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!

  • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    21 hours ago

    Corps like facebook have entire departments filled with assholes trying to be maliciously compliant with your laws.

    Like “as the law required, we opened WhatsApp to third party apps”.

    Then you go to watch this third party app, and it’s birdchat, never heard before, with only 200 global downloads, with more devs than actual users, launched like one week earlier. And if WhatsApp users want to chat with those dozens of birdchat users, they need to opt-in in a hidden toggle buried in the settings. And when they toggle the opt-in they need to confirm thrice on some scary “are you sure?” dialogs. I don’t think that a single message will be exchanged between the platforms in the whole 2026

    So for your anti ads laws, they will argue “this is not advertising, is simply suggesting a feature or product…”