TiVo Data Collection Ramifications 376
www.sharkdefense.com writes "Businessweek has an interesting article on a new TiVo technology which allows ad executives to see which ads are skipped on the DVRs. Thank goodness they still don't know if you went to the bathroom for a break or to the fridge. The article is an eye-opening read."
You can't handle the truth! (Score:5, Insightful)
So, let's see... Companies/organizations who sit between the producer and consumer, have made up their own rules and flimsy business model and don't like it when times change and require the business model to change. Where have I heard this before? *cough*RIAA*cough*
I know this isn't the same thing, I just saw the similarity. Oh, and I didn't see in the article, were the better ads replayed? They were during the Super Bowl [medialifemagazine.com].
Reality TV, news, and "event" programming such as the Oscars do significantly better at getting viewers to see the commercials.
PLEASE tell me this doesn't mean more Reality TV shows!!! I can't handle it!!! They're replacing the somewhat-good shows that have survived so far.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:2)
Essentially good telly costs money and I am quite certain that every thing will sort itself out just fine.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot TV, Real geeks unequiped to deal with the real world. From the makers of Survivor!
---
The good die young -- because they see it's no use living if you've got to be good.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:2, Funny)
Next M
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't get it though... Reality as seen through my TV? No thanks. I've got enough drama in my own reality. Really now.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:3, Interesting)
Hell, we alreay know that reality TV viewers will watch _anything_ - why are you surpriised that they are watching the adds too? It's probably of better quality than the programme itself!
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, good entertainment will always draw an audience and audiences will always draw advertisers. If broadband continues to get rolled out, we could see TVoIP with advertisers taking an international market campaign sponsoring programs on the net.
That's the beauty of capitalism. It eventually dethrones the most entrenched incumbents as they continue to foul up. You just can't predict how and when.
Decent Product Placement (Score:5, Insightful)
When I read this, the idea of firefly presented by a hemmeroids ointment was so ridiculous, it made me laugh. But not, I realized, much more than regular product placement.
Advertising agencies have still got it all wrong. Why doesn't one of the characters on Friends, for instance, have a thing for coke? I know enough people in the real world who are adamantly "addicted" to certain brands and foods that it wouln't even stretch the imagination to see a TV character with that trait.
But instead they do horribly klutzy things like "the doritos picnic" on the original survivor, or the painfully akward Coke placement on American Idol. It's actually disarmingly honest; "hey look, we're a show you like and we're pushing a product, don't you want to BUY it??"
No. No we don't. We're over advertising as a social contract, where we tolerate it with the abiding satisfaction of receiving the accompanying content as a "reward." We no longer feel any obligation to this system. Advertising dollars spent on that very mechanism are terribly wasted, even if it works sometimes. Better to assign the desired buy-craziness to a TV character we can empathize with and desire to emulate. At least this will catch us off guard for a couple of years.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:3, Interesting)
I certainly hope they're going to account for people who show the show as well as the commercials. Of course, there's nothing they can do about accounting for people who aren't paying any attention to the TV because they just want background noise while they play chess.
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:3, Insightful)
1)
Re:You can't handle the truth! (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you mean "and".
Anyways, if the companies find out I always skip car commercials, maybe they'd figure out a way to customize the ads I *DO* see. I will actually stop to watch an ad that looks interesting (is about a product I'm interested in.) But 99% of the ads on TV are either for junk I have no interest in (cars, beer, cellphones, makeup, maxipads...) and have been run so many times, they're just downright obnoxious.
If they want my eyeballs, they're going to have to earn them.
The part they don't (Score:3, Insightful)
Which ads (Score:5, Funny)
which ads are skipped on the DVRs
All of them?
Re:Which ads (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Which ads (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, I've noticed that trailers seem to be getting less and less descriptive. One of the ads for Terminator 3 that I watched told absolutely nothing about the plot. It was essentially the WB logo melting and reforming into a bar thingy, which then morped into a T in which the number 3 w
Re:Which ads (Score:2)
Kintanon
Re:Which ads (Score:3, Funny)
Rewind to watch = fast-forwarded too far (Score:2)
Sometimes Tivo's automatic rewind-on-fastforward does it right, but sometimes it doesn't and I end up getting about the last half of the last commercial.
Sounds like a bunch of erroneous data to me.
Further made erroneous by me watching something on Tivo and reading a catalog or magazine at the same time. I get into the magazine, forget about the
Re:Which ads (Score:5, Funny)
Great, every ad will now how hot chicks.
Oh wait...
The proper time for breaks (Score:5, Funny)
I think the point that we all are missing is that we should be watching TV for the ads and taking our breaks during the filler (a.k.a. the actual show). At least, that's the way to be a good consumer.
Re:The proper time for breaks (Score:2)
TW
This can only lead to one thing.... (Score:2, Funny)
No. Tivo has killed TV -- TV just doesn't know it (Score:3, Insightful)
What that says is that bored people stay for the commercials. Interested people watch the show, and skip the commercials.
