group like this, but its not hard to see the benefit, I would love it if I could watch TV without my brain hurting realizing that someone out there is persuaded by these advertisements.

      Hell have a button that says you are a CEO or high ranking member of a fortune 500, if advertisements on golf and stock shows are any indication there are a ton of advertisers who want to hit people who own giant corporations, so they advertise heavily on shows where they might make up .1% of the viewers in hopes they move their company to Oregon

      --
      Web Developers: Celebrate to our roots! Animated Gifs and Tiled Backgrounds, dont let our history die!
    27. Re:And.... by waveformwafflehouse · · Score: 1

      What percentage of Americans want ads at all?

    28. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Way to mistake marketing as advertising there genius. Advertising is a subset of marketing. Opinionated != Informed.

    29. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marketers: Well thats what they want because thats what we tell them they want.

      Makes me think of ClearChannel, or any "top 100" music / video / etc list I have ever seen. No, its not the best. No, its not what you want. It is what we want to sell, therefore we tell you its your favorite and you believe us.

    30. Re:And.... by ThisIsForReal · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Another way of saying 'targeting ads' is to not think of it by what it isn't - it is money that isn't spent advertising messages to people who have no interest in a particular product. Know what that is? Efficiency. Efficiency in the marketplace. And that means a larger economic pie for all of us. Maybe that pie will take shape when products are offered for lower prices (smaller, efficient advertising budget = lower overhead), maybe it'll mean more ad execs spending their extra cash on your elite car wash and waxing service. In the end, the world is more efficient. Is it worth the privacy tradeoff? For me it is.

      --
      -THE END-
    31. Re:And.... by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      Everyone hates ads, except for the shit they like.

    32. Re:And.... by ae1294 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I told Hulu that I'm a 20-something guy. You'd think they'd realize I'm not worried about my "inadequate lashes" or wrinkles..

      You didn't mention that you where a member of slashdot did you???

    33. Re:And.... by Rasperin · · Score: 1

      It's just targeting the question to your consumer base amirite? (I am right)

      --
      WTF Slashdot, why do I have to login 50 times to post?
    34. Re:And.... by Jack9 · · Score: 1

      Same percentage of respondents "don't want appearance to matter so much". But they do. Pointless study tells more about people's attitudes (understanding) than about their desires.

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    35. Re:And.... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      You'd think they'd at least push accessories or something instead...

    36. Re:And.... by toleraen · · Score: 1

      Copy and paste from a blog. Solid rant though!

    37. Re:And.... by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Umm markting people are the rats. That's why they always leav(or fired) from failing companies first. It is also why snakes(lawyers) go after rats so often.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    38. Re:And.... by Requiem18th · · Score: 3, Insightful

      BULLSHIT for 2 reasons

      Firstly, targeted ads won't make people more happy because they hate ads, period. The fact the ads are irrelevant just gives them more ammunition to complain about them but they'd still zap them if the can even if they are targeted.

      Secondly, ads are bad for consumers, (revenue not withstanding). I know this will be hard to get into some mind sets.

      Unlike genuine recommendations, or impartial review sites and product guides, ads are meant to either

      a) Make you buy a product you do not need or down right should not buy
      or...
      b) Make you choose a brand of a product you do need under false assumptions or wrong reasons.

      That sometimes you actually need to buy the product and that at least one brand is actually the best for you does not make them more honest, they are biased and should not be advising you which things to buy.

      Targeted ads are actually worse because they are more likely to trap you. This is specially obvious in the case where only the ad content is personally targeted not the product itself, example. Selling Pepsi to white adults using pop and using hip-hop for black kids (or kids in general). Since the targeted ad advertises the same product it's obvious that the only difference is the effectiveness to make you buy a drink you don't need.

      Do I see no room for ads in the world?

      Not at all, they are an excellent revenue source. As a consumer I want advertises to pay for ads, but as a consumer and a citizen I can only advise you to ignore them the best you can because they are never good for you.

      Since the content of ads is best ignored whether they are targeted or not is irrelevant, the fact that you are being tracked, however, is not. Therefore targeted ads are a net loss for you and for the whole of society.

      A case could be made that targeted ads are more valuable and thus advertisers will pay more for them, but this is mostly false, advertisers are not so much paying more for targeted ads as they are paying less for non targeted ones, if no ads are targeted the price of non targeted ads will rise.

      One could further argue that since targeted ads are more likely to trap consumers, advertisers are more likely to profit and thus keep paying for ads but this is false too, the price of an ad is mostly driven by competition among product producers, as long as producers have to compete they'll buy ads.

      I don't have hopes to convincing you, you probably are a glass house advocate.

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
    39. Re:And.... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Ok, have you -not- seen the targeted ads on Facebook?"

      Ah, Nope!

      Of course I guess that would require actually visiting a FB page sometime in my lifetime, which I haven't.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    40. Re:And.... by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      The "meet singles" is a little odd since I'm married, as are the "get a flat stomach" ads, for much the same reason.

      Yeah, I wish the ads were more targeted for that very reason. No, I don't want to meet singles, you should know that.

      The question is just how they learn these things, and if they use them for more nefarious purposes. With Facebook, I'm fine with them using the information that I gave them. I'm not fine with them using my activity outside the site to target advertising.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    41. Re:And.... by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      This post is so goddamn right.

    42. Re:And.... by sopssa · · Score: 1

      You said it perfectly. Why waste time on random advertisements when you could actually get something that benefits both you and the advertiser.

    43. Re:And.... by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      That's a common mistake, the problem is the targetting always seems to work like this:
      Hey you bought a PC yesterday; so you're in the PC buying demographic; so we'll serve you a dozen ads for the last thing you will need for the next couple of years...

      Well, if my PC turns out to be a piece of shit and I figure it out during the return period, I'll probably return it and buy something better, so that ad might come in handy anyway. On the other hand, NOTHING is going convince me to buy makeup (and even if my wife asked me to pick some up for her, it would be the brand she requested and whether or not I saw it in an ad would be irrelevant).

    44. Re:And.... by gtbritishskull · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Facebook is not a good example of what targeted ads should be. Google targets ads (though I do have problems with some of their ads, but in general they are OK. Hopefully in about 5 years or so they will get good enough that I will actually click on them when I see them). Facebook targets spam.

    45. Re:And.... by spectre_240sx · · Score: 1

      Or you could get a marketing person with a brain that would serve them ads for new software, a wireless N router or anything else that might be useful after one upgrades their computer.

    46. Re:And.... by xerxesVII · · Score: 1

      That was written by Mark Driver. He's got a great style and I always love stumbling on his stuff here and there.
      "The Right Way to Beat Up a Girl" is brilliant.

      --
      "We shall grapple with the ineffable, and see if we may not eff it after all." - Douglas Adams
    47. Re:And.... by bit01 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Way to mistake marketing as advertising there genius. Advertising is a subset of marketing. Opinionated != Informed.

      I'm well aware of the difference. Neurotic marketers who harp on this difference are doubly pathetic. My point stands.

      ---

      The majority of modern marketing is nothing more than an arms race to get mind share. Everybody loses except the parasitic marketing "industry".

    48. Re:And.... by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'd go further and say consumers actually DO want this (i.e. the benefits it provides) - but just won't admit it.

      AKA the rapist defense. She said no, but we both knew she really wanted it.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    49. Re:And.... by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      ads are meant to either

      a) Make you buy a product you do not need or down right should not buy or... b) Make you choose a brand of a product you do need under false assumptions or wrong reasons.

      That sometimes you actually need to buy the product and that at least one brand is actually the best for you does not make them more honest, they are biased and should not be advising you which things to buy.

      Are you saying that spending money is bad? I check woot most days just so I can find random fun things that are reasonably priced to buy. Ads are a form of information. It tells you that a company sells a product. You don't have to buy it. But when I decide to buy something I usually shop around to see who offers the best product at the best price. If I don't know about a company, it is hard to compare their prices. (And no, google does not always show you everyone who could be of interest to you when you search. Especially if you want to actually go to a shop and not just buy it online.)

    50. Re:And.... by babyrat · · Score: 0

      Targeted ads are actually worse because they are more likely to trap you.

      Trap you? Really? Please step away from the computer and put your tinfoil hat back on. (Alternatively you could paint your head with some fancy new paint I just saw advertised).

      a) Make you buy a product you do not need or down right should not buy
      or...
      b) Make you choose a brand of a product you do need under false assumptions or wrong reasons.

      Those are two things that ads might make you do. They also introduce you to new products that you are not aware of, or describe features of a product that you did not know of previously.

      How about we rephrase the question: "Would you prefer to see random ads, targeted ads, pay for the resource you are using, or do without the resource you are currently using."

    51. Re:And.... by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but when I surf the internet, it is usually not with a specific purpose. I sometimes just stumble across wikipedia, following links that look interesting. If I am just surfing around on the internet, I will follow an ad if it looks interesting to me. For example, if I were reading about stirling engines and I saw an ad on the page for a cheap stirling engine kit, I would probably follow it and be happy it was there.

    52. Re:And.... by Exception+Duck · · Score: 1

      Why should you get to choose ?

      Maybe a disclaimer should be in order, but it's a free society

      Would you rather have tampoons ads than the "ULTRA CPU MONSTER COMPUTER"

    53. Re:And.... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Users vote with their money, and their feet. AdBlock Plus, FTW. Screw the advertisers. Control your cookies, disable tracking, give the MINIMUM information for required applications, games, forums, etc to work. If that minimum level of required info becomes offensive - stop using the site. Simple.

      I use Google search exclusively, but they really don't have much information on me. They can't even make meaningful "suggestions" as I type in the search box.

      If/when I decide that I want to purchase something, I'll do a freaking search for it. I simply don't need an advert to decide what I need or want, or what I'm willing to pay for it. Google search will find it, when I'm ready.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    54. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's this, Microsoft embedding ads for Bing in Slashdot?

    55. Re:And.... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I've said it before and I'll say it again.

      Tivo should let you rate the commercials.

      You should be able to give the most annoying garbage 3 thumbs down.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    56. Re:And.... by martas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      true. personally, i'd gladly welcome targeted advertising under the following conditions:

      1) complete transparency of the way personal data is used that is subjected to scrutiny to make sure advertisers are adhering to their privacy policies (and, of course, some limits on what those policies can allow them to do)
      2) targeted advertisements that actually do a good job, for god's sake! i'll tell them anything they want - age, sex, occupation, movies i've seen over past 2 months, even the number of times i've ever shaved my private parts, if that's what it takes. but i want ads which really are interesting to me, 'cause IMO even gmail's ads usually suck badly at this. (in fact, i'd give anything just so i never have to sit through an overly-detailed ad about prostate cancer or tampons or menopause).

    57. Re:And.... by MpVpRb · · Score: 1

      As it currently exists...advertising sucks, for the advertiser and the customer.

      Advertisers waste lots of money on ads that are ignored.

      Customers waste lots of time looking at ads for products they don't want.

      Perfect advertising would, by definition, be targeted. When a customer was in the market for a product, all of the suppliers of the product would make their pitch. I realize that the spammer mentality would doom this simple scheme, but it remains the goal.

      When I am in the market for a product, I welcome, and seek out, advertising of the products I am interested in.

      Anybody ever read the Buyers Purchasing Digest? It is/was a publication aimed at engineers, containing only ads. I used to read it cover to cover.

      Unfortunately, to the advertisers today, targeted advertising is NOT designed to present ads the customer is really interested in. It is a simplistic scheme, only slightly better than spam. I remember when I bought a house. Got lots of ads from contractors. If the advertisers realized I was a do-it-your-selfer, I would have loved to get ads from building material suppliers.

    58. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or like this: "Hey, you spent last night searching the web for gay porn using your home PC. I'll serve you a few adds for gay dating sites on your office pc today."

    59. Re:And.... by Quothz · · Score: 1

      "Would you rather have ads tailored to your tastes or ads delivered at random?" Tailored.

      This phraseology is remarkably close to what they used. Among other questions, folks were asked, orally:

      Please tell me whether or not you want websites you visit to...

      Show you ads that are tailored to your interests.

      Give you discounts that are tailored to your interests.

      Show you news that is tailored to your interests.

      The "ads" question had the most negative response; the "discounts" one, the most positive. Things were broken down a bit further in asking folks if they'd be cool with it if the "interests" were determined based on their activity on the current website, other websites, or offline behavior. Interestingly, the more specific questions got more negative responses than the general ones - that is, a few people favor tailored advertising as long as it's not based on any actual information. Heh.

      And although you didn't ask, as such, TFA doesn't detail all this, but it does link to the actual working paper that does, which is nice. Big props to IT World for that.

    60. Re:And.... by gnick · · Score: 1

      You searching for a quick joke must be like searching for a needle in a coal mine...

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    61. Re:And.... by Chess+Piece+Face · · Score: 1

      BING

    62. Re:And.... by gnick · · Score: 1

      Sorry - That was terrible. I guess you can beat a dead horse to water, but you can't look him in the mouth...

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    63. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather use AdBlock, and not see any ads, while continuing to use the resource.

    64. Re:And.... by RyoShin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You get that a lot, too? I honestly don't see why that's so hard for Hulu OR the leash company to understand.

      This is why I think the surveys are wrong: while people don't like ads in general, they dislike ads that are unrelated to them more. Sure, targeted ads take a bit of information, but nothing I'd consider personal (age, sex, basic interests like games, clothes, movies, cooking, etc.). I'll ignore most ads, but it's far less of a nuisance if they at least feature explosions more often.

      Last week I was getting that TMobile "myPhone" or whatever commercial for literally every other ad. I never want to see nor buy that phone now.

    65. Re:And.... by apoc.famine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a slippery slope, but I do wonder why advertisers don't at least put a "I won't buy this ever" button on ads. If you click it, you don't see an ad for that for a year or so. They then show you something else. It's not like there's a tiny pool of things to advertise to you.
       
      It's not truly targeted, but it would help cut down on missing your target audience completely. Of course it would be abused, but you might actually be able to collect some really useful data that way.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    66. Re:And.... by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      The question is just how they learn these things, and if they use them for more nefarious purposes. With Facebook, I'm fine with them using the information that I gave them. I'm not fine with them using my activity outside the site to target advertising.

      Except it's not Facebook that provides the ads, all Facebook does is provide the space for the ads. Microsoft provides the ads.

      Falcon

    67. Re:And.... by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Hey, you bought some condoms yesterday - Need an escort?

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    68. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gentlemen, vote with your wallets.
      That is the only language these big business people understand. No money coming in because they were unethical and are being boycotted - that, and only that will get their undivided attention.
      One problem - "educating" Joe Average Online...

    69. Re:And.... by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      I'd like it if advertisers would allow us to give them information that they can work with. I mean.. I told Hulu that I'm a 20-something guy. You'd think they'd realize I'm not worried about my "inadequate lashes" or wrinkles..

      You should've checked the box for "never watches shows with a girl".

      In all seriousness, though, they aren't targeting you. They're probably assuming that based on your show selection - Grey's Anatomy, Sex in the City, etc. - that even though your profile says you're a 20-something guy, that you're sitting next to a 30-something girl. Or perhaps 40-something. I'm not here to judge.

    70. Re:And.... by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      Here is the resurrection of his Blindwino site, which is where the AC's copy pasta came from.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    71. Re:And.... by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

      Do you think the Marketers give a rats ass?

      Absolutely. The Rats Ass(tm) is one of our principal metrics.

      As an Australian marketing flack, I don't believe in targeted advertising anyway. You're supposed to make stuff attractive, not mess with people's heads. They resent it.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    72. Re:And.... by Korin43 · · Score: 1

      Yeah my roommate noticed that it started when I subscribed to Hell's Kitchen. And the subscription to Buffy the Vampire Slayer can't be helping..

    73. Re:And.... by Rorschach1 · · Score: 1

      I guess this shouldn't surprise me here, where people seem to think that a great idea is all you need to be successful. (It isn't.)

      Having the superior product doesn't count for anything if people don't know about it. I'm quite confident that my products are better than my competitors', but one competitor in particular was first to market and gained so much name recognition that many people don't even realize there IS an alternative. I don't *like* having to pay for ads, but it works, if you're smart about it anyway.

      I *stopped* advertising on one popular site because Google's targeting was way off - my ads were getting lost in a sea of garbage ads that had no place on that site, and were causing the users to ignore everything as irrelevant. My sales went up immediately when I moved that budget elsewhere.

      So yes, I would happily pay more to have my ads presented only to very specific categories of users, especially if it meant an overall thinning out of the quantity of ads thrown at them. I don't want to waste money spraying ads everywhere - I want them in front of people already looking for something I offer, or who have a need that they didn't know there was a specific product to fill.

      As a consumer, if I have to see ads I'd much rather they be for embedded C compilers, test equipment, and scuba gear than cosmetics, luxury cars, and heartburn medication. Every once in a while I *do* come across something I could really use that I didn't know existed. This happens almost exclusively with ads in magazines like Circuit Cellar, though - where the ads are, of course, targeted.

      As for American consumers not wanting targeted ads, maybe they should ask in a different way. Put someone in front of the TV for 30 minutes with the usual mix of ads for feminine products, pet food, dandruff shampoo, and so on. Then try another 30 minutes with ads targeted to their specific interests. Then ask them which they'd rather see every day.

    74. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit! The ones I get go along the lines of:

      "Hey, you bought a motherboard yesterday - Want to refinance your home?"
      "Hey, you bought a DVD player yesterday - Would you like to extend your penis?"
      "Hey, you bought a tent yesterday - Would you help a friend smuggle millions of dollars out of his country?"

      Now tbh, I mostly see ads when checking my email.

    75. Re:And.... by dcollins · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll say this: Slashdot is the only place that I ever see anyone praising/welcoming targeted ads, and I'm always mystified by it. For example, when I informed my college computer class just today that Google scans their searches, gmail, etc., for content to serve them targeted ads, the response was uniformly outright horror. Most people both (1) loathe ads, and (2) loathe the idea of companies tracking their behavior, so why anyone would expect them to like both at the same time is beyond me.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    76. Re:And.... by herojig · · Score: 1

      Great stuff! Best I've read on /. all day. If I knew how to mod (or what that was) I would. Reminds me of Hunter S. shooting his TV. Somedays I feel I should just shoot the LCD and then grow rice for the rest of my life.

      --
      I think therefore I can't be ~TTNH
    77. Re:And.... by demachina · · Score: 1

      "marketers have defended the practice by insisting it gives Americans what they want: advertisements and other forms of content that are as relevant to their lives as possible"

      I'm pretty sure most Americans want no ads at all, so its a little disingenuous if they actually said they are giving us what we want with targeted ads. But hey they are marketeers, so its not suprising they try to spin something that sucks and we don't want as something awesome by comparing it to other alternatives which also suck.

      The times I've seen ads that were obviously targeting me, and targeting me across multiple web sites, it mostly just creeped me out and made me want to hunt down Google or whomever was responsible and cut them out of my life. I did cut the company off who was paying for the targeted ads.

      --
      @de_machina
    78. Re:And.... by kimvette · · Score: 1

      If he did, they'd stream him Mountain Dew and Cheetos adverts.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    79. Re:And.... by jrumney · · Score: 1

      There's a fine line between useful and scary when it comes to this sort of thing. Most people would find it useful to not see ads that don't interest them in the slightest, but when the ads get too personal and targeted, it gets spooky.

    80. Re:And.... by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      Google has ads - I must say I have never noticed, I have an automatic ad filter - it's called ignoring information I did not ask for ......

      An advert should tell me two things, that a product exists - I can't decide to buy it if I don't know about it, and what sets it apart from the competition, anything else is irrelevant .....

       

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    81. Re:And.... by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      The fact is that targeting ads works. It creates more clicks. So we could believe a survey or we could believe the imperical results. More people click targeted ads than non-targeted ads and therefore people would rather have targeted ads than non-targeted ads.

      Of course people would rather not have ads at all. I would also prefer that everything was free in the supermarket, but that is not possible.

      A little note on surveys: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gMcZic1d4U

    82. Re:And.... by cerberusss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When I informed my college computer class just today that Google scans their searches, gmail, etc., for content to serve them targeted ads, the response was uniformly outright horror.

      Well, half of these people don't even know the difference between paid apps and normal search engine results. So while they display their utmost horror to you, they also do not care to inform themselves about it.

      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    83. Re:And.... by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      Indeed. In fact, I've coined a new term for the marketing spin that is applied to a product or system which is of no benefit to the consumer, only to big business.

