I want to get as far away from the ad economy and ad culture as possible. Since there’s a 0% chance the morons supporting it will ever learn from their mistakes, I’m starting to realize the only option going forward is to create new places where we aren’t stuck with the “tunnel vision of the stupids.”

It doesn’t have to be large, start small and work our way out. It also doesn’t have to be expensive. It shouldn’t be too difficult to enforce a ban on physical advertisements within the borders, but digital advertising is a whole 'nother ballgame.

Even for a small town, would it be possible to sue companies for running ads in it? Similar to how the same company will show different content on their web services depending on where the user connects from to adhere to local laws. It would be fine if they just blocked connections from where advertising is illegal, but it’s not okay for them to show ads to our residents.

Any insight into this besides useful idiots saying advertising is good or necessary would be greatly appreciated!

  • fonix232@fedia.io
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    7 hours ago

    Making all advertising illegal would quickly collapse society.

    Why? Because for any given service, how would you even know it’s available at all, let alone the people providing it?

    Our entire society as of now, and for the past few thousand years, has been so complex that people need to specialise and rely on each other for a lot of things. You rely on farmers, millers, bakers, butchers, etc. to provide your daily food. You rely on bus drivers, taxicabs, etc., for your transportation. On plumbers, sparkies, et cetera all for your home maintenance needs. Not to mention companies manufacturing and selling even more complex products you buy.

    Without advertisement, how would you know what restaurants are nearby? Or who can repair your broken sink? Who can come out and repair that in-wall conduit? who you can hire to build your new house? where you can go to get entertained? are we banning adverts for the local theatre’s new plays? are we banning the local handyman from letting people know he provides said service?

    I agree that today’s overkill advertisements are an issue, exacerbated by late stage capitalism that simultaneously wants to siphon your income both before and after you receive it, that having advertisements shoved down one’s throat should stop… But do you really think that banning ALL advertising is the way to go?

    Unless you’re proposing the absolutely moronic libertarian stance of everyone relying upon themselves only for survival and continued existence, you can’t just ban all advertisements.

    What would work is an incredibly heavy handed set of regulations that ensure the big players play fair, that ads aren’t using various psychological tricks to make you buy new shit you don’t need, that ads aren’t malicious and overwhelming, and so on. But even that is a scope of discussion that needs to take place over years, with a multitude of experts involved, not just one person willy nilly going “ads are bad mmmmkay so they’re now banned”.