This is the second advertising post I’ve seen on lemmy and they were both today. I’m wondering how other people feel about it or if they’ve even seen posts like this?

Personally I’m livid and hate seeing it here. One of the things that attracts me to lemmy is the donation based, volunteer run, distributed, open access nature of it. I don’t want it to become profit driven and I really don’t want to see companies in what I belive should be a purely social endeavour. I really think making it profit driven will ruin it, if that means it stays smaller then I’m okay with that.

Now I know I can block them and move on which is what I’ve done. I’m also pleased to say that both posts I saw were heavily downvoted and I did my part too.

I’m curious if other people agree with me and don’t want advertising like this on lemmy? Also, what do people think we can actually do about it if we don’t want it around? Petition instance admins to ban advertising accounts? Then how do we define one? Can anything actually be done or do I just have to block and move on from a possibly ever increasing flow of advertising until I get bored and move on?

Sorry for the long rambling post and thanks if you read this far.

  • teft
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    991 year ago

    Personally I think advertisements should be banned.

    Brought to you by Carl’s Jr.

    • WhirledWhyDweeb
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      171 year ago

      We fully agree, and in support of your community, we pledge to never advertise in this space.

      • Hardees
      • teft
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        61 year ago

        'Cause they pay me every time I do.

        You are an unfit shitposter. Your memes will be placed in the custody of Carl’s Jr.

  • Maharashtra
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    711 year ago

    If you’re asking me, I’m banning all advertisers and karma-fishers on the spot.

    Out of sight, out of mind.

    • SpeckleOP
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      151 year ago

      As the instance rules? So if anyone posts an advertising post the account is banned? Or each person blocking and moving on?

  • @[email protected]
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    561 year ago

    I like the way /r/3DPrinting handled ads. Their mods put it like this,

    “It’s okay for a Redditor to have a business and share it. It’s not okay for a business to have a Reddit account and do the same.”

    Basically, does that account contribute to the community outside of their business? If so, I don’t take issue with it.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      “It’s okay for a Redditor to have a business and share it. It’s not okay for a business to have a Reddit account and do the same.”

      That distinction is so minor it’s useless. I block all people who post dumb shit, regardless of whether they’re a business or not.

      At least there are no “sponsored” posts that can’t be blocked or downvoted. That’s the real problem. If Taco Bell wants to post “dank memes”, let them. Just don’t sticky the post so it survives based on the voting. I block the meme communities anyway.

      • @HollowNotion
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        101 year ago

        That’s fine, but if someone is making something actually interesting for a community I don’t see any reason why they shouldn’t be able to share it, provided that’s not the only reason they’re around. That gets harder to moderate, but if we’re talking “perfect world”, that’s what I would want.

      • @zuhayr
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        71 year ago

        I think when redittors give a product as a solution to a genuine problem asked about in the forums, (like use xyz software to handle your abc issue), that’s an advertisement as well and one we can all agree with having.

        Maybe, and that’s a very distant maybe, if you have a solution that you know would interest people in a specific group, (like some car part deal in a car enthusiastic group), that can be put out there.

        In any case, the general courtesy of mentioning your use case (owner, developer or just a user) of the product should be followed.

    • Overzeetop
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      71 year ago

      See, I’m okay with a business having an account and offering assistance. They should not advertise or proselytize, though I think a basic announcement of a new product is in a gray area.

      • @TheDoctorDonna
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        41 year ago

        But how can you trust that their advice or assistance is genuine and not just subtle marketing?

        • Overzeetop
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          41 year ago

          I mean, it fixes the problem someone asks about or it doesn’t. If the ownership is transparent I don’t see much issue. If you ask a question about the print speed of PLA+ at 205C on a PrusaXL and @BambuOfficial replies that it’s 200mm/s (and it’s wrong) but their Carbon prints at 500mm/s, then they get DV’ed and the mod determines if they’re being a little bitch about things. Its a bit like open source - if there’s enough eyes and enough participation, someone will note the correction and flag the post as malicious/advertising/assholerly.

          If @JosefPrusa replies that it’s 250mm/s currently and the next firmware that is getting released in a month will include adaptive heat profiling for 275mm/s, that’s both useful information and marketing…and probably a welcome official response from a manufacturer.

          • all-knight-party
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            1 year ago

            You could take that to a logical extreme and have companies providing valid product solutions to user problems, while conveniently making it seem like their product is the best choice or deal, while purposefully obfuscating or omitting other products that are actually a better choice, or even just a better choice depending on the user.

            Ideally, a neutral user involved in the industry or hobby being asked about would offer general best purchasing advice based on their experience through a willingness to help people like them.