      "Astroglide"

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    84. Re:And.... by joyma · · Score: 1

      146 million Gmail users have their incoming and outgoing emails read by Google so targeted ads can be delivered to them. Google even scans the incoming emails sent by non-Gmail users, without the consent or knowledge of those non-Gmail users. In the US, that's called a wiretap, in the UK it's a breach of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act. But those 146 million Gmail users aren't complaining. I think it's a little late for Americans to say they don't want targeted ads. It's clear that given a small incentive (e.g. free email) they'll allow marketers to scan whatever the marketer wants to. It's up to the network-based scanners to figure out what that small incentive is going to be.

    85. Re:And.... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a difference between the effect and the mechanism. I like the idea of targeted ads, but not how they are currently generated. I would like to be able to broadcast some public information saying 'I am currently in the market for a product in category X' and have companies that produce products in this category solicit my business. I do not want companies collecting information about me and using this to spam me with potentially relevant things.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    86. Re:And.... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      There are two purposes for adverts:
      1. Making people aware of products.
      2. Stimulating a demand for products.

      It's difficult to have a discussion while we are using the same terms to describe both forms of behaviour. Most people agree that the first of these is a useful - even essential - occupation. Most people find the second morally objectionable.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    87. Re:And.... by rwv · · Score: 1

      I told Hulu that I'm a 20-something guy. You'd think they'd realize I'm not worried about my "inadequate lashes" or wrinkles..

      You didn't mention that you where a member of slashdot did you???

      If he did, they'd stream him Mountain Dew and Cheetos adverts.

      Suddenly targeted ads don't seem so bad. And if I could get rid of the car commercials except the one time every 5 years that I'm shopping for a car that would be good.

      And no matter how many Budweiser and Coors Light commercials I see... I'm not buying their beer. They need to make it taste less like water.

      Also, sites that auto-load video w/ audio (whether it's an ad or not) should be banned from the internet. ESPN does this... I'm *very* close to finding a new site for getting sports news.

    88. Re:And.... by rwv · · Score: 1

      At least not if the folks serving ads are worth their salt.

      (emphasis mine)

      Ahh... the false conditional assumption. If he got the job, he must be qualified for it. If people are buying Toyota Camry's they must be the best car on the road. If the store raises their prices, they must also be selling stuff that's better quality.

      Don't be tricked assuming things are true just because some other logical condition has been met!

    89. Re:And.... by debiansid · · Score: 1

      Ads for Ad Blockers of course...

    90. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's poor data mining is all. Someone who just bought a new PC might be more likely to be interested in new software, or office supplies. or something that on the surface appears completely unrelated.

    91. Re:And.... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      That's not necessarily how it works - At least not if the folks serving ads are worth their salt.

      And that's the problem. Many advertisers are NOT worth their salt.
      For every ad offering useful products based on my purchases, there are a dozen assuming that I want to buy a dozen PCs just because I just bought one.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    92. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marketing = information pollution.

      I'm a lowly scumbag marketer as far as most people here are probably concerned, but let me burst your bubble and remind you that advertising is what finances all the freebies you've come to expect in life. Almost all media, including Slashdot, is free because someone else is financing it in the form of advertisements.

      The reason so many people have come to dislike advertisements (and most marketers actually belong to this group) is because advertising was so un-targeted, and still is. The SPAM commercial comes to mind. Repetition is not always a good thing, showing an ad to someone that isn't the target is NOT gonna get them to buy it, and so on so forth. Proper advertising is about delivering the reminder (or discovery) of a particular product or service to someone that's in the market, or will be in the market, for said product or service. And targeted ads does not mean (at least it shouldn't) that the advertisers has every last detail about you either. Large ad agencies have ethical rules about data collection and retention. Even marketers are people, and don't want that level of intrusion.

      That said, advertising will always change. Right now the trend is targeting. But too much of that will mean that when you're ready to buy a new car, every single damned ad will be for a car, or insurance. Then the signal to noise ratio goes up all over again. I'm betting that when this happens, some genius will come up with the idea of "random targeting" where you just shoot out an ad to any old Joe, using the cheapest left over spots.

      Either way, ads are here, they won't go away. If you find a way to turn them off, we'll just find new ways to get them to you. It's called life, but it also gets you the freebies. (It's not the reason freebies are around though.)

    93. Re:And.... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      let me burst your bubble and remind you that advertising is what finances all the freebies you've come to expect in life. Almost all media, including Slashdot, is free because someone else is financing it in the form of advertisements.

      If the loss of all free media was the price of completely eliminating all advertisement, it would be well worth it.

      The reason so many people have come to dislike advertisements (and most marketers actually belong to this group) is because advertising was so un-targeted

      Keep telling yourself that if it helps you sleep at night. The real reason people hate advertisement is because it's filled with lies and emotional manipulation.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    94. Re:And.... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      How about we rephrase the question: "Would you prefer to see random ads, targeted ads, pay for the resource you are using, or do without the resource you are currently using."

      If advertising went away entirely, we would not be mislead into buying things we don't need. We would then have more than enough money left over to support the media we choose to.

      Ad supported media is not free, the cost is only hidden.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    95. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the loss of all free media was the price of completely eliminating all advertisement, it would be well worth it.

      Unfortunately, eliminating all free media will not eliminate advertising. It will just pop up in a different form. Advertising is a necessary evil in a capitalist society. So if it helps fund free media, at least it's providing something that's of use.

      The real reason people hate advertisement is because it's filled with lies and emotional manipulation.

      Lies in advertising are both unethical and illegal, and any advertiser or marketer that isn't a real scumbag won't go that low. But advertising does comes with an image an advertiser wants to associate with a product. Most people can see past it though, if it's blatantly false. (For example, you wouldn't believe an ad just because it shows an image that walmart clothing is a top-end brand that the celebrities wear, would you?) If you can't, god bless your soul because advertising is only a small part of your worries.

      And no, I don't need to keep telling myself this stuff to help me sleep at night. I have hard, quantified numbers that prove that certain forms of advertising that doesn't rely of deceitful behavior actually works. People can dislike ads as much as they like, just like I dislike certain ads, but the bottom line is that it does work, which means that not everyone dislikes all ads. And guess what that means? Advertisers want to reach out more to the people that don't mind a particular kind of ad, and less to those that get pissed off by it, which is exactly what targeted advertising is all about.

    96. Re:And.... by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Some ads are there to sell you a product. Some are just there to create mindshare. Word of mouth is great, but how do you get the initial early adopters? Advertisement of course.

      People don't hate ads, they hate intrusive ads. They hate stupid ads. They hate ads that waste their time. But everybody loves watching super bowl ads. These are the cool ads that you talk about at work over the water cooler or among friends. Ads aren't bad in and of themselves. Ads are bad when they don't serve a purpose, be it informative or entertainment.

      Digital ads are mostly intrusive. This includes online ads, and product placement in games. So people don't like them. But Google's done very successfully for this very reason, and their ads are targetted. Their ads are neither intrusive, nor do they lack a purpose. In fact, because the ads are targetted, the ads can be useful.

      Mindshare ads for the online space though, need to be rethought.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    97. Re:And.... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Good idea. Also, they could also add a "Show me similar stuff" button for when the ad is somewhat interesting but still a near-miss.

      Both would provide a lot of data on what ads and/or products people in a given venue like or dislike, which would save advertisers money on useless shotgunned or misaimed advertising.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    98. Re:And.... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's exactly true. I didn't block ad banners until they started to sing and dance and flash in my face. I liked Google's targeted ads until they got to be a cancer that slowed down every site I went to. I didn't block ads entirely until the whole industry slithered down to predominantly porn banners and herbal viagra. Badly done, intrusive, and noxious ads are what made me block them -- NOT advertising in general.

      As to mindshare ads online -- there's no reason they can't be clever and creative just like some TV ads, and no reason they can't do their job of reminding you that Company X or Product Y exist.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    99. Re:And.... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I think you got that one backwards ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    100. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoopee Goldberg going 'Wow, you can the internet on this!'

      Dear God. The whole thing?!

    101. Re:And.... by greed · · Score: 1

      I love it when Amazon runs out of data mining steam:

      As someone who has purchased books in the past, you might be interested to know that Amazon has several books on sale for this upcoming Mother's Day.

      Usually there's some attempt to get things right, like "you bought a movie in Chinese, so anything else in Chinese must be interesting!" Or, "You've only ever bought PlayStation 2, 3 and Nintendo Wii games, so you must be interested in all our new Xbox 360 titles!"

    102. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, when I was part of facebook, I was 100% certain that I did not want voluptuous christian women, which were advertised to me on a regular basis.

    103. Re:And.... by Znork · · Score: 1

      For example, if I were reading about stirling engines and I saw an ad on the page for a cheap stirling engine kit,

      Yep, but then they're profiling the page (I mentally lumped trade-rags, such as a site about stirling engines, into consumer info), which means that you'll have an interest in that at that particular moment. Profiling the activity rather than the person is pretty much targeting purchase related activities.

    104. Re:And.... by Znork · · Score: 1

      True, but the argument I'm making goes beside those points: morals aside, is profiling the person ever really useful for marketing? Or does the miss in temporal profiling mean you're always better off targeting the medium, which by its very nature hits both personal and temporal profile?

      I'm not saying it's of no worth at all to target persons, but I suspect you'll always get a better ROI from temporal medium targeting, to the point where 'generic' advertisements are a waste of money that you could be spending on relevant forums instead. Is it ever valuable to know that someone bought a car, or has an interest in flowers and showing them cars or flowers when they're doing something else? Or is it always better to concentrate on the moments they're engaging in that particular interest?

    105. Re:And.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, we see you used an escort service yesterday - don't you wish you had had some condoms?

    106. Re:And.... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      An AC responded, "Hey, we see you used an escort service yesterday - don't you wish you had had some condoms?"

      Tee hee, exactly what I was thinking :D

      Next targeted ad: "New medication to treat the clap!"

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  2. Um, Duh! by HogGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wy do people think things like TiVO, Hulu,... are so successful?

    I believe the general public is tired of be bombarded to "BUY MORE!"

    1. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I believe the general public is tired of be bombarded to "BUY MORE!"

      As I see it, the problem isn't seeing ads; it's when I see them that determines my level of irritation. For instance, while I'm reading the news or streaming a show, the ads are a total pain in the rear and irritate me plenty (especially when I'm at work and some "bra sale" ads decide to pop over whatever site I happen to be reading at the moment). Conversely, when I'm at home browsing amazon for movies, I actually *like* being able to see comparable products, and have quick access to comparisons between them. Arguably, the "those who bought this also liked..." thing amazon does is a form of advertising competing products, and I've often been glad for it.
       
      So, when I'm out shopping I take little issue against relavent targetted ads. When I'm doing anything else, keep them away please.
       
      captcha: bagels

    2. Re:Um, Duh! by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      especially when I'm at work and some "bra sale" ads decide to pop over whatever site I happen to be reading at the moment

      "Bra sale" ads, eh? Which sites are you browsing at work? ;)

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    3. Re:Um, Duh! by loteck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm going to comment instead of mod, since this topic is so dear to my heart. Let me wholeheartedly agree and go one step further than bashing targeted ads.

      I'm against ads, period. Advertising has gone beyond informing me of a product to the point where advertisements, especially in TV and Radio, are manufactured specifically for the purpose of manipulating me into desiring the product being advertised. It is no longer, "Hey, buy this product if you're in the market". It is now, "Hey, watch as we manipulate you with images and sounds that play on your politics or emotions so that we can manufacture a desire for you to buy our product that you do not need."

      Not only is this manipulation occurring, but many times it is occurring so blatantly and unabashedly that I become offended that the ad is being shown. Think: Chevy's ads juxtaposing classic Americana and John Mellencamp to sell their trucks (link). That I, as a watcher/listener of that show/channel/medium, am considered to be so stupid that I will bite on their emotional/subliminal advertising garbage, is so enraging to me that I will completely disassociate myself from the show/channel/medium in order to get away from advertising.

      So I have abandoned commercial radio and television, and, frankly, I don't miss it. Advertising has gone from annoyance to something that I consider to be unethical and a serious contributor to our problems as a consumer society.

    4. Re:Um, Duh! by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is not at all new. Go listen to the radio ads of the 1930s and 1940s, or watch some of the sponsored programs of the 1950s. Look at newspaper ads from before those eras.

      Advertising has been about manipulating people into buying things for much longer than you seem to think. Why else do you think breakfast cereals have had mascots for so long? Manipulate the kids into begging for it enough, and a lot of parents are going to break down and buy it.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    5. Re:Um, Duh! by dwye · · Score: 1, Funny

      > So I have abandoned commercial radio and television, and, frankly, I don't miss it.

      And, of course, they won't miss you, since it sounds like you were never a potential customer of their direct customers, the ad agencies, or their indirect customers, the advertised companies.

      > Advertising has gone from annoyance to something that I consider to be unethical
      > and a serious contributor to our problems as a consumer society.

      So, how long have you been in recovery from your Home Shopping Network addiction?

    6. Re:Um, Duh! by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      I've always wanted to do a research project on the cost of advertising as a percentage of GDP and it's affect on inflation. Any ideas anyone?

    7. Re:Um, Duh! by dangineer · · Score: 1

      The entire point of advertising is to get you to desire something you never wanted in the first place. Always has been, the media is different, but the methods and motives are the same. Nothing new here except the tracking.

    8. Re:Um, Duh! by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      It could be that online game that was featured on Coding Horror a few weeks ago:

      http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001286.html

      It's a pain in the ass since it gets classed as a game but shows women in bras on the ads.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    9. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed completely. What bothers me even more are ads that explicitly complement the viewer -- I've seen this for insurance and financial ads. They literally say things like, "because we know you're smart." No, bullshit, they're just praying on people's emotions. How about just be sincere without being so goddamn patronizing. It's like Fox News putting "Fair and Balanced" everywhere.

    10. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is precisely what I've done. The advertising *pisses me off* so much that I stopped watching TV, stopped listening to commercial radio, and despise going to the movies since I'm forced to watch 30 minutes of ads if I want a good seat...right before I'm shown another 20 minutes of ads interspersed with previews. At least AdBlock Plus limits the amount of bullshit ads I need to see on the web or I'd completely lose it. Don't even get me started on the moving ads they've been installing in malls...

    11. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      especially when I'm at work and some "bra sale" ads decide to pop over whatever site I happen to be reading at the moment

      "Bra sale" ads, eh? Which sites are you browsing at work? ;)

      Doesn't matter what sites she is browsing at work. You won't get these ads because you are not a woman. Did you see word "targeted" in the title of the summary?

    12. Re:Um, Duh! by thadmiller · · Score: 0

      You are probably in the same boat as 99% of the population - ads suck, ads are annoying, ads are intrusive, etc, etc. And 99.9% of the remaining population is probably not interested in the ad even if they're not annoyed. But the remaining 0.001% is a $190 billion industry in the US alone. To quote an above post, marketers just don't give a rat's ass.

    13. Re:Um, Duh! by syousef · · Score: 1

      I haven't abandoned commercial radio and television. I get what I want out of it. However I'm glad to hear I'm not the only one that feels insulted by the blatant manipulation. I'm more likely to make fun of an ad than purchase anything because of it but since advertising works I must be in the minority.

      What's worse is I don't really get a choice. Even if I switch of my radio and TV and never log onto the Internet again, I still get a mailbox literally full of catalogs every day. Dead trees galore. All from companies who've eliminated plastic bags supposedly for the sake of the environment. More like for the sake of that 5c per customer you're saving you vile liars!

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    14. Re:Um, Duh! by ComputerGeek01 · · Score: 1

      Wy do people think things like TiVO, Hulu,... are so successful?

      I believe the general public is tired of be bombarded to "BUY MORE!"

      Which is why they BOUGHT a TiVO and\or a Hulu...

    15. Re:Um, Duh! by Tanaric · · Score: 2, Funny

      I suspect you're actually a very clever marketing agent for Chevy. Or, depending how much faith I have in humanity today, for Ford.

    16. Re:Um, Duh! by MpVpRb · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In the perfect world, a customer is in the market for a product or service. The suppliers make their pitch, the customer chooses the best match of product to requirement.

      As it currently exists...Advertisers use sophisticated psychological warfare to make you feel good about buying a crappy product you don't need or want.

    17. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was Science Daily actually; happened this morning. The ad wasn't a popup or popover, but it's the little eye-catching animation on the top and sides of the screen.
       
        I will give credit where it's due though; thus far that's the most potentially offensive (mixed office environment where most of the coworkers who can readily view what's on my monitor are female) ad to come across on Science Daily, and it was tame enough I didn't have to immediately click out of the article. I can't say the same for the New York Times, (which I have had to tab out of at times, and right-click close from the taskbar).
       
        And yes, I suppose I am being a little paranoid about what's on my screen. In this economy though, in a company that's about to undergo some significant organizational changes, well, I'm trying to play it as safe as I can. I still read slashdot under the pretense that many of the articles and discussions directly pertain to my profession, and it's part of my job to know what's going on in the industry as a whole (not just the immediate projects they assign to me). So yeah, ads at home = go ahead if I'm already shopping and they're pertinent. Ads at work (and most other times) = bad. I'd be running adblock if the IT department here would allow anyone to install firefox. As it is, we're stuck with IE6 because of compatibility issues with some of the old browser-based apps.

    18. Re:Um, Duh! by zuperduperman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > since advertising works I must be in the minority

      Or more likely, it does work on you, and you just don't realize. Marketers are a bit more canny than people realize. They know that 95% of their ads generate sceptisim or worse in most critical thinking people. But they also know that underneath the conscious brain your lower instincts are slowly being reprogrammed even against your will. Even if you consciously hate a brand, they may be happy if you just recognize the name. They know that however much you hate it, if confronted with the brand you know and one you never heard of before you will choose the one you know. You can't 'opt out' of this. It's happening just by being exposed to ads and there is *nothing* you can do about it except avoid the ads.

    19. Re:Um, Duh! by mx_mx_mx · · Score: 1

      No.

      I think that ads are such pain in the a*** because they target the typical, medium to low IQ customer.

      And since there are so many idiots, they don't care about smart ones.

      wait, nether companies do, this is why we got windows in first place.

      In other word, the world is ruled 'literally' by idiots, and normal peoples (I am not taking about very bright peoples, just normal peoples that finish college, etc) just suffer

      --
      Linux forever
    20. Re:Um, Duh! by calavicci · · Score: 1

      Firstly, I agree with you; the target audience is one major reason that advertisement is such a pain. Secondly, although I agree with your comment about Windows, that's not relevant. Thirdly, one should always insult another's intelligence in at least *vaguely* correct language.

    21. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course you can opt out of it. When faced with a such a choice (that doesn't include "none of the above"), always pick the product whose name you do not recognize.

    22. Re:Um, Duh! by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a great theory, but I'd like to see the controlled studies on it.

      I can't think of a person I know who dislikes a brand who would choose it versus the unknown. I can think of many people who I've witnessed do the opposite though.

    23. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Certainly you can 'opt out'. You simply choose not to. Therefore, you are 100% responsible for the purchasing decision and you don't get to blame it on the evil advertisers' brainwashing plot.

    24. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My solution for problem is simple. I have a list of products that I have seen an advertisement for. If something that I am interested is on the list, I don't buy it.

    25. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure there is--it's called thinking. Attributing some kind of genius or craftiness to a pathetically useless profession is just surrendering mentally. Never do that, and always remember who has interests opposite yours. That marketing works on the majority of the unthinking masses is a reflection on them, not on those to whom logic is just a word used on Star Trek.

    26. Re:Um, Duh! by Odinlake · · Score: 1

      Wy do people think things like TiVO, Hulu,... are so successful?

      Because of targeted advertising..?

      I believe the general public is tired of be bombarded to "BUY MORE!"

      Ooh - so you were going the other way with that.

    27. Re:Um, Duh! by dargaud · · Score: 1
      I couldn't agree with you more. I stopped watching TV when I was 16 as this permanent brain rape attempts (that's what I call this attempt to manipulate my emotions) was making me feel all dirty inside. When I listen to the radio, I switch channel as soon as a commercial starts. I'm rabidly against billboards along roads (if they work, then they distract the driver and must be removed for security reasons. If they don't work, then they should just be removed).

      To make a long story short I summed up all those arguments exactly as you and I stated above to a friend who is in advertisement. His reply: "that's why you'll be interested in our special program targeted at people like you..." How do you get through to people like that except by using a two by four ?

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    28. Re:Um, Duh! by devonbowen · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work on me. I don't own a TV, don't listen to the radio, do use ad blocking on the internet, and the few magazines I read aren't ad supported (for which I happily pay more). The only time I ever see ads is in public transportation or on the street and they're mostly for things that don't interest me. I don't recognize logos and can't sing jingles. I rarely go shopping and only with a list of exactly what I want - purchases are never spur of the moment. Since my tastes in books and music are so odd, I spend a lot of time having to search for the things I want (I have to do a lot of special orders) and rarely buy anything that would be popular enough to be advertised. I do enjoy a "normal" movie now and then, though, so I will go through the trailers to decide what I want to see. I guess you could call those ads. But since I go looking for them, it doesn't really fit the discussion here. Some of us really do live our own lives.