So that says that the TV shows need to be more boring. That's right, you're going to pay $60 per month for satellite TV, and at any time, you can wat
Re:No. Tivo has killed TV -- TV just doesn't know (Score:2)
The best thing that could come of this would be TV free of most commercials. Unfortunately, this would probably lead to shows that are unwatchable as they would contain so many "ad-ettes" (pop-up ads ala TLC, product placement, etc). Guess there's alwa
All we need next is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
+4 "funny!"
-2 "A feminine hygene product during the Superbowl is seriously OT!"
Re: (Score:3)
At least they don't show how to use it (Score:5, Funny)
Man 1: Hey, Joe, do you ever have problems with an itcy asshole? ... Just gotta make sure you get a thorough coat on...
Man 2: Well I used to, then my friends turned me on to Preparation H!
Man 1: Really? How's that work?
Man 2: Well lemme just slap a little on for you there, skippy...
Man 1: Oooh.. Oh...
Man 2
Man 1: Hey... that IS better!
Voiceover: Preparation H, for all your itchy asshole needs.
Re:All we need next is ... (Score:5, Funny)
Advertising Executive: "21% wrote in CowBoyNeal? Who TF is CowBoyNeal?"
Ugh (Score:5, Funny)
Are they talking about Skinimax and the Playboy Channel?
I like this kind of data collection (Score:5, Insightful)
uhm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe this just means we won't have to sit through crappy commericials anymore because the companies can now figure out what the public (dis)likes. It's not like they're stealing your credit card numbers or anything...
How much does this actually help? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How much does this actually help? (Score:2)
Not quite half. 30% maybe.
However, as a previous poster suggested, some commercials I find myself watching again. And like him, commercials with a pretty girl or for a cool looking movie often get watched again by me.
Still, I appreciate being able to fast forward through commercials, even if I don't actually do it. If Tivo ever changes things so I cannot (either because somebody pays them to do so, or some (stupi
Re:How much does this actually help? (Score:2)
What is likely to happen from this kind of research (if PVRs really get big) is that ad time for sports and "must-see" "talk about around the water cooler the next morning" programming will become really pricey and every
I'd be alright with this... (Score:4, Interesting)
What for ? (Score:3, Funny)
Do they need a new TiVo technology to know that all ads are skipped ?
It's like if my email client told bulk marketers which spam I didn't delete
Re:What for ? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've had a TiVo for three years now, and I don't skip all ads. First, some shows are compelling enough that I watch them live, and am forced to suffer through ads as a result. Second, ads for products that I'm actually interested in are worth watching, as are genuinely funny and creative ads (I love the Jack in the Box Chipotle Chicken Sandwich commercial). Not all advertising is evil.
Re:What for ? (Score:3, Informative)
Mod this up. There's a reason why AdCritic, the website that had a massive database of movieclips of commercials for fre
Re:What for ? (Score:2)
Re:Sadly... (Score:2)
Wow, sorry for you man. I suppose she doesn't have a TiVo then ? or does she have one to re-run the ads ?
Hackable? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hackable? (Score:2)
What we really need is to strategically convince them when we watch commercials or not.
Consider movies on broadcast TV. Did you ever notice how the first half of the movie is virtually commercial free, but the last 15 minutes of the movie is stretched over 40 minutes?
We should try and convince them that we would only watch 2 minutes of commercials during a single break and then
Re: (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2, Informative)
I thought the data for the neilsen ratings was gathered from set top boxes distributed by the neilsen company.
What's the problem here? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What's the problem here? (Score:2)
The problem, as you put it, is that most people on
Finally.. (Score:3, Redundant)
It's a Good Thing (Score:5, Insightful)
This has to be better than the endless flood of mindless ads they shove at us now. As long as the information is only used in the aggregate, I see only positives from this.
I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
You set up a budget for each, and the rewards are unknown, but positive.
Advertisements are to 1) make you feel good about the company 2) product awareness and announcement 3) to promote specials.
There is no science in changing ppls behaviour from advertising any more than there is a science to R&D (kinda ironic, eh?). With the science of R&D, I mean that the company does not upfront know how much more sales will come from ma
So what? (Score:2, Interesting)
This is great (Score:3, Informative)
If monitoring which commercials people skip causes companies to produce better and more entertaining ads, I'm all for it.
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Is it just me or what... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Ad-supported TV (Score:3, Insightful)
Something like "If everyone watches all the commercials on the next three programs of Firefly, we'll keep it on the air." constantly running across the bottom of the screen.
And just when I thought the TV watching experience had hit absolute rock bottom...
Re:Ad-supported TV (Score:5, Insightful)
Ads are irritating... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's my (and probably others') big pet peeve about them. Oh, they could be less frequent too. There is such a thing called advertisement overload, as where the unsuspecting consumer is so irritated by the advertisement, as where they lose interest in the ad itself, and goes of to take a leak (or to do something else useful, like grabbing a beer or something). Of course, the product doesn't get seen when that happens.
But will "they" learn? Probably not.