            A company would have an extremely apparent incentive to only promote their products, and perhaps even leave out potential issues or caveats with their products since it’d reduce likelihood of a sale.

            Again, this is all worst case, and not to say that doesn’t already happen by concealing the company rep behind a seemingly anonymous user account, but allowing companies to dilute advice with monetary incentives seems a slippery slope.

            I should’ve just not typed all of this and said: conflict of interest

          • @TheDoctorDonna
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            11 year ago

            I do see your point, but I can also see how the account could be used to manipulate the consumer too, which makes me wary.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        That’s a great example of a business taking part in the community. If they go out of their way to be helpful like that, which costs the money, I’m okay with them trying to recoup a little bit through the goodwill they put in.

  • Cloudless
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    321 year ago

    I would suggest that you censor the spammer’s company name in the screen shot. They want to have more exposure and they don’t deserve any.

    • SpeckleOP
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      181 year ago

      Thank you! I didn’t think of that, changed it now.

  • @fubo
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    1 year ago

    The nature of spam is that it is parasitic. Spammers don’t pay for the resources they use for advertising. They’re not sponsoring the site or funding development. Instead, they’re stealing from the commons.

    It’s important that spam be unsuccessful here. Multiple Internet services have been ruined by spam before.

  • @sulungskwa
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    231 year ago

    Honestly if money has to be a part of it I would rather just pay some instance maintainer a monthly/yearly fee.

    • SpeckleOP
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      81 year ago

      Thanks for answering. What are you paying them for? To keep it clear of advertising, so bannning advertising accounts? Or something else? What about accounts on other instances, paying your instance owner won’t affect them?

      You can already donate to your instance, and should if you can afford it 😊

      • @zuhayr
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        51 year ago

        Do you guys recommend that instance owners publish their monthly costs somewhere, vs donations earned? That could help ensuring instances are kept away from RC Cola® sponsored adverts.

        • @cccc
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          21 year ago

          Some do.

  • lohrun
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    221 year ago

    Yeet ads to the shadow realm, we didn’t flee traditional corporatized social media just to repeat the same mistakes of monetizing literally everything

  • @Caffeinated_Capybara
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    151 year ago

    Are these spam accounts? Then they should be banned. I could only see ads in the context of keeping the servers running. I think outside of that it doesn’t make sense for this kind of platform. If lemmy.world can run entirely off of donations, then I don’t see a reason for ads at all, especially if those ads don’t even contribute to keeping the lights on.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    No, advertising is horrible and should not exist on Lemmy. But since it’s federated, I wonder how we stop it. The only solution seems to be moderators with quick ban hammers. And what if some instances don’t moderate for ads?

    • Jeena
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      41 year ago

      Then there is always the big hammer of defederation.

  • GolGolarion
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    111 year ago

    Unless they’re paying for the instances costs, they can get outta here, and even then, i’m gonna block them.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    Rules are only as effective as the mechanisms enforcing them - I don’t think anyone wants ads on Lemmy instances, but removal requires moderation tools and staff (volunteer or otherwise) to review everything that’s posted.

    I imagine the problem we’ll see is as growth accelerates, post velocity will outpace moderation manpower - short version, you’re always going to have to do some blocking/filtering of your own.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        A report has to be reviewed for accuracy, there’s still time and resources required. It’s not as simple as just blocking every post or user that has a report submitted against them. People abuse report systems all the time.

        • QuestioningEspecialy
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          31 year ago

          Still better than “you’re always going to have to do some blocking/filtering of your own.” 🤷🏿‍♂️

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Wrongly blocking people simply because a report was submitted against them, even if it’s unsubstantiated, is better than users having to do some proactive blocking/filtering?

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                What a shitty response to a valid question. I’ll make this easy and just block you so we can end this here.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Sure, it’s manageable now, but it quickly won’t be if Lemmy continues to grow the way it currently is. “Add mods in the future” is kind of a hand-wave of the problem, which is that you need mods who are:

            • fair and responsible
            • willing to dedicate (potentially large) amounts of time and energy to moderating
            • willing to moderate for free

            That disqualifies a large swath of people from moderation.

            Now of course, it’s possible and it’s happened before, Reddit has a huge number of dedicated unpaid mods and it’s because of them Reddit was able to grow to the platform it was.

            But it’s a little more complex than “throw more people at the problem” when you need people who are incentivized by something other than payment.

            The unfortunate problem is that once you remove money from the equation, power is the closest great incentivizer. And power hungry mods are bad mods.

  • Jeena
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    91 year ago

    My dear, religion is ads are like a penis. It’s a perfectly fine thing to have and take pride in, but when one takes it out and waves it in front of my face we have a problem.