      Devon

    29. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Advertisers use sophisticated psychological warfare to make you feel good about buying a crappy product you don't need or want or which country to invade/destroy next

      There, fixed that for ya.

    30. Re:Um, Duh! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      This is the logic that marketers use, but there is a simple way of avoiding it. Now, whenever I see two brands and recognise one but can't think why, or remember the advert, I pick the other one. If enough people did this, then adverts would start having a negative effect on companies' bottom lines.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    31. Re:Um, Duh! by one+cup+of+coffee · · Score: 1

      Actually the 1930's is about when it started. Thanks in large part to Sigmund Freud's nephew Edward Bernays. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_(book)

    32. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Despite all the ridiculous amounts of Cialdini-esque manipulation and NLP abuse in advertising...

      The place where ads make the most difference is at second and third degrees of separation. People are innately wired to trust word of mouth advocacy from a trusted friend or ally more than any form of of self-interested ad display. So if for instance 5% of people (your dumb or happy go lucky, uncynical friends) are swayed by ads, and then later on the 95% of cynical people go looking for word of mouth referrals on a product, guess which product they are going to be referred to? The one that used an advertising medium that is despised. Welcome to hell.
       

    33. Re:Um, Duh! by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      If you haven't seen it, dig up the (free) documentary The Corporation, done by some Canadian folks. I think it's hosted on archive.org somewhere. The segment in it about the studies done on increasing the parental begging by children to sell products is exceptionally horrifying.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    34. Re:Um, Duh! by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Awhile back, one company had constant ads on a radio station I listened to. Then I got something in the mail from them. My Pavlovian response was to fly into a rage and jam their mail ad down the toilet in pieces. Somehow, I don't think that's what they were shooting for.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    35. Re:Um, Duh! by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      See the problem is that websites don't know what they're doing and ad placement companies are likewise clueless.... they are for some reason showing you ads to buy stuff when they should be showing you informational ads.

      Commerce sites should show related offers to buy. "HP - come buy our great computers"

      Content sites should show branding ads aka informational ads which tell you about new products or services or simply show you a logo and a tagline "HP - we make great computers"

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    36. Re:Um, Duh! by Hatta · · Score: 1

      They know that however much you hate it, if confronted with the brand you know and one you never heard of before you will choose the one you know.

      Not so. I make a habit of buying products I have never heard of before. After all, if they are spending my money on advertising, they can't be giving me the best possible value for my dollar. This lets me try something new whenever I can, and in the future I'll know which option is actually best, instead of which one is just more familiar.

      Why doesn't everyone do this?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    37. Re:Um, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure there is--it's called thinking. Attributing some kind of genius or craftiness to a pathetically useless profession is just surrendering mentally. Never do that, and always remember who has interests opposite yours. That marketing works on the majority of the unthinking masses is a reflection on them, not on those to whom logic is just a word used on Star Trek.

      If you did some of that "thinking" you're going on about, you'd realize why marketing and advertising types consider people like you the easiest kind of mark.

    38. Re:Um, Duh! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The ads like the Chevy ad you describe are designed to indude a warm-and-fuzzy association with their name, to improve name recognition and hopefully bring you into THEIR store FIRST.

      Of course, if the warm-and-fuzzy feels more like an enema, it can generate a reaction of "I wouldn't buy their product if it were the last one one on earth".

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    39. Re:Um, Duh! by mx_mx_mx · · Score: 1

      English isn't my primary language, thats all.
      I indeed make many mistakes.

      --
      Linux forever
    40. Re:Um, Duh! by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      The Power of Persuasion - How we are bought and sold. http://www.amazon.com/Power-Persuasion-Were-Bought-Sold/dp/0471763179/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1255289450&sr=8-1

      Full of links to studies showing that advertisements work, how and why. They work on everyone, but more on those that think themselves immune to advertisements. As we can easily imagine, advertisements work much better on kids.

      Anyway, why do you think companies spend so much on advertisements if they are not convinced advertisements work? Even if sufficient studies were not available in academia, wouldn't they themselves conduct such studies to convince themselves before spending billions of dollars? Of course, results of such studies will not be available for us to study.

      You can yourself conduct some (less rigorous) studies. I have found that junk food works well for such studies. Choose a junk food that your wife likes, not immensely but reasonably well, but for some reason she has not eaten it for a while. Casually mention it in conversation. Wait for results.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    41. Re:Um, Duh! by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Read more carefully. The issue was not whether advertising works but specifically whether people will choose a brand they actively hate versus a brand they do not know.

      Your suggested experiment specifically suggests "choose a junk food that your wife likes." To address the question I asked, you have to choose a junk food, or at least a brand, your wife hates, mention it in conversation, then see if she runs out and buys some.

  3. 66% say they don't want it, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...in my experience nearly 100% of people don't know what they actually want.

    1. Re:66% say they don't want it, but... by rel4x · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'll bet if you polled the same people they'd say they hate seeing weight loss/dating/bizop ads everywhere.

      But the fact is that those are the things that you can advertise to based on the general demographic of a large site. Without more specific information....yeah.

      --

      Before you mod me funny, think, perhaps I was insightfully funny?
    2. Re:66% say they don't want it, but... by MrMr · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure she meant no when she said no.

  4. Isn't the point of advertising by kipin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To make people aware of what they don't necessarily know about or necessarily need/want. Doesn't targeted marketing miss out on this aspect of advertising?

    --
    If I can not smoke in heaven, then I shall not go. -- Mark Twain
    1. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by petgiraffe · · Score: 1

      It depends on the product. It doesn't make sense to waste money advertising highly specific networking equipment to someone looking for cookie recipes, unless you already know that person has looked at networking equipment before.

      --
      -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
    2. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by tonyreadsnews · · Score: 1

      Yes, but running car ads on a kids network channel is likely not to gain them as much increased brand awareness compared to running it, say a financial news channel or something like Spike.

      That's targeting.

      More so with websites. If the ad software knows you just came from a used car website, it can give you a different ad then if you just visited some other site.
      Most don't even care about that much personal information, most right now are happy if they get gender. Bonus if they can guess age group.

    3. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by Zerth · · Score: 1

      The point of advertising is not to inform, it is to induce action. Buy stuff, visit a website, vote a particular way.

      Informing can do that, but implication or outright misinformation generally works better.

    4. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      To make people aware of what they don't necessarily know about or necessarily need/want

      Actually, I'd wager at least half, if not most advertising is really all about brand recognition. After all, when you're in the grocery store looking at a wall of paper towel, you're far more likely to pick brand X if you saw it on TV recently.

    5. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by Chess+Piece+Face · · Score: 1

      A big chunk of advertising is to retain current customers by rewarding their purchases. Think about how much Budweiser spends while almost everyone is decided on whether or not Bud is for them. It's not so much "hey that looks new and interesting" as it is "alright, I'm on the right team and drinking what is popular."

    6. Re:Isn't the point of advertising by dargaud · · Score: 1

      most right now are happy if they get gender. Bonus if they can guess age group.

      That's why on every website/blog/forum that asks for personal info, I completely skew their statistics with widely outlying replies. Everybody should be born in 1921, interested in death-metal, pokemon and gardening.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
  5. Yes and No by Reapy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When given the choice between targeted and non targeted advertising, I would pick targeted. When given the choice between any form of advertising and no advertising, I would pick no advertising.

    But more importantly, I don't think I, or the majority of people, like knowing that a company is rifling through my 'personal stuff' to find out what I like and dislike. It gives you a feeling of having your privacy invaded. Just a few hours ago I wrote my wife to say I had gotten a stain on my shirt from lunch, and google was nice enough to put up a stain remover advertisement right after I fired off the email. It is a little bit off putting.

    1. Re:Yes and No by mewsenews · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just a few hours ago I wrote my wife to say I had gotten a stain on my shirt from lunch

      I want to ridicule you for leading the most boring life imaginable, but we're both posting to Slashdot, so I will welcome you as a brother..

    2. Re:Yes and No by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Just a few hours ago I wrote my wife to say I had gotten a stain on my shirt from lunch, and google was nice enough to put up a stain remover advertisement right after I fired off the email. It is a little bit off putting.

      Hell, what's scaring me more is just where some of them are even getting their information. I started getting into guitars a while back. I bought a guitar off of Amazon.com as a result, and I'd joined a few online forums on the subject. Hadn't really mentioned much about it elsewhere.

      Shortly afterwards I log into Myspace and I'm seeing mostly guitar-focused ads. Hadn't mentioned a thing nor done anything related to them actually on myspace, but they had to have some type of information sharing arrangements in place because the advertising sure as hell was targeted.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    3. Re:Yes and No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are implying that Google has boldface lies in their privacy policy? If you can prove this you could have a nice lawsuit.

      http://mail.google.com/mail/help/about_privacy.html

    4. Re:Yes and No by happy_place · · Score: 1

      the problem with targetted marketting is the same problem that all marketing has. It only presents the products of the vendor who paid for the ad. There's a difference between you needing a tool, and then presented by ACME's tool-o-matic 5000, and you going online and searching for all possible solutions to your tool's needs. Targetted Ads give the illusion of being helpful but they don't care about better products, or even if the solution they propose is mistaken or if there's a competitor that has a better product. They only provide help in context of what they have been paid to advertise.

      --
      http://www.beanleafpress.com
    5. Re:Yes and No by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But more importantly, I don't think I, or the majority of people, like knowing that a company is rifling through my 'personal stuff' to find out what I like and dislike.

      You may not like *knowing* it, but *they're already doing it*. How do you think those direct mailers figure out where to send their advertisements? Well, for starters, they go to a company like Experian, which knows an unbelievable amount about you thanks to things like credit card purchases, club cards, and so forth (including fun stuff like whether or not the lease on your car is about to expire). They then tell Experian "Hey, dudes, I want to target single males 18-25 who make between 50k and 75k who live in or around Washington DC", and they get back a list of addresses.

      In short: you're already being tracked. You been tracked for *decades*. The only difference is, people are actually paying a bit of attention. Unfortunately, they're missing the forest for the trees.

    6. Re:Yes and No by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Just a few hours ago I wrote my wife to say I had gotten a stain on my shirt from lunch, and google was nice enough to put up a stain remover advertisement right after I fired off the email. It is a little bit off putting.

      Target (no pun intended) does something similar with your credit card.

      I used to chug antacids before switching to a healthier diet. I used to buy them at Target along with other stuff because the store is in a convenient location. Now that I no longer buy antacids, everytime I use my credit-card there, the register prints out a coupon for TUMS or some house-brand antacid. Technically I knew that stores track us by CC#, but this rather minor exploitation of that data is what it took to really drive it home for me. So now I pay cash at Target and try to do so at other stores too.

      However, using cash may soon not be enough, Target's in the process of installing license-plate scanning systems in all of their store parking lots. It probably won't take much effort to start correlating license plates with purchasing habits in the same way that the 'anonymized' netflix data was correlated with imdb profiles or those MIT students that came up with a way to figure out if someone was gay just by cross-referencing their facebook friends.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    7. Re:Yes and No by lazyforker · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing from your mention of Google that you signed up for Gmail - it's "free" because you're allowing Google to sell ads based on the content of your email. You have made a value judgement and determined that reduction of privacy is outweighed by the benefit of free email. If you don't like it use some other service. At least Gmail is totally upfront about their service.

      My problem is with services that mine my information without my knowledge and consent.

      Furthermore I don't want ads, targeted or otherwise. When I need something I'll go out looking for reviews, prices etc - not ads. With the advent of search engines I no longer need to be told about exciting new products that are out there - Google finds them for me.

    8. Re:Yes and No by Gravedigger3 · · Score: 1

      Actually he is a spy and the stain that needed removing was human blood.

      --
      All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be. -PF
    9. Re:Yes and No by InsurrctionConsltant · · Score: 1

      Actually he said "from lunch", so I'm going to have to go with Vampire.

    10. Re:Yes and No by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Time for me to play devils advocate again. It could just be that you noticed the guitar ads more than before because you had guitars on your mind...
       
      FWIW I am getting a little scared about what happens to personal information that ends up on the internet.

    11. Re:Yes and No by MpVpRb · · Score: 1

      But, they are doing it poorly.

      I would be in favor of targeted ads if the advertisers weren't so incompetent.

      When I am in the market for a product or service, I seek out and welcome advertisers of that particular product or service.

      I have no interest in the grossly generalized target of "males between xx and xx years old who make xx dollars a year". That kind of targeting is almost always wrong. It's just slightly more accurate than spam.

    12. Re:Yes and No by jasonwc · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean. A few years back, I emailed a friend a paper I wrote on Mozart's life and within minutes, I began getting ads for vacations to Salzburg, Austria (Mozart's birthplace). Apparently, Google searched the text of the DOC file.

      Fortunately, I haven't seen many ads, image or text based, while browsing in several years due to my use of FF + Adblock Plus.

    13. Re:Yes and No by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I have no interest in the grossly generalized target of "males between xx and xx years old who make xx dollars a year". That kind of targeting is almost always wrong. It's just slightly more accurate than spam.

      It was also just an example. Did you miss the part about knowing when your lease is about to expire? Trust me, the amount of detail a company like Experian has on people is, to say the least, surprising (I've seen the list of attributes and it is *quite* extensive).

      The problem is that same information can't currently be used to target advertisements on the internet (and in the case of TV, they currently have no deployed method of targeted advertising at all), and so they're stuck doing this ad hoc behavioral stuff. Which is why, compared to direct mail, internet and TV advertising is *far* less efficient.

    14. Re:Yes and No by Reapy · · Score: 1

      Well what I love about slashdot is that the only retribution from mentioning a stain on my shirt was that my life is boring, followed by vampire jokes...not the 10000 other jokes that were all possible based on that one line... Humanity has hope...maybe :)

    15. Re:Yes and No by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Target's in the process of installing license-plate scanning systems in all of their store parking lots.

      Do you have a source for this? If true, Target will lose a customer.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    16. Re:Yes and No by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Target's in the process of installing license-plate scanning systems in all of their store parking lots.

      Do you have a source for this? If true, Target will lose a customer.

      http://wcco.com/local/target.license.plate.2.676861.html

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    17. Re:Yes and No by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      The license reading technology isn't perfect, for example if a camera goes by a fence, it reads 111111.

      LOL'd.

      But seriously, though – even though they just say they're going to tap into the police database and look for license plates with outstanding police records, not use it to track their customers – are people going to put up with it?

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  6. Jesus, what balls... by thisnamestoolong · · Score: 4, Insightful

    marketers have defended the practice by insisting it gives Americans what they want: advertisements and other forms of content that are as relevant to their lives as possible,'

    Did I just read that right? Americans want advertisement? Yeah, I want advertisements, just like I want another hole in my dick. What sort of a psychotic, delusional dream world must whoever this quote was mined from live in?

    --
    To the haters: You can't win. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    1. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Eudial · · Score: 1

      Where's a "+1 The Damn Truth" when I need it?

      --
      GAAH! MY PRINTER IS ON FIRE!!! PUT IT OUT! PUT IT OUT!
    2. Re:Jesus, what balls... by dirk · · Score: 1

      It doesn't say they want advertisements in general, it says they think they wanted targeted advertisements. I think most people would say they want zero ads, but given a choice between random ads that don't apply to them (ads for diaper and tampons for young males for example) and ads that are targeted so that the majority of them will be for classes of items they buy (video games and porn sites for young males), most people would take the targeted ads.

      People want to complain about ads, but give them a choice between a cheaper product with ads in it and a more expensive product without ads, and 95% will take the cheaper one with ads. I know I would rather have no ads (but not so much that I want a price increase to get rid of ads), so I would take ads that are targeted more toward me so maybe they are of at least some use to me.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    3. Re:Jesus, what balls... by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      the problem was the deliberate wording where they don't ask the question about if people like advertisements. They only asked if people wanted targeted advertisements.

      Whether they are targeted or not, people don't give a rats ass, they just don't want them.

    4. Re:Jesus, what balls... by tonyreadsnews · · Score: 1

      You missed the context (and I wonder if most in the survey did too).
      Better framed.
      1. You are going to be shown an ad (whether you like it or not).
      2. Would you prefer it has anything to do with your life or not.
      Do you think marketers are going to offer you of opting out of #1?

    5. Re:Jesus, what balls... by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I want advertisements, just like I want another hole in my dick.

      An oddly apropos analogy. Turns out, there are a lot of guys out there that DO want another hole (or two) in their dicks. I suspect there are also freaks out there that LIKE advertising. Hell, how many times have you heard coworkers talk about some commercial like it was actual entertainment?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    6. Re:Jesus, what balls... by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What sort of a psychotic, delusional dream world must whoever this quote was mined from live in?

      The same dreamworld all the sociopathic CEOs and marketers live in. The world where they think it's OK to use up 1/3 of my TV screen with an ad while I'm actually watching a show; the world that has almost nothing but "paid programming" on Sunday morning TV, the same world where they think annoying me will get me to buy their crappy product, the same world where it's OK to annoy you with blinking, moving ads when you're on the internet trying to read.

      The same world where the people responsible for ruining the economy are rewarded with bailouts; the same world where a CEO who ran his business to the ground is rewarded with a golden parachute and an even better paying job at the next company he'll ruin.

      The same world where the former head of NASDAQ is arrested for a sixty billion dollar Ponzi scheme.

      The world that is run by sociopaths who don't give a damn about anything but themselves and their money.

    7. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I don't know about advertisements and bombardment with crap in general, but I do want to know about things I may be interested in. It's a tough situation. On the one hand I don't want invasion of my privacy but on the other I want to know about new and upcoming things that I actually might actually be interested in. Plus they need to be limited, like advertisers get 60 seconds of my day and that's it, period.

    8. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Q: "Do you want to pay $1 from your wallet or give me $1 worth of eyeball time I can sell ads for?"
      A: "Well you're sure not getting my money"
      Q: "Ads are only worth something if they lead to sales, do you want tons of uninteresting ads?"
      A: "Let's get this over wtih as fast as possible"

      Of course you want it free as in beer and no ads and a free pony. But if you phrase is as "How do you want to pay?" not "Do you want to pay?" it's not that unreasonable a conclusion...

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    9. Re:Jesus, what balls... by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      thisnamestoolong wrote:

      marketers have defended the practice by insisting it gives Americans what they want: advertisements and other forms of content that are as relevant to their lives as possible,'

      Did I just read that right? Americans want advertisement? Yeah, I want advertisements, just like I want another hole in my dick. What sort of a psychotic, delusional dream world must whoever this quote was mined from live in?

      It was written by a marketer who was in the act of marketing the profession of marketing. Need I write more?

      Cheers,

      b&

      --
      All but God can prove this sentence true.
    10. Re:Jesus, what balls... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, actually, I DO want advertisement, if it's done right. If I get advertisements that come up, and automatically tell me about something that I do want to buy, then that is great. I could learn something I wouldn't have otherwise known.

      In fact that would be ideal for advertisers, too. They are only interested in contacting people who will buy. That's why Microsoft and dice.com advertise here on Slashdot, while Lexus and people selling million dollar homes advertise in the Wall Street Journal. Advertisers probably wouldn't be interested in advertising to you at all, since you probably aren't the type who will buy something you saw in an advertisement. If advertisements were targeted perfectly, you probably wouldn't see any.

      The only problem with this is they have to track your movements across the web. Not cool.

      --
      Qxe4
    11. Re:Jesus, what balls... by value_added · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Americans want advertisement? What sort of a psychotic, delusional dream world must whoever this quote was mined from live in?

      The same world where the majority of the population identifies themselves as "consumers"?

    12. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's at this point that I'm glad there aren't ads on slashdot queued off what's said in the comments...

      Right about now we'd have all sorts of piercing ads talking about holes in your dick along with buying psychotic drugs and curing sleep/dream problems... I'd no longer be able to surf this site at work or when the wife is around with most of the comments...

    13. Re:Jesus, what balls... by cnvandev · · Score: 1

      This is Slashdot. I'll take the cheaper one with ads, and just run adblock. Until it's banned...

    14. Re:Jesus, what balls... by sorak · · Score: 1

      The world where they think it's OK to use up 1/3 of my TV screen with an ad while I'm actually watching a show

      Normally, I consider advertising as a precondition to getting free content, but that did annoy me last night.

      I was watching south park, and some of the characters were speaking Somali. Comedy Central covered the subtitles with a big ad to promote the new episodes. If only these decisions were made up of human being smart enough to not use advertisements in a way that degrades the product they are trying to promote...

