• @MurrayL
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    2 days ago

    Despite the downvotes (post was at -2 at the time of this comment), this is actually an interesting article that talks about the differences in approach between platforms.

    “Overwhelmingly, Chinese social apps are competing with traditional e-commerce platforms,” he said. “The fact that U.S. lawmakers aren’t talking about this signals that Western apps are going to be playing catch-up for a very long time, no matter what happens to TikTok.”

    • @[email protected]
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      212 days ago

      Agreed, never use TikTok so I never realized but the angle on sales vs advertising is really interesting.

      • bizarroland
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        102 days ago

        It makes a lot of sense.

        If you can incorporate sales and advertising into your product in a very seamless and addictive way, then people will use your free app for its entertainment value and make you money.

        • @BlackAura
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          42 days ago

          It’s not that seamless depending on the content you usually consume.

          I feel like I keep seeing the same single livestream trying to sell me a phone charger, and then roughly the same 5 or 6 videos trying to sell me a specific product over and over again.

          As long as I don’t report or say “I keep seeing this ad” it will show me the same ones so they are easy to skip.

          Usually it’s something I started watching until I realized it was an ad, but because I started watching it one time it thinks I’m interested so it will continually show it to me.

          Once you spot them they are easy to skip. (at least, until they get better at masking then and then it will get harder).

          • @pycorax
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            11 day ago

            And I thought western social media was already unbearable without adblockers. This sounds even more hellish.