    15. Re:Jesus, what balls... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      It's spilled over to broadcast TV as well. Last night I was watching "2 1/2 Men" on the local Fox station, and the most intrusive one of these I've seen anywhere popped up, for some show "sponsored by Landmark cars." That's where I bought te car I'm driving, but after that intrusive insult, I'm not likely to buy my next one there.

      The History Channel does it way too often, and inappropriately as well, often covering necessary text at the bottom of the screen.

      Today's world is run by idiots.

    16. Re:Jesus, what balls... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      See, all that shit you said annoys me, too. But I honestly don't mind ads like Hulu does it. Sometimes they alert me to a cause or something I wasn't aware of. Sometimes it's crap. But it is only a 30 second break in what I'm watching. I can live with that, if it means I can keep watching shows on Hulu. What gets me are where you get cable operators double-dipping, selling ads AND subscriptions, as well as taking public money to... hell if I know what they do with it. It probably goes up all the exec's noses. That is the advertising I take offense to... when they aren't giving me a product nearly as valuable as my time I give them to watch their ads.

    17. Re:Jesus, what balls... by basementman · · Score: 1

      I would much rather have advertisements than have the alternative, paying cash.

    18. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i suppose you wait until that favorite tv show of yours goes on sale on dvd right? or google you would rather pay them for their search results, or slashdot you pay to have an add free slashdot... when you figure out that perpetual energy machine and you do get something for nothing next to the money tree please invite me to this world. its not a choice between ads/no ads it a choice between paying for a product indirectly/ directly. I watch my favorite tv shows because they are too expensive to buy directly, i did experiment with amazon unbox at a $1.89 per episode wasn't too bad except i had to wait too long to get the episodes. google doesn't have a pay option that i know of but i like to search a lot and the ads are not intrusive and are sometimes helpful, in a similar manner i can easily ignore the ads on /. and like the news on it more than i dislike the ads so i don't pay for it directly.

    19. Re:Jesus, what balls... by syousef · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I want advertisements, just like I want another hole in my dick.

      Free S&M bondage girls ready to fulfil your every fantasy today!!! Please provide your credit card number.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    20. Re:Jesus, what balls... by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      The same dreamworld all the sociopathic CEOs and marketers live in.

      What makes you think its a dreamworld? The sad fact of the matter is, it works. We, the consumers, are part of the problem. I'm taking a marketing class right now, and it is the most depressing class I've ever had. The whole class seems to be about how you can ask someone if they want to buy another brand new car, and they'll say hell no, but if you ask them if they want to buy the 2010 POS 'kickass car for sexy people' five minutes later, they'll say 'I'll take two.' And the problem is, it's true. It might seem like the CEOs and marketing gurus are to blame, but, unfortunately, the latter group at least is very confident in getting people to think they want something, and people really buy into their annoying crap. Remember in Return of the Jedi when Jabba called Bib Fortuna a weak minded fool because Luke manipulated him with the old Jedi mind trick? It's kind of like that, and although I don't mean to sound pretentious, so shall it likely remain until people stop buying something because a commercial made it look cool/sexy or because some famous actor/athlete told them to buy it.

    21. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing the point. Ads pay for the shows. No ads = no show. Targeted ads allow for more revenue, which means a show with higher production values. Targeted ads = better shows(in theory).

      Yes, Americans want advertisements because they're "voting with their eyes" by watching the shows with ads. Their compensation is that they get these shows for free.

    22. Re:Jesus, what balls... by greggman · · Score: 1

      I want ads. Before the internet I used to subscribe to PC Magazine, Wired Magazine, and several others and the ads were more important for me than the articles. That's how I learned about all these new products, services, technology, software, gadgets, etc that were coming out.

      And, I'd much rather have ads for things I like than don't like. If PC Magazine was full of ads for tampons, makeup and fashion I don't think it would have been nearly as informative for me personally.

      Whether targeted ads are good or bad I still want ads.

    23. Re:Jesus, what balls... by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 1

      the world that has almost nothing but "paid programming" on Sunday morning TV

      Turn on NPR. Radio for grown-ups, (or as close as you get in America.;-))
      You really are missing the joys of BBC Radio 4.

    24. Re:Jesus, what balls... by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 1
      I don't think they want adverts, I just think that Americans have been duped into believing that public service broadcasting is communist.

      BBC, NHK, CBC, ABC (Aus) TVNZ and the rest are, after all, just a hair's breadth from North Korean telly, aren't they?

    25. Re:Jesus, what balls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What could be more annoying than when they end up covering subtitles during a show?

    26. Re:Jesus, what balls... by yuhong · · Score: 1

      Yep, when I read this, I think of the "shareholder value" world, where employees and customers are dehumanized as something like "headcount" and "consumer" (yes, like a sociopath would do), the former as an expense to be reduced, while the latter is to be treated as something to squeeze maximum revenue out of using marketing, both in order to "maximize shareholder value". Yep, it is ridiculous, and indeed I think it ran many businesses to the ground (examples I think include Circuit City and GM).

    27. Re:Jesus, what balls... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Your reading comprehension is suffering a bit. I wasn't referring to commercial breaks, I was referring to the ads that run at the bottom of the screen while the show is running at the top. The History Channel is maybe the worst at this. Regular ad? No problem, that's when I take a piss and get another beer. Covering up the subtitles with an ad for a different show? Moronic.

    28. Re:Jesus, what balls... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Making a product sexy, yes -- "sell the sizzle, not tha steak". But I'm referring to ads that actually ANNOY. If you convince me that your product will get me laid, I might be suckered into buying it. But if you cover up a third of my TV screen while the show I'm trying to watch is on the other 2/3rds, there's no way in hell you're going to sell your crap to me.

    29. Re:Jesus, what balls... by gnud · · Score: 1

      You forgot some =)

  7. Don't you want to know? by prgrmr · · Score: 1

    if you really could use a Guinness right now?

  8. damn straight! by NoYob · · Score: 5, Funny
    How the hell am I going to explain to my wife why there are ads for hairy milf porn all over the place?!

    No targeted ads!

    --
    It's NOT me! It's the meds! I'm on 1000mg of Fukitol.
    1. Re:damn straight! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      As long as your wife is a hairy MILF, I don't see where that'll be a problem...

    2. Re:damn straight! by sorak · · Score: 1

      Tell her you used to work with a guy named Harry Milfporn, and damn that gmail!

    3. Re:damn straight! by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      You create a separate account on your pc for "extracurricular activities" and don't log into any sites or provide your real info. That way it's all nicely hidden away (and encrypted if you use something like file vault.) Unless of course they would be targeting by IP which they shouldn't because it would dramatically decrease the usefulness of the ads since a single IP will be shared among family members who belong to widely different demographics. This is all hypothetical of course, now which sites did you say those were ?

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    4. Re:damn straight! by terryducks · · Score: 1

      maybe she'll get the hint not to shave.

    5. Re:damn straight! by BooRolla · · Score: 1

      by telling her not to shave?

  9. What kind of ads do we want? by dfxm · · Score: 1

    Seriously, this is like asking, "do you like being tortured?" Of course Americans (and citizens of any other nation) would say no!

  10. Depends how people react by RichMan · · Score: 1

    I suspect they will be able to identify two markets
    A) those who react positively to targeted ads. Those they will target as much as possible
    B) those who react negatively to targeted ads. Those they will target more subtly. IE follow the Steak ad with a soap ad.

    They will use the targeting criteria to place people into pool A or B.

  11. Exactly by petgiraffe · · Score: 1

    What matters to companies is not whether targeted ads are what consumers want but whether they generate sales. No sane person wants any kind of ad, targeted or not.

    --
    -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
    1. Re:Exactly by ElSupreme · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Pretty much. Consumers do not want 'targeted ads'; consumers are more likely to buy productst in targeted ads. The targeted is for the advertizer not the consumer.

      --
      My addiction: Arguing with idiots. AKA Slashdot!
    2. Re:Exactly by 1729 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No sane person wants any kind of ad, targeted or not.

      I find the targeted ads on Google searches to be useful. When I'm searching for information on Product X and there's a sponsored link along the lines of "Buy Product X here for $...", I'll often click that link if the stated price is reasonable. Well-targeted non-intrusive ads can be quite helpful for comparison shopping.

    3. Re:Exactly by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      I don't. When I have to buy something, I know what I want and which sites will probably have it.

    4. Re:Exactly by AnotherUsername · · Score: 5, Informative

      No sane person wants any kind of ad, targeted or not.

      I find the targeted ads on Google searches to be useful. When I'm searching for information on Product X and there's a sponsored link along the lines of "Buy Product X here for $...", I'll often click that link if the stated price is reasonable. Well-targeted non-intrusive ads can be quite helpful for comparison shopping.

      I don't click on any of the ads on Google searches. Call me jaded, but I don't feel like being redirected to a site which redirects me to a site which redirects me to a site which is a spam site of some sort. I don't trust the ad links, and I don't click any of them. I don't even click the sponsored link. Ever. I've just become too jaded to any kind of commercialism online to ever bother rewarding a company(which I might very well be searching for to begin with to purchase from) to buying ad space. This goes for YouTube ads(the embedded ads that I immediately X out of. And no, I really don't believe that anyone on YouTube should be paid for making videos and posting them online.

      To summarize: If I come across an ad/sponsored link in my online travels, I refuse to click on it. Not because I necessarily hate the company, but because I neither trust the ads I come across(spamming/phishing possibilities) nor do I wish to reward a company for intruding into my private life. Of course, I hate 90% of ads, period(Internet, TV, newspaper, magazine, billboard). However, Super Bowl ads do occasionally make me laugh.

      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    5. Re:Exactly by gtbritishskull · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While what you say is true, you seem to imply that the advertiser and customer interests are mutually exclusive. If a company offers me a product that I want, then I am happy to give them money and they are happy to take it from me. Everyone wins. I think most people would agree that they prefer to see ads for things they want to buy, and would prefer not to see ads for stuff they don't want to buy. The problem comes when your privacy is invaded to target ads. Or, more specifically, when the information used to target the ads is used in a way the customer does not approve of or is sold to the highest bidder.

    6. Re:Exactly by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      The very words "targeted ads" depict two things: first, the consumer is a "target" and thus the salesman is the hunter, and second, "ads" are something the salesman creates with the intent to manipulate someone into buying. So of course nobody wants "targeted ads." However, if I am in control and aware of exactly which information about me is used, how it is used, and assured it will go no further, I'm happy to have a technology that augments a search into one area with suggestions about products in related areas.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    7. Re:Exactly by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Actually there's at least one consumer who likes targeted ads - me. Ads for megacleavage.com, bikinigirls.com, toplessbeach.com, bottomlessbeach.com, notastitch.com, ..... These are the kinds of ads I enjoy seeing popup on my computer screen. (two thumbs up)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    8. Re:Exactly by More_Cowbell · · Score: 4, Funny
      I don't click them either, but mostly for other reasons.
      1. Those ads cost the company money every tim
      --
      Experience teaches only the teachable. -AH
    9. Re:Exactly by More_Cowbell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gaa... was trying to hit preview...

      I don't click them either, but mostly for other reasons.
      1. Those ads cost the company money every time they are clicked, eventually raising prices for us the consumers, and
      2. Clicking on them reinforces to the advertiser that the ads work, thereby creating more ads.

      --
      Experience teaches only the teachable. -AH
    10. Re:Exactly by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's true. Personally, if I must have ads, I'd rather they be targeted. The problem is that I'm not sure I want to give up enough of my privacy in order to receive ads that are appropriately targeted.

      So there's the problem. I'd rather see ads for the next neat videogame than ads for Pampers. But, no, I'm not sure I want to advertisers that I'm childless in order to make certain that I don't see ads for Pampers.

    11. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nonsense. Targeted advertising is more likely to grab my attention and distract me from what I'm trying to do, whereas it's easier for me to ignore random advertising. However if I really want something, with the Internet I can now do research to find out how to meet that need and that's what I do no matter what. I'm not interested in being harassed by some marketing group trying to persuade me that I have a need for their product. That's always been true for me, but it's true for even more people now. The Great Correction caused a lot of people to realize that financing a lifestyle with debt isn't as good an idea as they had been led to believe.

    12. Re:Exactly by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      That's true. Personally, if I must have ads, I'd rather they be targeted. The problem is that I'm not sure I want to give up enough of my privacy in order to receive ads that are appropriately targeted.

      So there's the problem. I'd rather see ads for the next neat videogame than ads for Pampers. But, no, I'm not sure I want to advertisers that I'm childless in order to make certain that I don't see ads for Pampers.

      I agree, most people would rather have targeted ads over others but don't want to give up the privacy needed for targeted ads. Personally I block almost all ads, though I do accept ads from Google. Between allowing Google ads so I can google as well as visit other websites that use Google ads such as slashdot, and not accepting them and giving up being able to google, I'll accept their ads. Every once in a while I'll even click on an ad. I however only use Google to search, I don't even use gmail.

      Falcon

    13. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think most people would agree that they prefer to see ads for things they want to buy, and would prefer not to see ads for stuff they don't want to buy.

      How about seeing ads for stuff that I want AND I CAN AFFORD to buy? That will eliminate 99% of ads right there.

      I mean, really, what's the point is showing me cool cars that I like, and want... but could never afford?

    14. Re:Exactly by Brass+Cannon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ha. Put your tinfoil hat on and read Scroogled http://blogoscoped.com/archive/2007-09-17-n72.html. This pretty much sums up what we 86% are worried about I think.

    15. Re:Exactly by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No sane person wants any kind of ad
       
      There are some exceptions.
       
      I own and operate a movie theatre, and I print and mail out several thousand flyers each month listing the movies that will be playing for that month.
       
      I hear complaints from customers every month if they don't receive the monthly flyer in the mail for whatever reason.
       
      I also have a mailing list of people who I send the flyer to that live outside of the "general distribution" area. I don't even advertise that "service" in any way; people ask me if I can mail them the flyer, so I do.
       
      So again, there are always exceptions; it depends on the type of advertising and what's being advertised. If you're genuinely interested in my flyer, then it becomes useful information ("What should we do tonight?") and not just another ad.
       
      On the other hand, I'm a big believer in Privoxy, Noscript and cookie management on my computers.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    16. Re:Exactly by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      That's not true. Advertising did serve a purpose for consumers in the past. If you're living in the early 1900s, then you probably actively sought advertisements, like the Sears-Roebucks mail-order catalog to see what new commercial products are out there. And even today, if you're like my family, you probably still appreciate the local supermarket sending you their weekly advertisements showing what products are on sale or what deals they're currently offering.

      But today consumers are much less dependent on advertisements to tell them what's available. There are better ways of finding out about products & services that you need/want. If I want to find a good LCD monitor, I'd be much better off searching Google and looking at online product reviews. I can even find the best prices online by doing a simple search for a product name on Google. So what do I gain from targeted ads?

      Likewise, if you're looking for a printer, a publicist, etc. then you'd just do a Google search as well. This allows consumers to find exactly what they want, exactly when they want. TV, e-mail, radio, web banner/pop-up ads, OTOH, are not only unnecessary with the advent of powerful search engines like Google, but they force themselves on you when you're not looking for those products/services. People today like to shop on their own time. So the best way to advertise these days is just to have a well-designed, easy to find, easy to navigate website. But beyond that, there are still ads that people actively seek out, they just take the form of eBay auctions/Craigslist/classifieds ads, and listings on sites like Pricewatch.com, Orbitz, Google Product Search, etc.

      So there're definitely ways to market your product without annoying people.

    17. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet how do you know something exists if you haven't seen advertising for it?

      It is interesting to look at what people consider is and is not advertising. Obviously, commercials on television, Banner/Flash ads, googles' AdSense, etc.

      But what about the slew of enthusiast hardware sites, or Gizmodo, Engadget or the like? Their whole raison d'etre is to advertise current and upcoming tech hardware and toys.

      They just present it in a different manner...

    18. Re:Exactly by Valdrax · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If a company offers me a product that I want, then I am happy to give them money and they are happy to take it from me.

      Personally, if a company offers me a product that I need, then I am happy to give them money for it. If it's merely a product that I want, and if that want is primarily born from the influence of their advertising on me and my peers, then I'm better off without it.

      Better not to face temptation than to have to overcome it.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    19. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That story is really dumb.

    20. Re:Exactly by BikeHelmet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I find the targeted ads on Google searches to be useful. When I'm searching for information on Product X and there's a sponsored link along the lines of "Buy Product X here for $...", I'll often click that link if the stated price is reasonable. Well-targeted non-intrusive ads can be quite helpful for comparison shopping.

      Not quite the same thing. That's targeted at the subject (what you're searching for) rather than you.

      To quote the article:

      Asked if online ad vendors should deliver targeted ads by tracking customers' behavior across multiple Web sites, 86 percent of the 1,000 respondents said no.

      So rather than displaying advertisements related to what you're searching, it'll display advertisements for things related to past purchases or stuff you might be interested in. I despise that kind of advertising and tracking. If I'm interested in something, I'll decide when and where I want to buy it - and it's Google's job to provide me with links and suggestions when I finally search it out.

      There's also potential for it going wrong. If it tracks only one online purchase that I make - for tampons - then it might keep displaying tampon ads to me. That's despite me being a guy. (And yes, I did purchase tampons once. I am the most computer savvy person in this household, after all.)

      Anyone remember that slashdot article about camera facial recognition for targeted marketing? You're female, with a short person next to you, so tampons and kiddie toys must be for you! Doesn't matter that you're a war vet, or just incredibly short. And actually, the guy next to you is a guy, but he has to wear shiny-clear lipstick stuff because of an illness that dries out and cracks his lips, and then he gets sores all over them - but I'm sure he'll want some tampons.

      Don't target ads at me, or whatever it thinks makes me "me". Just give me something related to what I'm searching, and that's it.

    21. Re:Exactly by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Yes, but quite often I've found that you can buy Product X for ($ - <= 5) on Amazon, etc., so while I rarely see something satisfactory.

    22. Re:Exactly by Blink+Tag · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Amen. The summary says Americans don't want targeted ads--which is quite a different statement from the much clearer statement further down that we don't want targeted ads created from following our behavior across the internet.

      I *do* want targeted ads. When I sign up for a store's loyalty program (like I did last week), I *don't* want five ad emails from the company in the next seven days pushing me clothes that have no relation to my purchasing habits (which is exactly what happened). It should be no surprise that I'm a fan of "permission marketing" as espoused by Seth Godin. If Netflix can do such a remarkable job of guessing my preferences with a handful of data points, these stores should too. And don't bother me otherwise.

      The part of the survey scenario that's creepy is the single entity tracking my viewing habits across multiple sites.

    23. Re:Exactly by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      The part of the survey scenario that's creepy is the single entity tracking my viewing habits across multiple sites.

      *Cough* Google *Cough*

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    24. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that's the case, then you shouldn't click on the top few search results either. If you are searching for something that is commercial enough to have more than one or two ads, the top search result sites are highly likely to have paid for SEO to get themselves up near the top. Instead of being upfront and paying for the click, they basically do an end run around the system, quite possibly paying more for their spot, but looking "organic" and hiding how they got there (i.e. there's no "SEO'd link" equivalent of "Sponsored links"). On non-commercial searches, this is not a problem, so that is not a valid counter-example to the prevalence of SEO.

      I happen to work in the industry, and that is how the real world works. You think you are jaded, but you actually still have a pretty naive view.

      As far as the "good guys" would like you to do, please just click on what is most relevant in your estimation, rather than some religious avoidance of officially paid links in favor of what could be unofficially paid results. Unless of course, you purposely want to screw the search site and reward SEO companies (and help the occasional company which didn't SEO and still got the top spot legitimately).

    25. Re:Exactly by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      It's how an ad is targeted that really matters and when.

      If I type in a search in Google or any other search engine I'm willing to be served ads related to my current search. It also makes sense to have adverts relating to that search on any website i click on as a result of that search.

      What everyone objects to is ads tailored to by tracking past web sites visited. At the very least it might not be the same user. Parents don't want targeting by a profile based on their kids interests for example.

    26. Re:Exactly by dontmakemethink · · Score: 1

      As someone highly opposed to advertising of any sort, I consider targeted advertising to be one of the least offensive.

      1. At least they're trying not to be intellectual pollution
      2. They are undeniably the most ecologically friendly, wasting no remotely significant natural resources, i.e. wood for paper or oil for transportation
      3. I find the ads chosen for me to be a curious form of infotainment sometimes, "they think I'll want that?!"

      So if you ask me if I want targeted ads, I'll say no. If you ask me if I'd rather have targeted ads than some asshole at my door trying to sell me a fancy vacuum cleaner, I'll say gimme the targeted ads every time.

      My greatest concern about targeted ads is that they're used in product R&D. Innovative minds are being wasted on making products fit the indicated market demand instead of developing truly original ideas. We end up with what we think we want instead of what experts would have chosen for us. Camping gear is a good example, with complete tent/chair kits and powered air mattresses etc. The industry has gone to great lengths to cater to people who suck at camping. Instead of progress, camping equipment has become extravagant and disposable, only usable in the least adventurous situations.

      --

      War as we knew it was obsolete
      Nothing could beat complete denial
      - Emily Haines
    27. Re:Exactly by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      I think most people would agree that they prefer to see ads for things they want to buy, and would prefer not to see ads for stuff they don't want to buy.

      Ehmm, isn't this whole article about most people, in fact, not agreeing? Or at least most of the surveyed americans?

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    28. Re:Exactly by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      Okay, well you're wrong.
      Ads are a great way of learning about new products, and in case you can't tell: People like new products.

      But there's a problem: who could possibly filter through all the ads in a day, and only pay attention to what they want? One might as well read all the news sources and filter through all the crap there to get at what they want!

      Fortunately for everyone, targeted ads exist, so you can be sure to only be informed of things you are likely to want to buy. It's really win-win.

      Potential problems:
        - If targeted ads have poor aim. Solution: Companies will continue to improve their methods until they know they only need to send ads to people who will buy things.
        - Being "left out" from ads you could be interested in, just because you've never bought that type of product before. This is the most serious one, because it's the same type of "living with blinders on" that leads to things like digg.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    29. Re:Exactly by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Thing is a lot of people don't know what they want or need.

      See:
      http://www.ted.com/talks/malcolm_gladwell_on_spaghetti_sauce.html

      So if you ask them what they want, they may often give you useless or even incorrect answers (watch for the part about coffee).

      Similarly often when you ask people something - e.g. whether they want "targeted ads" or "XYZ", they may say "No" (or "yes"). But when you rephrase the question, or provide an example, they suddenly say "Oh, that's different". To make things worse many survey questions are pretty bad.

      And media headlines are worse, after all the actual survey was: "Asked if online ad vendors should deliver targeted ads by tracking customers' behavior across multiple Web sites, 86 percent of the 1,000 respondents said no."

      That's quite a big difference between wanting "targeted ads" and wanting "targeted ads by tracking your behaviour".

      Just because a relative or friend asks me to buy or look up something for them online doesn't mean that I suddenly want ads for similar stuff on every webpage.

      At least the google search page rarely serves up irrelevant ads when I'm searching for stuff.

      --
    30. Re:Exactly by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

      Better not to face temptation than to have to overcome it.

      Actively resisting temptation builds moral fibre.

      --
      Squirrel!
    31. Re:Exactly by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      I don't click them because there are too many malware sites using redirections.

      If I can't see the URL I'm clicking on, and I don't recognise it as being a legitimate website, I don't click it. http://www.alviramano.com/nc7834qyov9qywfnoc is not a valid URL to me, and often is a clickthrough link. I don't know where I could end up.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    32. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because gays know what to shop for, and where.

    33. Re:Exactly by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. People want 'pull' adverts, they don't want 'push' adverts. If I express an interest in a product or service, then I want as many companies as possible to compete for my business. If I don't have an interest in a product or service then I don't want companies trying to artificially generate this interest. I no longer own a TV because I got fed up with watching irrelevant ads[1]. I now rent DVDs and stream video from the iPlayer. My time is more valuable to me than it is to an advertiser. Given the low probability of generating a sale from any given advert, this has to be the case. I'd much rather pay with money than pay with my time for things like TV shows and films, because I get better value.

      [1] Really. I am never going to be the target market for feminine hygiene products. If I am ever in a situation where I need to buy them, I will expect to have been told exactly which brand to buy. I also don't care about car insurance (I don't have a car), how to get out of debt (I'm not in debt, largely because I'm not stupid enough to buy the kind of financial products these people are offering), and so on.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    34. Re:Exactly by esper · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the part in TFA (and TFS) where it says "Sixty-six percent of those surveyed don't want tailored, or targeted, online ads, according to the study" even before tracking was (explicitly) introduced. Although TFA doesn't give the exact questions, the results as presented seem to indicate that 66% don't want targeted ads at all and an additional 20% aren't opposed to them in general, but are opposed to having their behaviour tracked across multiple sites as part of the ad targeting process.

    35. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Those ads cost the company money every time they are clicked, eventually raising prices for us the consumers, and

      the advertiser is going to be paying for ads anyway, and google ads just come out of the company's advertising budget. in fact, google ads are cheaper because you only pay when someone actually responds to the ad, but if google did its job right, the targeted nature of the ad will increase the chances of a successful conversion. in the long run, if a google campaign is successful, it could replace conventional untargeted ad campaigns and bring the cost of advertising down.

      of course, when's the last time you saw a company lower its prices just because its cost of operation actually went down?

    36. Re:Exactly by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Even if it IS the same user, it might not be valid. I recently ordered a product for my mom's cat because mom isn't online. I'll probably start getting ads for every known product for cats, dogs, gerbils, and pet goats, even though I have never had a pet, and never will.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    37. Re:Exactly by Hatta · · Score: 1

      How do you know you want it until the marketer tells you you do? If you already want the product, why do you need the ad?

      The job of an ad is to convince you to do something that you wouldn't otherwise do. It tries to convince you to put the interests of the advertiser in front of your own. Viewed this way, it's clear that more effective advertising is not a good thing.

      I have no problem watching ads that don't apply to me. They can't affect my behavior. When marketers target ads to me, that's extra effort I have to expend to stop them from influencing my behavior. I prefer to make decisions based on research into what is best for me, and not emotional manipulation by marketers.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    38. Re:Exactly by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      From what I have been able to gather, it asked if people were OK with having information gathered on their surfing habits, not if they wanted ads to be targeted or not. I think that people prefer targeted ads (but its just my opinion), but they are not willing to sacrifice their privacy for it.

    39. Re:Exactly by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      I don't feel that my buying decisions are swayed by what an advertisement says. I don't really care about trying to be "cool" or look "hip", so anything that I buy I judge based upon what I know and want. An advertisement is just a source of information for me. I assume that they are biased, like I assume anything on the internet is biased.

      How do you find out about new things? Do you read articles, look at tech reviews, ect? Do you assume those sources are unbiased? If you see something that has a good review, do you go out and buy it immediately? How are they different from an advertiser selling a product? At least with an advertiser, you know what their bias is. With reviewers it can be hard to tell.

      So, lets say I am on a pilot's forum and see an advertisement on the side for a little RC helicopter for $20. It has piqued my interest so I click on the ad. I read what the website says, then google the product and see what I can find about it. The advertiser does not mention that the helicopter is very cheaply made and usually breaks in about a week (from hard landings), but I expected this on a $20 RC helicopter. I don't need the product. It is an impulse buy. But I make an informed decision and determine that the enjoyment that I get out of the product is worth the amount of money I pay for it. Now, after I buy it there might be an ad on the confirmation page for another website that sells a remote controlled dropper that you can use to drop things from the helicopter while it is flying. This is another $10. But, with visions of trying to drop popcorn in my passed out roommate's mouth with a helicopter dance through my head, so I buy this also. I am happy that I saw he ads. They informed me about products that I would otherwise have not known about, so would not have thought to look up.

      If you see an ad and cannot think for a few seconds about whether the product is actually worth the price to you, and whether the things the ad claims are valid or not, then I have no pity for you. You are a fool. And, a fool and his money are soon parted. It is up to your parents to teach you, and up to yourself to learn, the self-control necessary to be a responsible member of society. Advertisements are an information source for me. I like to have as much relevant information as possible about everything I do. If the ad is targeted to me, that means it will be more relevant to my interests and therefore more useful. You seem to prefer ignorance and protection to knowledge and freedom (you must be an american). We will probably just have to agree to disagree.

    40. Re:Exactly by Mister_Stoopid · · Score: 1

      The way they asked the questions in this survey, they may as well have asked "do you like looking at banner ads?" There are two correct ways to conduct this survey, neither of which was apparently (based on TFA) used in this case.

      Option 1:"Given the choice between targeted and non-targeted ads, which would you prefer?"

      Option 2:"Do you think internet content should be supported by advertising?" followed by "do you think internet advertisers should deliver targeted ads?"

    41. Re:Exactly by More_Cowbell · · Score: 1

      I pretty much agree with what you say (they will advertise anyway) ... and I already knew that. It's more the principal I guess? (Though if we ALL stopped responding to ads, they would go away. I know, I know, never happen.)

      For me it's sort of like the stupid junk mail I get form AT&T every week, trying to get me to sign up for a land line (we only have cellphones). They change the ad every few weeks, and though it is for the same service at the same price, they change the 1-800 number - so they will *know* which directed ad worked. Now I've thought a few times about finally getting a land line since the reception in our house is not the best. If I was ever to though, I would just go to their website; I have no desire to help them feel like sending me the equivalent of a trees worth of paper every month is helping anything at all.

      And I never said anything about anyone lowering prices because costs went down... but you can be sure as hell that the reverse is true.

      --
      Experience teaches only the teachable. -AH
    42. Re:Exactly by Technician · · Score: 1

      Consumers do not want ads. There fixed it for you.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    43. Re:Exactly by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      pretty much nails why long term tracking is a waste of effort on the part of advertisers and an annoyance at the least for users.

      If you are searching for cat related products then thats when to advertise to you. I can't think of any reason why you would want cat related products when searching or browsing other information.

      besides some search terms might be ambiguous and lead to completely wrong results if they take into account past searches.

      Google seems to get a better handle on what I want from a search the results i get from my computer seem to be closer to what i want than if i use someone elses especially someone who doesn't share my interests.
      I wonder if it makes a difference if I sign into my gmail account?

  12. What WHO wants, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "it gives Americans what they want: advertisements and other forms of content that are as relevant to their lives as possible"

    Bullshit. Nobody WANTS ads, targetted or otherwise. I'm sick to death of advertising. It's deceptive, it's infiltrating every aspect of our lives (this comment brought to you by Fukital, when you just don't care anymore, reach for Fukital! The beer with cyanide!) and all it does is reinforce the grossly consumerist society we've become.

    There need to be REAL restrictions on commercial speech, and banning tracking and targetted ads is a good start.

    1. Re:What WHO wants, exactly? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Really? I don't mind a lot of ads. I hate the ones that interrupt what I'm trying to get to, which is why I use Adblock, but if the ads aren't intrusive they can be quite informative. I get an email daily from Newegg, telling me what's on sale, about coupon codes, and so on. I'm not always in the market to buy computer gear, but when I am, I buy from them. Their ads are informative, and they back it up with good service. Nonprofit groups that need funds and volunteers also find people via advertising... would you deny them that? Sure, we're a "consumerist" society, but that's part of capitalism. If you don't want to be in a consumerist society, move to Malaysia and do subsistence farming.

  13. The Questions by whisper_jeff · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I would love to see the wording of the questions because, honestly, I cannot imagine why anyone would not want to see ads (assuming you have to see _an_ ad) that is targeted at their interests rather than just any random ad. Now, I understand people wanting their privacy respected and that's why I want to see the questions because, given how lopsided the responses seemed to be, I suspect the questions were phrased in a way that made them more about privacy and less about targeted advertising.

    Yes, I realize there is a connection between the two but that's not the point - the poll appears to have been about targeted advertising and not about privacy and, as I said, I can't imagine people not wanting to see ads that are focused on their interests.

    1. Re:The Questions by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can't imagine people not wanting to see ads that are focused on their interests.

      To show me ads that are focused on my interests, advertisers would have to know what my interests are. I don't want sociopathic corporations to know what my interests are, thank you very much.

      And it doesn't matter if they knew me only as "consumer 38234585" and somehow couldn't connect that with my real identity: the purpose of their targeting ads is to influence my behavior, to attempt to manipulate me.

      As the late great Bill Hicks put it, "By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself.

      Aaah, no really, there's no rationalisation for what you do and you are Satan's little helpers. Okay - kill yourself - seriously. You are the ruiner of all things good, seriously. No this is not a joke, you're going, "there's going to be a joke coming," there's no fucking joke coming. You are Satan's spawn filling the world with bile and garbage. You are fucked and you are fucking us. Kill yourself. It's the only way to save your fucking soul, kill yourself.

      Planting seeds. I know all the marketing people are going, "he's doing a joke..." there's no joke here whatsoever. Suck a tail-pipe, fucking hang yourself, borrow a gun from a Yank friend - I don't care how you do it. Rid the world of your evil fucking makinations. Machi... Whatever, you know what I mean.

      I know what all the marketing people are thinking right now too, "Oh, you know what Bill's doing, he's going for that anti-marketing dollar. That's a good market, he's very smart."

      Oh man, I am not doing that. You fucking evil scumbags!

      "Ooh, you know what Bill's doing now, he's going for the righteous indignation dollar. That's a big dollar. A lot of people are feeling that indignation. We've done research - huge market. He's doing a good thing."

      Godammit, I'm not doing that, you scum-bags! Quit putting a godamm dollar sign on every fucking thing on this planet!

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    2. Re:The Questions by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > I can't imagine people not wanting to see ads that are focused on their
      > interests.

      It's like this: I'm not interested in buying anything except when I am specifically shopping for some specific thing that I intend to buy. So why would I want to see any ads, "focused" or otherwise? Besides, my interests are so esoteric that I don't fit any demographic anyway.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:The Questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would love to see the wording of the questions because, honestly, I cannot imagine why anyone would not want to see ads (assuming you have to see _an_ ad) that is targeted at their interests rather than just any random ad.

      I like funny ads or ads with cute people - maybe a puppy. Cool car commercials. None of it is ever shit I am in the market for. Is there a way to say "I like funny ads" as opposed to "market me paper towels"? I don't think so, given the alternatives, it is better to block, reduce exposure, ridicule, enjoy what you can. As for getting information, anything important I will research online. You "cannot imagine why" - sucks to be you, dumbass.

    4. Re:The Questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I realize there is a connection between the two but that's not the point - the poll appears to have been about targeted advertising and not about privacy and, as I said, I can't imagine people not wanting to see ads that are focused on their interests.

      You can't disentangle it from privacy though. For you to see ads focused on your interests, the advertisers have to know what your interests are. Which is more than they ought to know.

    5. Re:The Questions by Secret+Agent+X23 · · Score: 1

      I would love to see the wording of the questions because, honestly, I cannot imagine why anyone would not want to see ads (assuming you have to see _an_ ad) that is targeted at their interests rather than just any random ad.

      Because--just speaking strictly for myself--if it's accurately targeted, then maybe there's a greater chance that I'll be suckered into buying something I don't need but think I want, thereby wasting money and contributing to the overall clutter in the house.

      Screw that.

  14. typical reporting - loaded questions by keatonj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Two problems.. The population seems to think the automated systems care more about their privacy .. they just want to sell you stuff, not sell the history off to some PI that your ex hired .. And it's a loaded question. Article headlines saying Americans don't want targeted ads, but really it's Americans hate getting spied on. Had you have simply asked the question at hand "would you like advertising that is more likely to be involved or associated with your interests or your current activities." Arguably they could say your not allowed to show ads about football, when your watching the football game. Cause after all that's targeting your advertisement ..

    1. Re:typical reporting - loaded questions by Steauengeglase · · Score: 1

      You are right, we Facebook for that.

    2. Re:typical reporting - loaded questions by Weirsbaski · · Score: 1

      The population seems to think the automated systems care more about their privacy .. they just want to sell you stuff, not sell the history off to some PI that your ex hired ..

      ... unless they can find a profitable market doing that.

      --

      I am not a sig.
  15. i don't know if i care by shadowrat · · Score: 1

    i never pay attention to banner ads anyway so i don't notice if they are targeted or not.

    I do know that i appreciate amazon.com's suggested material. is that what people don't want? i kind of like it.

  16. The land of the Free... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whoever told you that is your Enemy...

    -----
    Play 3D Sexvilla 2 ? Show off your main character!

  17. They're Wrong by plaxion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What most of us want is NO ADS. They're annoying, distracting and whole purpose for being is to manipulate people.

    If we are in the market for said product we'd go shopping. There has yet to be a commercial that has moved me with their... oooh, shiny...

    CAPTCHA: cringe

    1. Re:They're Wrong by owlnation · · Score: 1

      What most of us want is NO ADS. They're annoying, distracting and whole purpose for being is to manipulate people.

      Actually... no, not exactly. There are ads people like: the Aflac duck ones, for example. The problem is that advertisers are for the most part, a talentless bunch of hacks. And a bunch of hacks that have no ethics whatsoever. Why society has tolerated them for so long remains a complete mystery to me. I've never met an advertising exec, but I'd really love to -- not sure he'd enjoy it though.

      It's perfectly possible to produce ads that entertain and inform people. There's actually absolutely no need to distract, deceive, manipulate, nor irritate.

      But yes... targeting is unacceptable in most circumstances, unless the ad is targeted to specific groups of people enjoying a particular activity -- car ads during sports games or on sports websites for example. (though car ads are actually some of the most irritating, almost all of those involve lies.) Targeting individuals should be a criminal offense.

    2. Re:They're Wrong by dbet · · Score: 1

      What most of us want is NO ADS.

      Really? Because I think the choice is either - no ads and you pay for site, or ads and the site is free. So now which one do you want?

      I'm against ads with loud noises or flashy graphics, ones that cover what you're reading, and anything that tries to track you later. But let's be honest here. The site has to pay for itself somehow.

      Disclaimer: I'm talking about sites that don't explicitly sell anything. Places like Amazon pay for the site as part of your purchases.

    3. Re:They're Wrong by bit01 · · Score: 1

      But let's be honest here. The site has to pay for itself somehow.

      Yes, lets be honest. "Advertising supported" just means you're paying twice over, once in time to watch/avoid the ad and twice in the increased price of the product to pay for the ad.

      Advertising on the web is just an horrendously inefficient micropayment system that hides the true cost of a site from the user while stealing their time and attention for nothing in return.

      ---

      The majority of modern marketing is nothing more than an arms race to get mind share. Everybody loses except the parasitic marketing "industry".

    4. Re:They're Wrong by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And how exactly would you know that someone developed HD televisions without advertising? Or that the local store has them for sale for $X, which is right in your budget? Advertising isn't necessarily just to convince you to get something... it can be just to inform. If I'm in the market for something, I pay more attention to ads for that thing. I even seek them out. How is that a bad thing? They inform me about options, and help me get the best deal for my money, as well as telling me that brand X has all these features that are awesome, but I wasn't aware of and was about to settle for brand Y of the same thing. A capitalist economy can only function properly when all parties are fully informed going into any value exchange. That will never happen completely, but advertising helps.

    5. Re:They're Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly would you know that someone developed HD televisions without advertising? Or that the local store has them for sale for $X, which is right in your budget?

      Hmmmmm... maybe by going shopping, both in store and online when your actually in the market for a TV.

      Advertising isn't necessarily just to convince you to get something... it can be just to inform.

      Bull... they don't spend money without expecting a return for it.

      If I'm in the market for something, I pay more attention to ads for that thing. I even seek them out. How is that a bad thing?

      And if there are no advertisements for that you are in the market for do you sit on your duff and wait for some genius to buy a TV spot? No, you go shopping, because you're in the market for something.

      They inform me about options, and help me get the best deal for my money, as well as telling me that brand X has all these features that are awesome, but I wasn't aware of and was about to settle for brand Y of the same thing.

      They are also full of one sided half-truths designed to persuade you to buy their product rather than their competitors.

      A capitalist economy can only function properly when all parties are fully informed going into any value exchange. That will never happen completely, but advertising helps.

      If you're so concerned about being fully informed then advertisements as they are now, fall far short of informing anyone about the product being hawked and the options available to the consumer.

    6. Re:They're Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of talentless hacks and distraction. If someone likes ads that use cutesy props that have no relation to the product at hand, like those horrible Aflac duck ones, or Geico's Gecko then they deserve to be marketed to.

      Seriously, I swear the only reason that these companies come up with these cutesy campaigns is because they don't have anything of real substance to toot their horns about, but they want to keep their names out there. So instead of pointing out some salable fact, they try to woo people with distractions.

  18. Matt Cutts already commented by barrkel · · Score: 0

    Matt Cutts already commented on this article, he has some interesting notes about the people behind the study - they also want Gmail shut down:

    http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/studying-a-study/

    One of the study's co-authors was Chris Jay Hoofnagle. Hoofnagle has served as the Senior Counsel and Director of the West Coast Office
    of Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). You haven't heard of EPIC? EPIC was the group that in 2004 argued that Gmail should be shut down: "In a letter sent to California Attorney General Bill Lockyer on Monday, the Electronic Privacy Information Center argued that Gmail must be shut down because it 'represents an unprecedented invasion into the sanctity of private communications.' "

  19. Instead ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's have people participate in an experiment:

    1. Please surf the web for something you are interested in. Here are your two options:

    A. Give me $5, and you can surf the version w/o advertisements.
    B. Sit down and surf the version with advertisements for free.

    That will tell you how much ($$$) Americans "don't want" targeted ads.

    (My conjecture: Of course Americans don't want ads, they don't want to pay taxes, die, have to wait for anything, or be inconvenienced in any way. To save money, they take targeted ads every day and twice on Sunday.)

  20. It isnt about what you and I want. by woodchip · · Score: 1

    It is not about what you and I want. If i had my way, I would never see an advertisement. Instead it is what the marketing people want. They want ads that reaches their audience and makes them money. And as long as targeted ads make them money, that is what we are going see.

    1. Re:It isnt about what you and I want. by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      If i had my way, I would never see an advertisement.

      I listen to NPR or CDs when I'm driving. I don't have television service at home, and when I'm online, I use FireFox + AdBlock whenever possible. I'm not at the "never" stage, because there's nothing I can do about billboards on the side of the road, but it's pretty damn close.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    2. Re:It isnt about what you and I want. by woodchip · · Score: 1

      you could move to Vermont. Billboards are illegal here.

    3. Re:It isnt about what you and I want. by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > And as long as targeted ads make them money, that is what we are going see.

      Only so long as you choose to look.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:It isnt about what you and I want. by zrq · · Score: 1

      If i had my way, I would never see an advertisement.

      How would /. raise the money to pay for their web servers ?
      If it was a subscription only service would you pay to read it ?

  21. Go ahead with targeted ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it means I'll only see ads about porn, hentai, furries, videogames, computers and hardware (except Windows-only bullshit), science-fiction and comedy movies, I'm all for it.

    I can't stand those stupid Evony Online banners anymore! Are they for a game or porn or a dating service or selling ladies underwear?

  22. Are these polls for real? by war4peace · · Score: 1

    I wonder who verifies those polls. Not related to the number of respondents but how are the questions being phrased/asked.
    I would take those marketers to a turkish bazaar, where sellers grab you by hands and drag you to their stores, even if you just want to pass by to a meeting or something. Leave them there for a couple days and then check back with them. Maybe this would change their opinions...

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  23. Just go away marketers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd just prefer NO advertising thanks. I'll take word of mouth and self directed research anyday. The rest is just noise (and usually not related in any way to the task I'm currently doing). Interrupting me or blocking me until you tell me about the latest greatest widget (wether it's something that might interest me or not) is damn frustrating.

  24. Well duh... by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of course Americans don't want targeted advertising. They know it will just result in more advertisements for porn, penis pills, and 'personals' sites (quotes because we all know they are just the www version of 1-900 numbers).

  25. I like my privacy but... by Tekfactory · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I must have ads, I would rather have targeted ads for something I might actually want or use, than things I do not want or use.

    Lessons we could learn, at Amazon or Netflix if I say I am not interested in Season 1 or CSI: Anywhere, DON'T offer me season 2, 3, 4 and 5. There is a Circle of Hell reserved for recommendation systems that offer me the same product over and over in different colors.

    If I bought a new Lens Kit for my Canon DSLR, then you offer me a Canon DSLR and I say "I already got one" don't offer me a Nikon DSLR.

    Somehow they need to find a way to tag their products as Series, and also Durable Goods vs Accessories or Refil kits, not just as a bunch of tangentally related SKU#s that this customer or that customer bought.

    Maybe as with Tivo we need Ad filtering devices that can Blacklist Ads we don't like, for products we don't need. This is really the only way to keep your "preferences" data at home and not have it abused.

    1. Re:I like my privacy but... by idiotnot · · Score: 1

      This. It's another case where people say that want something that they really don't.

      To put it another way, how many of you want to see ads for feminine hygiene products on /.? Just sayin'.

      (Some places do go overboard, however, with the recommendations. I'm looking at you, Amazon. Really, I'm not going to buy a Nickelback CD. Ever. And I do buy a fair amount of things for other people. Because I bought a bridal book my fiancee wanted, doesn't mean that I want 800 wedding planning guides.....)

    2. Re:I like my privacy but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No tracking needs to be involved for targeted ads. As the parent says, simply blacklist the things you don't like, and let the marketers build up a profile of the things you don't want. This way, your horizons may be expanded as well, if they offer you a product that is not specifically related to the things you usually buy but is interesting enough that you check it out. I would rather they try and work out what I want based on my negative feedback.

      Of course, no ads at all would be better but that isn't going to work for these leeching ghouls.

  26. Polling pool by Narnie · · Score: 0

    1000 people isn't really a large pool to guesstimate the preferences of the American population. It's like asking 1000 people if they think Obama is doing a good job--results will vary widely among ages, gender, location, class, etc.

    Nevertheless, I think it can be assumed that Americans don't like the idea of businesses, governments, or neighbors digging through their personal information for the sake of marketing. Many states have invasion of privacy laws, I wonder if/when citizens will flex these laws to keep their online privacy.

    --
    greed@All_Evils:~#
    1. Re:Polling pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's like asking 1000 people if they think Obama is doing a good job--results will vary widely among ages, gender, location, class, etc.

      Were you afraid to say "races"? Or was that too obvious?

    2. Re:Polling pool by Narnie · · Score: 1

      Sorry, left that one out... yeah, participants race, nationality, education, religion, etc could cause results to change too. The 'etc.' was to signify the normal list of the major demographics, I didn't think I actually needed to list them all.

      --
      greed@All_Evils:~#
    3. Re:Polling pool by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      1000 people isn't really a large pool to guesstimate the preferences of the American population.

      Let me guess, you aren't educated in statistics, right?

      As it happens, 1000 is roughly the magic number from which you can extrapolate meaningful statistics about a large population.

  27. This needs to be shared by robkill · · Score: 1

    How about a "targeted" email of the results of this study to all online advertisers. Certainly it's important enough that they won't mind receiving 2 or 3 copies since it's "business relevant". We do want to make sure these people are inconvenienced, er I mean informed.

    --
    DMCA - Chilling free speech since 1998.
  28. RTFA? by I.M.O.G. · · Score: 1

    I don't have to RTFA to be able to judge from the summary that the study's questions were leading. If the questions were asked the right way, I'm sure people would respond that they'd prefer to see ads that are relevant as opposed to punch the monkey and black market viagra ads. From the summary, it sounds like all the study really says is that people don't want more advertising.

  29. Bullshit by nedlohs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Americans don't want their web usage tracked.

    They likely do want targeted advertisements. But the dislike of tracking wins out. Of course 90% of them signed up for a supermarket discount card and pay for everything with a credit card so they don't really care, they just think they do.

    I'd rather see an ad for a video game than for tampons. Of course I'd prefer not to see an ad at all, but that's irrelevant.

    I'd also prefer that any random web advertising company can't see all the things I've purchased and web sites I've visited.
     

    1. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. I don't want targeted ads.
      I want fair reviews of products, not marketing bullshit with its semi-conscious messaging.

    2. Re:Bullshit by ElSupreme · · Score: 1

      That is why I shop at Publix!

      --
      My addiction: Arguing with idiots. AKA Slashdot!
    3. Re:Bullshit by bit01 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather see an ad for a video game than for tampons.

      Why? Neither ad is of any use to you or 99.9%+ of the population. The product is irrelevant, they're all useless to you.

      Of course I'd prefer not to see an ad at all, but that's irrelevant.

      It's highly relevant when 99%+ prefer not to see an ad at all. There should be a law.

      ---

      The majority of modern marketing is nothing more than an arms race to get mind share. Everybody loses except the parasitic marketing "industry".

    4. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they signed up for a supermarket discount card because they are fined if they don't. They have a credit card because it makes purchasing things easier and is actually required for certain things. When they got the credit card no one told them that all their purchases would be tracked and that info would be sold to other companies. People do care about their privacy it's just that no one else cares what they care about

    5. Re:Bullshit by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      I have never been to a supermarket yet where the cashier hasn't just entered their own or some store number for the discount card when I say I don't have one. So I still don't pay the fine.

      And though I now have a credit card I didn't for the first 30 years of my life with no problems at all.

    6. Re:Bullshit by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Why? Neither ad is of any use to you or 99.9%+ of the population. The product is irrelevant, they're all useless to you.

      Because there's a small chance an ad for a video game will in fact be relevant to me. I have found out about a game by seeing an ad for it on a website and said game provided enjoyment to me when I then downloaded it from usenet. I count that as useful.

      It's highly relevant when 99%+ prefer not to see an ad at all. There should be a law.

      Yes, there should be a law stopping me from displaying whatever I want to display on my web site. What a fantastic idea!

      99% of people would rather not pay for anything too, there should be a law making everything free for everyone.

    7. Re:Bullshit by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Because non-targeted ads are fair reviews of products and not marketing bullshit?

    8. Re:Bullshit by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      They likely do want targeted advertisements. But the dislike of tracking wins out. Of course 90% of them signed up for a supermarket discount card and pay for everything with a credit card so they don't really care, they just think they do.

      This is a competely false analogy.

      The supermarket gives me a real choice. On a per-transaction basis, I can decide whether to use my supermarket membership or not. If I do, they give me several bucks off my grocery bill, and that's the price at which I've sold them that personal info. If I don't use the membership, then I've declined to sell that particular info at that price on that particular occasion.

      I also get a real choice with the credit card. If I choose to use the credit card for a particular transaction, then I get an effective discount of about 1/4% (because I don't have to pay the bill until the end of the month, and the price of money is something like 5% per year, and typically it's about half a month until the end of the month), and the credit card company gets my info. If I don't use the card, then I've declined to sell that particular info at that price on that particular occasion.

      The difference with ad tracking is that they're offering me $0 in return for my information. They're just hoping that I haven't figured out how to use cookie whitelisting in firefox, so that they can take my information for free.

  30. What I Want by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...marketers have defended the practice by insisting it gives Americans what they want...

    If I wanted some giant faceless social entity telling me what I want I would:

    A) Start going back to church
    B) Start using Microsoft products at home again
    C) Start wearing a dark turtleneck and buying Apple prodcuts
    D) All of the above

    And since I do none of the above, and never intend to, I say to you, marketers, go f*** yourselves. I have a brain. I think. I make choices. I have freewill. Stop looking at me as an endless consumer statistic for you to shovel your broken/flawed/rushed/under-designed P.O.S. products into the mouth of, and start looking at me as the living, breathing, intelligent human being I am, you insensitive clods!

  31. Gimme my Ads ! by lbalbalba · · Score: 1

    No, seriously, if even a website like Amazon.com can't 'recommend' me items correctly based on past purchases, how the hell else are competitors gonna get it right ? I really don't mind targeted ads (but then again, I'm European) but they *do* have to get it right and recommend/advertise me stuff that I *really* would like to buy.

  32. People Lie by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ask someone "would you like me to constantly monitor your life and give you adds based on what we learn about you?" and you'll get "no" every time. If you ask "would you prefer that adds be relevant to your life?" and you'll get "yes" much more often.

    Add that to the fact that people will say "I hate that idea" but then if you were to have them browse with targeted adds and without (and distract them by telling them it's a study about a new web browser, but just use IE with a skin or something) and ask them after which one they thought handled adds better, they'd pick targeted adds without knowing why. A survey is not scientific, and a good pollster can make a poll say what they want it to say, and in this day and age, often they are trying to show a result rather than learn something.

    1. Re:People Lie by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

      A survey is not scientific

      Imaginary experiments are!

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
  33. Think about the money by Chameleon+Man · · Score: 0

    Targeted ads have a larger success rate when trying to draw people in. That said, websites have less of a need to clutter their site with non-targeted ads to make the same amount of money. Given the two options, I would much rather choose targeted...then again, I use ad-blocker. And besides, with respect to publicly posted information (not e-mails), saying targeted ads is an invasion of privacy is like calling a friend a stalker for looking at your facebook pictures.

  34. non-targetted ads helped me grow up by fhuglegads · · Score: 5, Funny

    If all I ever got was targeted ads I would know nothing about feminine hygiene products. Knowing these dirty little secrets that women have is part of being a teenager. I would have missed out on a lot of immaturity if all they showed me was ads for Atari 2600 games, pizza and the pepsi challenge.

    1. Re:non-targetted ads helped me grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I be able to interest you in a neat thing called the internet, and a neat site called Wikipedia? If you like it, you can have it for only $10.95 a month. That's less than 40 cents a day!

  35. So what do they want? by moorehol · · Score: 1

    random ads to dating services? how about "save your kingdom"! and play some crappy role playing game using elfy looking hot chicks on their google ads. -mandy http://www.mandymoorehol.com/

  36. I can sum this up in one command by geeper · · Score: 0

    s/Targeted//

    --
    Error reading device 'Signature'. (A)bort, (R)etry, (F)ail?
  37. loyalty cards; air miles, etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the thing about this that i find interesting is that the same people will whip out or sign up for numerous 'loyalty' cards that shave 5% off the top or give 'points'. do those same people believe that the companies involved don't scrutinize their purchases and buying habits? and/or sell the related information to 3rd parties for profit?

  38. I wouldn't mind them, except... by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    ... except that I do mind the means to get them targeted.

    Otherwises, besides that, I of course want ads relevant to my interests like an offer to purchase the xkcd book, rather than Viagra and lottery ads. If you must get ads, that is.

    I think pretty much everyone agree.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    1. Re:I wouldn't mind them, except... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Nah. If the ads are irrelevant then they're just noise. If they're well targeted then they're insidious noise.

      I have trouble believing ads work as well as the effort and money that's put into them, but I'd prefer they're further from successfully exercising mind control rather than closer.

  39. and when asked.... by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

    and when asked if they were ok with getting 80% less advertising in exchange for the ads actually being about things they were interested in, consumers replied "lol wut?"

    seriously people - ads pay for the crap you're looking at. Do you want half the page covered in ads? Your alternative is to have much fewer ads, but have them be about things relevant to you. There is no third "everything for free!!!!" option, no matter how strong your sense of entitlement is.

    1. Re:and when asked.... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      I would rather pay more money for less shit, pay for my TV programming and get a good product, well designed, and not built to break and fall apart after a year, than suffer through one more single TV commercial or ad, anywhere.

    2. Re:and when asked.... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Actually, if they just dropped the ads the content would be cheaper to deliver and products would be cheaper too, because the producers wouldn't be wasting money on advertising. Sure, we'd have to pay for ad supported services, but we'd end up paying less overall than we do now.

    3. Re:and when asked.... by bratwiz · · Score: 1

      I would rather pay for fewer channels with better shit. Seriously cable / fios / satellite tv -- it all sucks. Too many commercials, too many infomercials, too much bullshit content.

      TV sucks these days. Movies suck these days. Music sucks these days. Its hard to find any content worth paying attention to, much less buying. The soul is being (or has been) sucked out of everything these days.

      Too much lowest-common-denominator bullshit. Fuck it. Why bother?

      (Hint: I don't)

  40. In principle ... by Old97 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I prefer ads that are relevant to my interests so targeted ads are a good thing in that respect. On the other hand, I generally don't want companies doing what it takes to understand me personally well enough to target ads for me. If Amazon uses my past browsing and purchasing patterns on their site to make recommendations that's o.k. by me. What I don't want is a third party using my interactions with a company in order to target ads. It feels creepy and I resent the intrusion.

    --
    Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
    1. Re:In principle ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd LOVE to have accurately targetted ads. Because then I could set my personal targetted-ad preferences to 'no ads under any circumstances ever' and because the companies can accurately track my preferences (otherwise their targetting isn't working properly) then they've got no excuse to ever pester me. And maybe I could even go after those advertisers who disregard my preferences because the very existence of targetted ad technology deprives them of any excuses for advertising at me. 'I specifically said I didn't want this crap, you are aware of my preferences and yet knowingly disregarded my wishes and intruded anyway, now you can compensate me for my annoyance.'

  41. Bill Hicks said it best by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    By the way, if anyone here is in marketing or advertising...kill yourself. Thank you. Just planting seeds, planting seeds is all I'm doing. No joke here, really. Seriously, kill yourself, you have no rationalisation for what you do, you are Satan's little helpers. Kill yourself, kill yourself, kill yourself now. Now, back to the show. Seriously, I know the marketing people: 'There's gonna be a joke comin' up.' There's no fuckin' joke. Suck a tail pipe, hang yourself...borrow a pistol from an NRA buddy, do something...rid the world of your evil fuckin' presence.
    - Bill Hicks

    --
    I come here for the love
  42. 18%? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    18% said those companies should be put out of business

    Cool, and i thought i was standing alone in that attitude. Nuke the damned companies.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  43. Not part of your 95% by VirginMary · · Score: 1

    most people would take the targeted ads.

    I don't know about most people, but I prefer non-targeted ads. I think they are far less likely to trick me into buying stuff. And, I really don't want to buy more stuff than what I come up with on my own. In fact, I would prefer to live in an ad-free world. I would even be willing to pay more for this better world. I find 99% of all ads insulting to my intelligence and mind-numbingly boring. I also view advertising in general as psychological warfare directed at me and have long ago conditioned myself to view all advertising and advertisers as personal enemies! In fact, I am less likely to buy something after having an ad about it shoved in my face or blared into my ears. If I made a major purchase I'd prefer a consumer magazine comparing different products and I always perform extensive research on the 'net before buying an expensive geek toy. I then tend to pay more attention to negative reviews.

    --
    When 1person suffers from a delusion,it is called insanity.When many people suffer from a delusion,it is called religion
  44. Make it Manual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make it manual so that I can subscribe to the service and indicate the ads I want to see - at least that way I can:

    1) get USEFUL adds! I was interested in a lawn mower last year - this year not likely so much ...
    2) be amused by adds for puppies or video games or 10 million dollar islands ...

  45. Obviously by Cornwallis · · Score: 1

    'In high percentages, [US residents] stand on the side of privacy advocates.'"

    This means the marketeers will ignore it.

  46. What is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    their definition of 'targeted'?

    Do they assume that because I am a male over 45 that I want erectile disfunction cures?

    That since i live in the midwest I want country music and go hunting and fishing?

    Do they think I have spare money to invest?

    That I know or care anything for (American) football, baseball, (ice) hockey or (tenpin) bowling.

  47. Re: Entertainment! by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Didya see the new Norton Ad pair with Dokken and the Chicken?

    Yet yaknow, it's that Safe-For-Prudes divider line that keeps the ads from really being fun to watch. I'd watch ads where the advertiser cut loose if I clicked three disclaimers to CYA for them legally from Mr. Thompson.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  48. Question phrasing? by IBBoard · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much of this is dislike of adverts and the tracking and how much is the way the question was phrased? Would the "general public" have been so against it if it was just "tracking ads" rather than "tracking ads across multiple sites"? And are the marketing companies now going to come back with their own survey worded to say "would you prefer useful and relevant adverts or a random collection of anything?" to prove that people do like being tracked?

    On the plus side, at least people think that CEOs and companies should actually be punished for misusing information rather than just going "oh well, never mind".

  49. Headline wrong by wurp · · Score: 1

    The 'answer' given in the headline is to a question very different than the one asked.

    I'd bet the vast majority of people would rather see targeted ads than random ads. There is no need to give away your private information to get targeted ads - you could have ad finding algorithm live in your computer and display targeted ads *without* letting arbitrary third parties track you online.

  50. Re:Jesus, what balls... Two Words by DevConcepts · · Score: 1

    Slap Chop. Your Gonna Love My Nuts

  51. Facebook by Phroggy · · Score: 1

    Facebook shows me targeted ads, with an opportunity to give feedback; if I don't like an ad, I can indicate not just that I don't like it, but why. The ads are unobtrusive: they're off to the side, out of the way of the content, and they don't blink at me. I rarely see ads for stupid crap I have no interest in (with the exception of Facebook's mobsters game).

    It can be a little creepy though. The other day I replied to a comment from a friend who happens to be black and female. Facebook immediately showed me an ad for a black dating site. This could have been coincidental, but it was the first time I'd seen that particular ad...

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  52. Separating tailoring and tracking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This study lambastes the TRUSTe study for "combin[ing] two ideas into one question: the issue of whether sites should serve tailored content and whether the tailoring should be based on a certain kind of tracking." The study goes on to treat the two ideas in significant isolation when in fact they are fairly inextricable.

    This seems really disingenuous to me. If the point of the study is to determine whether consumers are OK with the value proposition of targeted advertising, then it is necessary to present the complete context. By separating the context into two ideas - one which is only barely controversial and fairly intuitive, and another which is vague, sinister, technical - and not clearly articulating the value proposition seems to set up behavioral targeting for automatically being an unpopular concept.

    In addition, there is an interesting missing baseline. If the first question is "Please tell me whether or not you want the websites you visit to show you ads that are
    tailored to your interests" (ignoring the news and discount variants for the moment), it seems that you'd need to know "whether or not you want the websites you visit to show you ads at all." I suspect a large portion of that group are simply people who don't want to see ads, period. That's fine, but it's a bit odd not distinguishing between the two responses.

    I feel that the Westin survey question of "As you may know, websites like Google, Yahoo! And Microsoft (MSN) are able to provide free search engines or free e-mail accounts because of the income they receive from advertisers trying to reach users on their websites. How comfortable are you when those websites use information about your online activity to tailor advertisements or content to your hobbies or interests?" does a better job because it's explicitly stating "given that you are going to see an ad anyway...".

    1. Re:Separating tailoring and tracking? by bratwiz · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why you got modded down, you're making a good point.

      Another point to consider is context-- the fact that people do different kinds of things online at different times, which may vary from day-to-day, week-to-week, etc. During one time period I may be at work and my browsing / interest behavior revolves around work-related issues. Showing me an ad for a non work-related is not likely to pique my interest during this context. At another time I may be at home with my family doing family-related stuff. My browsing during this period is most likely to be G-rated and related to family entertainment, information, or home-related needs. Occasionally I might look at a "more colorful" site and my browsing is going to be focused in ways that relate to that.

      Showing me a porn ad in *ANY* context other than when I'm actually engaged in that type of activity would send me through the roof. I definitely do not want that type of advertisement to pop up during, say, my "family" browsing context, nor my "work" browsing context.

      Likewise I'm not an iTunes subscriber, don't buy music online (or offline for that matter, I refuse to support the RIAA mafia) so showing me ads for music downloads and such is completely pointless. Moreover I don't give a rat's ass about most "popular" consumer items and getting in my face about it is guaranteed to get your company on my list of people NOT to buy anything from.

      I agree with another previous poster-- if you show me an ad WHEN I am actually interested in buying something that relates to the ad -- BEFORE I buy something related to the ad -- I might consider it. You can determine that context by me SEARCHING for something. If I make a purchase then you should drop that as an ad trigger. Once I make the purchase I'm not likely to be interested in looking at competing products anymore and you'll just piss me off if you do.

      And when I am searching-- I want several things-- information, pricing, availability, and shipping cost. Secondarily I want to know store policies on various things including returns, exchanges, gifts, etc. I want GOOD information and in a useful format. I want to be able to start from an overview and drill down to details. I want pictures from lots of angles. I want complete specifications. I want to know if it comes in different colors or sizes and what they are. I want straightforward information I can use to compare products, both within a manufacturer's line and versus competitors *I* choose.

      In the online economy your store name / brand / logo / image isn't likely to mean doodly-squat to me. In fact I probably won't even notice the name until I checkout unless I've bought there before and am specifically seeking it out to buy from again. Anybody can hide behind a domain name. There are small operations with outstanding fulfillment and large well-known old-school operations with fulfillment that absolutely sucks. So playing coy and hiding your prices or playing games with product information is just STUPID. Why should I jump through your hoops when there are a thousand other stores just like yours I can visit without the hassle?

      Finally, when it comes to targeted ads, generally there is a limited range of products that the marketer has to push. If my interests and activities don't clearly fall within one of those areas, the marketer just "picks something" and throws it at me. There is nothing lamer than showing me your last-ditch pitch when you know I'm not going to be remotely interested in it.

  53. I've never understood online marketing by tech10171968 · · Score: 1

    Something I've never understood about online advertising: a marketer puts up ads on a website, and people go out of their way to avoid/block those ads because they find them "annoying" and "always getting in the way". So what does the marketing department do? That's right; they find ways to make the ads even more obtrusive and annoying! I guess I could never understand how getting in the faces of unwilling viewers (who are actively trying to avoid you) is supposed to bring in more sales. There seems to be some ass-backward logic at work here.

    Instead of working on "targeting" ads, maybe they should work on forms of advertising which don't somehow annoy the hell out of the majority of people who are likely to see those ads. Maybe something like "opt-in" advertising? I'm no expert so I don't know. All I know is that the present way of advertising seems rather self-defeating IMHO.

    --
    This space for rent!
  54. 66% say they don't want it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just in: 92% say they don't want *any* ads at all; the other 8% are just too stupid to care...

  55. Flash Cookies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if you delete your "browser cookies", all the "Flash cookies" remain. And many many websites use those Flash cookies to crossreference people.

    Any tiny little Flash object can set and/or read those cookies.

    Google "flash cookies" for good info on how to delete them.

  56. No ads at all please. by frogzilla · · Score: 1

    I don't want any advertising at all. That may result in "free" sites like this ceasing to exist. I can accept that. I can not emphasize enough to people how much more pleasant adblock makes the World Wide Web.

    1. Re:No ads at all please. by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > I don't want any advertising at all.

      Actually, I don't mind advertising as long as I don't see it (and I don't). And no, I am not "ripping off" the advertisers by not seeing their ads because I would never buy the products anyway. Yes, if I were typical the economy would collapse. I'm not. If you think it unfair of me to block your ads figure out a way to block me from your site. You put it up on the public Web and I am going to look at it if I see fit. Arranging for it to be accessible only to those you want is your problem.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  57. Ad targeting by credit rating by Animats · · Score: 1

    Google has been experimenting with ad targeting based on credit rating. ""Let's say we have an advertiser who wants to reach consumers with a high FICO score who applied for mortgages in the first quarter," Korsunsky says. "We can provide the advertiser with a list of Web sites on our Google content network that index against this segment. ... "Marketers expanding into a term like 'credit card' into a campaign -- they should have their ad copy prequalify a good credit shopper," Korsunsky says. "So adding copy like 'have good credit, apply for a card today' would let marketers filter out people without good credit."

    Google - now, with more evil!

  58. Ads should be relevant, not targeted to individual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I do a search for infrared receivers, I don't mind getting advertisements for where I can buy an IR receiver. If I'm reading movie reviews, I don't mind advertisements for a site that sells movie tickets. What bothers me is when the advertiser keeps track of my browsing habits, and shows me an IR receiver ad while I'm reading movie reviews a week after searching for receivers.

  59. Chuck? by antdude · · Score: 1

    Is that why Chuck was having poor ratings and almost got canceled forever (it got lucky for season 3 renewal!)? [grin]

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  60. My ISP does this by Ravenscall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And because they do it, and I work from home on a semi-regular basis (using VPN and OWA), almost all of the ads I get are for the company I work for.

    It makes me giggle that they are wasting their money.

    --
    You say you want a revolution....
  61. I like free services so... by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

    :I like my privacy but... If I must have ads, I would rather have targeted ads for something I might actually want or use.

    I like free services so... if I will ignore ads, I would rather have advertisers not invade my privacy.

    --
    But... the future refused to change.
  62. No control questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why didn't they also ask about ïnon-targeted ads for comparison? We are supposed to assume that since people don't want "targeted advertising" that the "targeted" part of it is the reason it's unwanted?ï

  63. I want Perfect Advertising, so do you by thethirdwheel · · Score: 1

    I want to find out about stuff that I could use. If there exists a product that is perfectly suited to my needs, I want to be told about it. There is absolutely NO way to do this without knowing something about me. Therefore, I want targeted advertising. A significant part of the reason I read slashdot, and browse newegg and gizmodo, is so that I can find stuff that meets my needs. I waste enormous amounts of time doing that in order to find a product I actually want. If google read all the emails, IMs, &c that I sent and figured out that I was looking for a gadget with properties x, y, and z, and then marketed one to me I would be ecstatic. If you don't want that, I don't understand you. What people don't want is: 1. disruptive advertising - we all hate popup adds and flash banners 2. bad advertising - see all viagra, tampon, &c references above 3. invasions of privacy - no one wants the general public to know they're in the market for a vibrator (well, almost no one) It doesn't mean they're not hoping for an add for the perfect one I think we can all agree on this one.

  64. Re: Maynard Keenan said it best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except you are posting that on slashdot. Which is ad-supported. I've personally worked with Jeff "Hemos" Bates to resolve ad serving issues. So you either want the co-founder of a website you choose to frequent to kill himself, or you're a blowhard who hasn't thought this through. Here's my counter-quote for you:

    "And in between
    Sips of coke
    He told me that
    He thought
    We were sellin out,
    Layin down,
    Suckin up
    To the man.

    Well now I've got some
    Advice for you, little buddy.
    Before you point the finger
    You should know that
    I'm the man,

    And if I'm the man,
    Then you're the man, and
    He's the man as well so you can
    Point that fuckin finger up your ass."

      - Tool -> Aenema -> Hooker with a Penis

    As long as you choose to frequent ad-supported websites, Bill Hicks is also talking about you. You're complicit. (Unless you're a paid Slashdot subscriber, of course.)

  65. The title misses the point by tommy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article isn't so much about targeted advertising as it is how the user's data is obtained. What the article actually says is we don't want to be tracked across multiple sites. It doesn't mention targeted advertising using data acquired on a single site.

    --

    I have a woman and money. Life is good.

  66. Fucking Dumb Question by logicnazi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course most people say they don't want targeted ads. I mean it's like asking "Would you like your taxes to be raised." Of course people say no because other things being equal people would prefer zero taxes and almost no ads. Of course if you asked whether you would prefer the government increase the gas tax or income tax, or whether a tax hike would be a worthwhile price to pay for universal health care you would get very different answers.

    In this sense ads are quite similar to taxes. We would prefer to get our government services for free and our media without any ads but since that's not possible question that matters is what tradeoffs you would like to make. I suspect if you asked people whether they would prefer to get tageted advertisements, a substantially larger number of untargeted ads or no longer get free webmail and the like I think you'll find many people take the first option.

    Also it's well documented that people seem to only really care about privacy/psuedo-anonymity/targeting when someone asks these kind of ominously phrased questions. I mean all the 'experts' go around saying vague ominous sounding things about losing privacy/etc so you ask people a question about privacy/etc.. and they think, "Hmm, I don't really understand what all the fuss is but it sounds kinda ominous and scary...you know I probably should be more responsible and worry about these issues." So your never finding out how much people actually mind losing their privacy and the like, they may not even notice. All you're really measuring is how much vague scary statements make people think they should worry about something.

    Ohh, and the fact that so many experts seem to take these concerns seriously is no more useful. If you dismiss a danger like that rather than looking thoughtful and concerned you appear less serious. I mean it's the same reason doctors and other medical experts in the mainstream media never get up and say, "Pshhaw, marijuanna use by teens isn't anything to worry about," despite having uncontrovertable data that it is way less risky that many other accepted activities. Once society views something as posing a risk and takes it to be a serious matter then any role models who refuse to treat it as a matter of serious concern are considered irresponsible and blamed for any harm that might have been avoided by being overly cautious.

    --

    If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    1. Re:Fucking Dumb Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make me want to register on /. in the hopes that some day I'll get mod points and remember to come back here and mod this +1 Clearest (and Snarkiest) Thinking I've Read All Day.

    2. Re:Fucking Dumb Question by anti-pop-frustration · · Score: 1

      Of course I'd prefer not to see an ad at all, but that's irrelevant.

      We would prefer [...] our media without any ads but since that's not possible

      Great outlook! I love how some people treat ads as if they where a inevitable fact of life.

      Eating food is inevitable, rain is inevitable, dying is inevitable. Ads are just a byproduct of our economic system, we can easily get rid of them. This is a choice we make. It's up to us to decide in which kind of economic system we want to live in.

  67. What exactly was asked? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

    Without knowing the questions, this is meaningless. Most people don't want ads, period. If the question was "do you want to receive targeted ads?", then of course most people said no. Targeted ads are still ads. Nothing surprising there. The important question is whether people would rather have targeted ads or non-targeted ads, when they see ads.

  68. you are idi. if you bought PC, you need printer, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you are idi. if you bought PC, you need printer, tonner, antivirus, usb drives

  69. I don't click on any of the ads on Google searches by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Does that mean you don't use Google, or you just don't want to pay to use it? I block almost all ads but I accept Google ads because I like being able to google. I'd rather put up with the annoyance of ads than not being able to find what I'm looking for relatively easily.

    And no, I really don't believe that anyone on YouTube should be paid for making videos and posting them online.

    While I'll say being paid isn't a right or an entitlement, I do want to support those who created stuff I like. I also believe there would not be as many creators, sure there would still be some just not as many, if they had to give away their creations.

    Falcon

  70. google flame bait (they are just soo holy) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was funny today when I tried to load slash-dot that the site was slow. Why? Because the adsense and google stuff was bogged down as these facists like to track everything we do. I am thinking I need to log all of these urls and have them redirected by my hosts file.
    How can I scrub all the google adsense nonsense and doubleclick stuff? Does anyone already have a list of offending urls?
    It would be awesome to have a version of DNS that is aware of these track-and-brainwash type of urls that are designed to 'tailor' a message.

    All of this tracking costs a lot in terms of electricity to send all of the packets to the snoop-sites. It is very un-green and environmentally devestating. It slows the web down. It should just plan be prohibited or I shoudl be able to opt out.

    Ah, but the kinds of folks who run a company like a google, all they do is just get money from banks and buy any company that they like.
    Moral? Huh.

  71. Doubleclick targeted ads 12 years ago! by antispam_ben · · Score: 1

    And probably earlier. I recall Clark Howard talking about how to go to doubleclick.com and go through the hoops to have Doubleclick not track you across websites using its banner ads with cookies - back in 1997.

    --
    Tag lost or not installed.
  72. ads and do it yourselfers by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Advertisers waste lots of money on ads that are ignored.

    Advertisers wouldn't pay for ads if they didn't work, at least not for long.

    I remember when I bought a house. Got lots of ads from contractors. If the advertisers realized I was a do-it-your-selfer, I would have loved to get ads from building material suppliers.

    What, you don't get ads from building material suppliers? I rent an apartment and I get ads from Home Depot, Lowes, and other suppliers.

    Falcon

    1. Re:ads and do it yourselfers by MpVpRb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Advertisers wouldn't pay for ads if they didn't work, at least not for long.

      They "work" in a crude, approximate, inefficient way. Kinda like spam.

    2. Re:ads and do it yourselfers by prockcore · · Score: 1

      Advertisers wouldn't pay for ads if they didn't work, at least not for long.

      That's why newspapers are going under. Because advertisers are deciding that online advertising is more effective than print advertising. Cheaper too.

    3. Re:ads and do it yourselfers by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Advertisers wouldn't pay for ads if they didn't work, at least not for long.

      That's why newspapers are going under. Because advertisers are deciding that online advertising is more effective than print advertising. Cheaper too.

      More effective, ie they work at least better than other forms of ads. They're also cheaper because websites are cheaper. In the print industry, newspapers and magazines revenue from subscriptions barely paid distribution expenses before, profit was made in advertising. However subscriptions have been falling and adverting rates are determined in part my the subscription base.

      Personally I'd pay a little more to subscribe to publications I like. And a little more for web access as well without ads. One of my favorite print magazines was "Byte magazine". It did have an online edition but when I just went to it I was redirected to "Dr Dobb's Journal". Another one I loved went out of print but still has a web presence, Transitions Abroad. I had renewed my subscription 2 months before the print edition was stopped but they had arranged with a Canadian magazine like it to take over delivery of the print edition, "Verge Magazine".

      Falcon

  73. Hmm... by yorkcc21 · · Score: 1

    By having this it would be very good for both the consumers and both the companies. The consumers would have ads targeting to their interests which might would also help ad companies create revenue for the increased number of visits this would create. Although this is a good idea, it would also be a huge invasion of privacy for many consumers, that do not want their history tracked by their searches.

  74. ads by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Advertisers wouldn't pay for ads if they didn't work, at least not for long.

    They "work" in a crude, approximate, inefficient way.

    Actually some of those who sell ads, like Google provides tools to advertizers so they can determine which ads work best. Google Analytics is a tool to analyze website traffic and marketing effectiveness.

    Falcon

  75. Human blood stain by chihowa · · Score: 1

    ...from lunch, though. He's a cannibal, which is possibly more interesting than a spy.

    --
    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  76. This vindicates my blog posting of a few days ago by Oflife · · Score: 0
  77. I think we're missing something here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that is, I myself do buy things from ads, but not always what I was looking for at all.
    As many have pointed out already, the targeted ads tend to assume that if you just bought a camera, you want more cameras -- that's just stupid, and we can maybe assume someone will fix that.

    I am a collector of odd things sometimes. As a scientist, for awhile I was trying to find good sources of glass for apparatus. While searching for something else entirely, I happened on an ad for some pyrex used by artists for whatever it is they do with it, and bought myself a nice stock for the lab.

    That's maybe not the best example, as I had been searching for glass, and maybe targeting would have got me there quicker -- but it would have been for more pricey stuff than the artists use, not a win for me.

    As a professional inventor, who knows what I may be inspired by -- I want variety, not the same old gunk! I might see an ad for amazing magnets and be inspired to make a permanent magnet cyclotron (this actually happened) that cuts hospital costs for isotopes by a fat factor (not that they'll pass along the savings, but that's not my point).

    There are things in the grocery store I rarely buy, but am glad are there for those rare times I DO want them. Variety is the spice of life.

    I just can't see targeting as being good enough to work anytime soon, for me, and yes, trying to track MY web habits would drive any rational software nuts indeed....because of the range of things I do is so out of the norm. Well, I do sometimes look at MILFs, but rarely....

    I find it fairly easy to ignore the manipulations in advertisements myself, a 7 year fast from TV made them appear as they are -- sick. I know that this toothpaste won't get me the girl, and neither will that deodorant. And on reflection, would I even want that girl if that's the only sort of thing that drives her desires? What about when the next new thing comes around, does she then come around too? Who wants or needs one of those? Trust me, you don't.

    While this never worked when I was a teenager, I recently got a really cool car (2010 Camaro SS) and boy, does it ever attract the babes. See the above, I'm happily married, and don't have interest in chicks who see the money that it represents as an aphrodisiac. By now, I know better. Much better. But it's interesting to observe indeed. Why didn't it work when I wanted to get laid? Because I wanted to get laid, is my theory. How to get a cat on your lap? Have any other cat on there, and the rest are jealous.

  78. No shit, Sherlock by kheldan · · Score: 1

    ..finds that U.S. residents do not want to receive Web advertising of any sort.

    There, fixed that for you.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  79. no, targeted ads work *IF* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IF the person is actively *LOOKING* to buy the thing you're advertising. It is annoying as hell if you're not looking. Just because I love Chevy or Ford doesn't mean I want to be bombarded with truck commericals or auto parts 24/7. However if I was say.... looking to buy a car, or a washer dryer, or something then hell yeah i want to see those targeted ads with my "preferences". Ad agencies just don't know how to do that. It would require a throwback to salesmen that actually have real understanding of their products and understand what you ( think you ) want

    That would cost alot of mediocre people their jobs, and companies are generally run by mediocre people

  80. What do consumers want? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Said like a true marketer: advertisers know what consumers want, and don't need consumers telling advertisers what is wanted.

    Hate to break it to you, but people hate ads. All US ads, and this probably holds in most other countries, do not provide information about products, instead the ads try to convince people to buy things they don't need based on feelings toward the brand. The only people who like ads are marketers and corporations who profit from them. You know it's true, you just won't admit it.

  81. Not surprising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really surprising really, but we haven't really seen the worst of it yet - the real danger comes when someone who knows you intimately uses that information for ad targetting. This could be Facebook or someone you trust even more, like say your bank or healthcare provider.

    American Express already does this in a limited form - using your spending profile and other account attributes to target 3rd party adverts which are served on its own website, and the company has its eyes on further monetizing that data. Once that happens, in conjunction with an ad service that can track you across multiple sites, privacy pretty much goes out the window.

  82. Honestly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Biggest pile of retardation, ever.
    Its like "WHAT DO YOU WANT?", "uhhhh, we don't know" situation.

    I certainly prefer targeted advertising, i don't give a shit about X new music band, i don't give a shit about cars or makeup, i don't care about most sports.
    I want technology, games, sci-fi, science, etc.

    I think a great solution would be if you could actually register your interests with advertisers.
    Of course, then you will just have all the whiners go "I DUN WANT ADS!" and stamp their foot like kids.

    Don't block decent advertisers, block the abusive ones.
    Block the Flash users, block the GIF abusers.

    I could bet that more than half of the people commenting in this thread has benefited from advertising, targeted or anonymously.
    And i could bet than almost all the people AGAINST it have.
    And word-of-mouth IS advertising too, just before you think it isn't.

    So much fucking hypocrisy in this god damn world, fucking sickening.

  83. If I must have ads, give me "targeted" ads by jroysdon · · Score: 1

    I thought of this back when I had a Tivo and its Thumbs Up/Down rating for shows. Tivo then uses your ratings of different shows and what you record to suggest new shows. I always thought it'd be great if I could do that during commercials. Once I thumbs down a commercial, don't show it to me again (I'm just gonna zap it anyway).

    I don't get ads most of the time in my browser (NoScript, content filtering), but I always though it was retarded to insist on throwing useless ads at me. Why do I, a male, care about female personal care items, etc.? I'd much rather have techie/geekie/cool ads if I have to have them. You're more likely to have me follow-up and be interested in it, which is more likely to result in a sale.

    I think if most Americans have no choice but to have ads (which, face it, most of the time you don't have a choice), if they really thought about it, they'd want ads that fit them - or at least a way to filter out ads that completely don't fit them.

  84. Disable all Cookies, almost.. by u64 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just set Opera Preferences to Cookies=OFF Flash=OFF ReferrerLogging=OFF GifAnimation=OFF.
    Then i Edit Site Preferences to only allow things when i want.
    Like youtube.com FlashOn and CookiesOn to allow autologin.

    More Privacy and faster browsing for me!

    urlfilter.ini
    [exclude]
    http://www.google./*.ico
    http://www.google./images/*
    http://images.google./*.ico
    http://images.google./intl/*
    http://video.google./*.ico
    http://video.google./img/*
    http://s.ytimg.com/yt/img/master-vfl*.png
    http://intellitx/

    Basic system32\drivers\etc\hosts file
    127.0.0.1 localhost
    127.0.0.1 www.google-analytics.com
    127.0.0.1 pagead.googlesyndication.com
    127.0.0.1 pagead2.googlesyndication.com
    127.0.0.1 adservices.google.com
    127.0.0.1 www.googleadservices.com
    127.0.0.1 imageads.googleadservices.com
    127.0.0.1 ad.yieldmanager.com
    127.0.0.1 ads.adbrite.com
    127.0.0.1 www.adbrite.com
    127.0.0.1 3.adbrite.com
    127.0.0.1 4.adbrite.com

    TODO JavaScriptOFF...

    But there still remain many Cookies to block.
    Especially good stable settings for n00bs that cant defend
    themselfs. I'm unsure if that's possible though...

  85. I admit it by patiodragon · · Score: 1

    I want to see ads for tools and not tampons. I WANT targeted ads!

  86. No targeted ads, but give the data WHEN I WANT it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want nothing to do with 'push' advertising, targeted advertising, tracking, profiling, et. al.

    However would it be too much to ask for these marketing companies and manufacturers and retailers to actually give me the information I *want* and *seek* about products WHEN I'M ACTUALLY SHOPPING FOR THEM??

    e.g. several major etailer sites don't even give even general information as to what the warranty length is on products they list for sale. Many times there isn't even an obvious / easy to find link to the product page on the product manufacturer's own web site. Many times there isn't even a link to the manufacturer's site at all. Sometimes there isn't even clear information on who the manufacturer is at all. Often there's no specific information as to what exact model number or version number (relative to the product's manufacturer) of product is being sold. Often one can't find the UPC or sometimes even the ISBN of a listed product. For food products often neither the etailer / distributor site nor EVEN THE MANUFACTURER'S SITE LISTS THE INGREDIENTS LABEL OR ANY INFORMATION FROM IT. Yes, sure, I want to buy that candy / whatever without a vague clue as to whether I'd be deathly allergic to something in it or whatever.

    Many times it isn't even all that clear what the return policy, shipping / billing policies and procedures are from various ecommerce sites. What if it is defective on arrival?

    How many clicks & form submissions will it take me to even find out what the shipping & handling charges are for a given product / number of products / weight of products would be to my address?

    A lot of these sites don't even give you clear information within their reasonable capability to know whether a given product is in fact in stock or how long the lead time / back order might be.

    Maybe they'd have to do a lot less phishing / push advertising / profiling / targeting if they'd actually let INTERESTED consumers efficiently discover what the features of the products are when people are trying to consider buying them.
    This is a great missed opportunity for semantic web and library science and proper catalogging / indexing and b2b ecommerce and XML / SOAP / REST web services, RDF, OASIS B2B / product description schemas, intelligent agents, or whatever.

    Why is it often easier for me to pick up / search a well indexed physical paper CATALOG of products and find out certain product / company / supplier information than it often is to look ONLINE?

    How about doing away with google, bing, yahoo keyword search crud and let me actually have product / supplier classification / search / indexing according to some usefully complete indexes / schemas / databases / data sheets.
    No, I don't want to download a 3 MBy PDF file with glossy photos and insufficient actual details on each one of fifty different products when I'm searching for a particular model of XYZ, say, a computer case or PC power supply and open, page through each individual one and try to mentally compare virtues and compromises. What I'd REALLY like to know is the useful preselection prerequisite parameters like, say, what are the actual dimensions, what actual length/height of cards fit into each slot, what's the biggest dimension power supply I can install, what's the tallest heatsink I can use. What dimensions of motherboard are supported. Whether the PSU is 80+ or not. Whether the PSU is UL listed or not, and if so, what's the listing. Whether it meets ATX 2.0, 2.1, or some other specifications. Actual parametric data that I want to use to select a supplier, and a product, quickly and efficiently.

    Google way maybe I search for "vacuum cleaner" +powerful. Or vacuum +amps +carpet or whatever. Good luck if I'm even trying to discriminate by the amperage or the voltage 110/120/220/240/50HZ/60HZ/whatever to narrow down the results according to what is actually compatible with my electric service. Maybe I should be able filter by whether it is UL / TUV / CE / FCC / DOC or whatever certified to s

  87. I wish there were a solution by kimvette · · Score: 1

    Oh, how I wish that software existed to block such ads - perhaps in the form of a browser plugin or extension. If only such software existed. Oh well. ;)

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  88. Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    (1) Like most slashdotters, I have configured my machine to not show ads. So no I am not complicit.

    (2) Slashdot is not like most "ad-supported websites". For one thing, unlike most sites, people can and do subscribe to Slashdot to both support it and avoid ads.

    (3) For another, people can and do get absolved from ads by none other than slashdot itself. Apparently you are not one of those "thanked for making slashdot great" or you would have acknowledge this possibility.

    (4) Analogy time. Advertisers are like defense contractors with mines to peddle. Viewers are like children wanting to play soccer on that big open field while keeping both legs intact. The two sides, you see, are at odds. Now these defense contractors they _will_ sell their mines. And viewers _will_ lose as a result. But a fair number of people, mostly soccer ball players and wannabes, are not happy with the arrangement.

    (5) Advertisers have LONG abused their privileges. Given a chance to run their ads at the same volume as TV shows, they crank up the volume. Allowed 5 or 10 minutes of ad time per hour, they (the advertisers _and_ the complicit TV stations) have jacked that up to almost 20 minutes per hour, and interstitialed us to death -- an ad overlay tonight covered up part of a Jeopardy question FFS! Same online -- there was a time when you'd see a top and maybe a bottom ad. Now you feel lucky to escape some websites without having to reboot.

    (6) Bill Hicks speaks more than adequately for soccer players everywhere. Yes, there is another side of the story, but frankly they've had their chance for decades and always blown it, badly. No mic for them.

    (7) FWIW, slashdot's subscription rate ($10 for 1,000 ad-free pages) is reasonable to me. But offers me nothing I don't already have. I emailed Malda about it and suggested things like allowing more than 100 comments max on a page for subscribers. Apparently this is possible for some other configuration of /. than the one I prefer (all comments displayed, and nested). Sale lost.

    (8) If you want to succeed with a product, you have to make people want it, rather than ram it down their throats. This is what Bill Hicks was ever-so-politely pointing out.

    (9) Good day to you, A/C. May I suggest a DVD rental of Anger Management?

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... you block ads, but you visit a site that is largely* ad-supported. Slashdot offers an alternative ad-free subscriber model, yet you decline to participate in it because you want more benefits... The /. content model allows visitors to choose between three options: pay for the content we bring you by viewing ads, pay for the content by subscribing, or be a parasite who merely shifts their costs onto someone else.

      (And it doesn't stop there - /. is basically a content aggregator which links to other ad-supported sites. Whether /. itself allows for non-advertising alternatives is moot - the entire content model is predicated on the existence of ad-supported content. The entire thing would fail if it linked to sites you had to pay to read.)

      I really have a hard time swallowing your sanctimonious sense of entitlement and vague ad-fatigue-induced rage as a legitimate source for criticism.

      Seriously. Take a look at your analogy. A rather important omission is that "big open field" was constructed, maintained, and paid for by somebody who needs to make money. You are grotesquely ignoring that there is a transaction occurring between publishers and audiences.

      That is, in fact, what makes you complicit. By blocking ads and not paying a subscription fee, you are not magically removed from this transaction, but merely shifting the costs to someone else. Maynard is quite apt in this case. As long as you are consuming the media, you are in fact The Man as well.

      * The minuscule portion of people who are community exemplars and are absolved from ads is not even remotely germane to a conversation about content revenue models.

    2. Re:Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      I have to go to work in 2 minutes but I would like to try to respond a bit now.

      you decline to participate in it because you want more benefits

      No. Because I want a benefit.

      Look, I'm also in the content business. I publish weekdaily to 6200 people. And I don't charge or gain a single penny from it. I accept that. Such is the Internet. But I have a family with hungry bellies and I can rarely afford to be charitable outside of my home. Sorry. The thing I was after would be trivial for slashdot to do -- provide more comments on a page if people want them -- i.e. settable in preferences but defaulting to 50 or 100. But a shot gun approach won't get me to sign up (not that I am accusing /. of that).

      As to my analogy, the field(s) I had/have in mind are not someone's commercial fields. Mines are a third world thing. These people have next to nothing, and mines make that closer to nothing at all when they can't cross a field to get from A to B. In my analogy, the mines shouldn't be there, period. And in much of the world, ads shouldn't be there period -- example, the school system.

      Take care and I may reply further if I get a chance.

      --
      I come here for the love
    3. Re:Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take care and I may reply further if I get a chance.

      Sounds good. I'll try to check back tomorrow.

    4. Re:Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      Ok, a couple more thoughts.

      ...The /. content model allows visitors to choose between three options: pay for the content we bring you by viewing ads, pay for the content by subscribing, or be a parasite who merely shifts their costs onto someone else.

      No, the /. content model HOPES visitors will view ads or pay to not view them. And I hope for whirled peas. There is no allow -- people can come and more importantly go any time they please. You have to sell people to keep them coming back.

      FWIW I think slashdot's ads are in the reasonable category, both the amount, content and size of them but you need to think shareware authors to understand this. I have registered a number of programs to get benefits I couldn't get otherwise. For example, I love xReminder Pro, the trial version allowed only 5 reminders total (I now have 240) and the registration cost of $20 lifetime was reasonable so I registered the product and plug it periodically. I did the same with Eudora and have even bought a few upgrades to that product. Money for value, it's how the world goes round. You can rail against it but it will be to no avail.

      * The minuscule portion of people who are community exemplars and are absolved from ads is not even remotely germane to a conversation about content revenue models.

      Did you really want to dump on the community exemplars, making them seem worthless? They provide a value, and get rewarded. Period.

      --
      I come here for the love
    5. Re:Sorry but Bill trumps Maynard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you really want to dump on the community exemplars, making them seem worthless? They provide a value, and get rewarded. Period.

      Wait, what?

      I'm completely baffled by how you misinterpreted my statement that community exemplars form a tiny percent of /.'s traffic and therefore aren't relevant to a conversation about big picture revenue models. I'm not "dumping" on them or diminishing them in any way. I'm just saying that relative to /.'s overall size, there just aren't that many people awarded an ad-free experience for their community contributions. "Miniscule portion" and "remotely germane" are not pejorative terms.

      you decline to participate in it because you want more benefits

      No. Because I want a benefit.

      The benefit is Slashdot's content. The very existence of Slashdot. I don't walk into a bookstore, grab a magazine off the shelf and walk out, saying "I would totally pay for this magazine if only they had an extra benefit for me."

      That's not how it works. Slashdot provides a service, in exchange you view ads or subscribe. Sure, you are technologically capable of bypassing the ads, but there are two problems with that: a) because you can doesn't make it right, and b) it simply shifts the costs onto those who do view ads or subscribe.

      What if I figured out a way to bypass the reminder limit of xReminder Pro and get full functionality without paying? I think you would rightly argue that is piracy and I'd be ripping off the very nice person(s) who made it. I don't get how figuring out how to bypass Slashdot's (or any other ad-supported website) advertising is different.

      But now we're getting into the weeds. The original issue is you quoted a very offensive remark suggesting people in marketing/advertising commit suicide. I pointed out that you're doing this on a site which you apparently like, a site which could not exist without advertising (directly, via its own ads, and indirectly, via the ad-supported nature of all the linked content).

      This makes you an active participant in advertising, by consuming ad-supported media and incurring the associated costs (staff, hardware, etc.). Even if you block the ads yourself, you simply shift those costs onto someone else who does view the ads.

      Calling for the death of marketers while happily consuming ad-supported media is, in addition to being offensive to the people who work for the site you choose to visit, hypocritical.

      Anywho, I feel like this conversation keeps getting deflected all over the place, going to in-school advertising, the quality of /.'s ads, valued community members, a personal site with 6200 visitors, etc. and that you are cherry-picking single quotes to quibble with rather than addressing the whole argument - which is how do you reconcile visiting ad-supported sites while wishing for their demise?

      I'm happy to cease this argument for fear that it will continue to go in circles or go off-topic.

  89. 95% of Americans . . . by bogidu · · Score: 1

    want the internet that they pay for to not carry advertising at all. The other 5% haven't figured out that they are paying to have advertising sent to them, unlike junkmail which the advertisers pay for.

  90. Just to sum up the thread ... by golodh · · Score: 1

    Just to sum up the thread, can we say that Americans will get loads and loads of targeted ads because "The Market" wants it?

  91. Well, for starters... by Waccoon · · Score: 1

    How about tailoring the ads based on the web site contents? You know, by actually studying the complete audience and site content, and not individual people?

    Yeah, big web sites usually do this correctly, and especially tech web sites. However, I get a little annoyed seeing ads for clothes cleaning products while browsing a web site about art. Not all artists are slobs. Honest! How about art supplies, cameras, printing services, legal services for artists, books on publishing, etc? It shocks me how often web sites can't do this right.

  92. Marketers are redundant. by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    If we're actively looking for a given kind of product, there are lots of useful and effective ways for suppliers to make their products known to us when required.. That does not constitute a reason or excuse for continually waving marketing drivel under our noses at all times.

    Marketroids have arrogated to themselves the right to pollute every visible surface with their crap, and for some reason nobody even seems to question that right.

    I often think the world would be a better place if every single marketroid was rounded up and sent to the gas chambers.

  93. What are ads again? by rgviza · · Score: 1

    Sorry, been using no-script for so long I've forgotten =D

    --
    Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  94. Don't want ads? Use a HOSTS file by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject-line above & this post -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1388939&cid=29612827

    I state that simply because it can clue you into how to avoid seeing adbanners period, which makes you faster online and safer as well.

    (Especially since they have been found for years now, @ times, to also harbor malscripted code in them, same as bogus websites do. [er this very article here on /. -> http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/06/15/2056219 , no less)

    APK

    P.S.=> I don't want to agree with your statements about marketers & businessmen, but, then again, I cannot argue with the numbers/results around us all either, so, you do have a point: The results tend to justify what you state. I think that because the banks/IMF/Federal Reserve fractional reserve banking system is screwing up the nation, businesses are getting desperate & folks will do almost anything to hold onto their jobs in order for they & their family to survive. To do that, they need to keep their source of income going, & that's the business they own or work for. They're getting desperate is all & trying desperate measures (because of messes like the hedgefunds scandal, this "war for freedom", & other debacles that create debt & financial chaos)... apk

  95. You know what by e-scetic · · Score: 1

    You know what. All advertised products, targeted or not, are things you simply don't need. The point of advertising is to create the perceived need, on your part, out of nothing. And the perceived need isn't a need but a desire, and that's the point - to create the desire and confuse you into thinking it's a need. And you know they do it very well, the magic spell of advertising works on you.

    You live in a consumerist society, you're nobody, worthless, if you don't have what everyone else has, and have your toys to play with, to distract you from better things that you should be doing instead - like, I dunno, revolution or doing things for the betterment of mankind. That's where advertising gets its power. To defeat advertising, stop being a society based on property, money, consumption and greed.

  96. This has been done way before the internet was the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They were targeting people based on the sex, age, country of birth, type of property owned, car they drive, the type of license plate, political party blah blah blah.
    And all this information is available to the public.

    James

  97. root cause by zerobytes · · Score: 1

    I think the root issue here is not the advertising. It's that people don't want other people tracking their online activity. Sure, no one likes ads but people have to make money. If there must be ads then I'd rather they be tailored to me - BUT, I don't want someone snooping through my internet history. That's private (or as /.ers know, not so private - so why do we fuss so much?).

  98. "targeted ads" How about "all ads"? by LiberalZombie · · Score: 1

    "Americans don't want ads" - There, fixed that for you. Advertising agencies exist in denial. They believe they are the life source for every farking thing in the universe while at the same time all the consumers in the universe whine about all the advertising they have to endure. When will corporations get a clue and actually listen to the consumers?

  99. It all depends... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    on how the targeted ads are created, what data is gathered and what they concentrate on (as a fellow slashdotter, I don't need viagra just because I looked at porn).
    I think most people don't want targeted ads out of privacy concerns, but take Amazon's recommendation list, its a great example of how targeted ads can be done in a way that is non threatening and actually works.

  100. Life without filters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans are loath to this paradigm because it flies in the face of their freedom to choose. I may like one thing one day but don't put me in a category because tomorrow I may be about something else. That is my freedom and right. Just let me see it all and I will choose today and tomorrow what I want to see today or tomorrow. With out your filters thankyou.

  101. You are way too close to the trees by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    I'm also happy to cease this discussion because you ignore most of what I say with "this conversation keeps getting deflected all over the place".

    You ignore alternate revenue models (like a pay-for product that offers more features) and then whine that I'm not hyper-focused on your dear little advertising-supported web site.

    You trivialize my web site, without acknowledging my point that I was making about it -- that I serve content without needing to make an ad-buck from them. For that matter I could publish to only those who paid to subscribe. Or I could stop publishing. Many solutions are possible. Whining about people who don't follow your view of the world is childish.

    and that you are cherry-picking single quotes to quibble with rather than addressing the whole argument

    Actually that is my point. Look at my second to last comment. I made a 9 point comment and got one or two points of reply. In my last comment you responded to my first line and my last line only. Pottle - kettle, etc.

    As to people bypassing shareware programs, yes they do this and it can be an arms race. But it seems like Microsoft figured it out with XP. I think /. is technical enough to figure it out. Especially if Slashdot (represented by you, an A/C, at the moment) takes a less adversarial approach. But instead we have Slashdot (represented by you, an A/C, at the moment) arguing with a customer, instead of remembering the customer is ALWAYS right.

    And by the way, what I posted isn't an argument. Bill Hicks is a comedian. He naturally gets the biggest laugh taking things to extreme. But his fundamental point speaks directly to the topic of this thread -- people don't want ads. Hicks is expressing some of the anger that people justifiably feel when advertisers take advantage of them, lie to them like Oracle did recently, won't shut off the ads in the middle of Jeopardy, market shamelessly to children, and on and on and on for years and decades.

    Hicks vented. He had a platform to voice frustrations. Most consumers do not have this.

    Closer to home, many (most?) slashdotters do not like Slashdot 2.0. They voice it in comments, they voice it in their SIGs, they no doubt send emails to the head honchos at /. And what happens? Nothing. They don't have a big enough voice. Slashdot is abusing their one-sided conversation with their readers by (1) ignoring things they could do to improve the reader experience, and (2) howling at the moon as you are doing to me in this sub-thread.

    I think you are after some sort of theoretical victory -- "If I can just get this guy to admit that he is the man too then I will have won". This is so far from the point that it makes me laugh and want to say, once again, lighten up. Or change YOUR thinking -- you're not a tree. Models change. The net started with no ads, moved to extreme ads and it is time to throttle it back again to value ads -- marketing your feature & benefits in ad-speak.

    Lose the dogmatic "You must view our ads or pay us for what WE perceive is a benefit" mentality, man. It will get you nowhere, I can guarantee you that.

    Here, look, I will formally end this thread. I surrender. You are right. You and I are both the man. You win this battle.

    And Slashdot is losing the war. Because they can't stop thinking of it as a war, apparently.

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:You are way too close to the trees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to make sure there's no confusion, I am not nor have I ever been a Slashdot employee or otherwise affiliated with them (other than as someone who has purchased ad inventory on their site) and my opinions are my own, not representative of Slashdot.