Re:Ads are irritating... (Score:3, Informative)
How else are they supposed to make sure you can hear it from the bathroom?
Death of Intelligent Shows (Score:2)
So I use my TiVo to record my favorite shows and I consistently fast forward through all of the commercials.
Marketers considering buying commercials on my favorite show determine it is not lucrative to do so.
Funding for my favorite shows plummets; my favorite show gets canceled.
And we're left with only shows with stunned and dulled audiences too stupid or too cheap to buy a TiVO. [And I'll bet most of them take a potty/fridge break during a lot of the commercials anyway.]
British TV ads VS "The cup of Tea" (Score:5, Interesting)
So in essense this activity means that alot less viewers are actually present during the ad breaks than in the US when watching live TV. So what's the solution: Make ads that people actually want to see. British ads on the whole are funnier and more episodic than their US counterparts. I've never heard anyone in my time in the US talk about "The new ad for Coke" around the water cooler at work, but in the UK this regularly happens for the soft drink "Tango" for example.
So perhaps the answer is to make ads more entertaining, less repeated (why oh why show the same ad twice in an ad break), and less formulaic. If US ad agencies showed half the imagination that the UK ad agencies showed then people might actually be less tempted to skip over the ads or leave the room.
Re:British TV ads VS "The cup of Tea" (Score:2)
Re:British TV ads VS "The cup of Tea" (Score:2)
I've lived in the US for over 4 years so am fully integrated into the water cooler community. My comment was based on my experience of comparing UK and US ads and people's reactions to them. There are some ads that provoke discussion, e.g. the Superbowl halftime ads, but ads of the ingenuity shown
Still a mix of science and art (Score:2)
It's still an art though. I sometimes just let the TiVo go while I make a run for the bathroom. Ha! I showed them. So while they think I'm I'm watching the commercial for depends, I'm actually easing the tension on my bladder. So they still have to figure out of those commercials we're not skipp
Real hard... (Score:2)
Another industry refuses to accept change (Score:2)
Kind of reminds me about the RIAA battling against p2p filesharing. They refuse to accept that the music market is changing, and they're fighting as hard as they can to keep it like it is.
Now we've got TV execs scared that the people who buy advertising time on their shows will be able to find out just how effectiv
Proportion of Viewrs with TiVo? (Score:5, Interesting)
Does anyone know if there is a TiVo demographic?
Re:Proportion of Viewrs with TiVo? (Score:5, Funny)
Yes. We're all alpha geeks with unparalleled technical skills, perfect Libertarian/Free Market outlooks, vast bank accounts/portfolios and enourmous genitals that make the bitches scream and beg for more.
Invasion of privacy? (Score:2)
What will advertisers do with the data ? (Score:2)
In the case of Taco Bell, since their food is mainly about calories per dollar, the answer is pretty clear. But it might not be the case for other products. I can't see that
"Sticky" genres explained (Score:2, Interesting)
Judging from the way I and many people I know watch television (admittedly not a statistically significant data set), I would guess that a lot of those shows or genres in which people do not skip commercials, or change the channel, result from "ambient" television viewing. That is, people leaving the television on in the background while they do other things, like read Slashdot, or cook dinner.
The shows where people eliminate commercials are those to which they are actually paying attention.
Hey I'll watch your commercials (Score:2, Insightful)
2. don't ever show the same commercial twice during the same tv show commercial break (this is what annoys me the most).
I would think... (Score:3, Informative)
Is this not the case?
Take that! (Score:3, Funny)
Take that ad-execs!
I told ya, suckers. (Score:3, Funny)
Open source Linux-based PVR's to the rescue!
Thank goodness they still don't know if you went to the bathroom for a break or to the fridge
Unfortunately they'll be able to deduce that you were jerking off when you rewound and replayed that Doritos girl commercial about forty times.
Re:I told ya, suckers. (Score:3, Insightful)
only two things make ppl watch ads (Score:2)
(2) Cliffhanger programs, or can't-miss'. If someone really doesn't want to miss anything, they're more likely to put up with ads. This means that the program needs to be that good, and it needs to have left off at the right moment.
Effect on the marketplace (Score:2)
Why commercials suck (Score:5, Insightful)
Here are a few things they have done wrong, that really piss off viewers:
1. Volume. The add should be no louder than the rest of the broadcast material. This should be a standard among all stations - if my tv is set at a specific volume, I should be able to go to any channel at any time and have it be *exactly* the same volume.
2. Timing of product. Tampon/pad commercials during dinner or sport events are probably not very well planned. Similarly, I've seen car/realestate commercials on during saturday morning cartoons...
3. Repeating ad. Ever watch a 30 minute show and see the *same* commercial 4 times (once before, twice during, once after). Or even 2 different commercials for the same product back to back? That gets annoying, and you blank it out.
4. Portrays customer as idiot. This may just be a pet peeve of mine, but it seems to be a fad now in advertising to portray customers as mindless automotons who just consume whatever you give them. For example, the guy in Best Buy staring mindlessly at the new TV, and the salesguy saying "dude, you need these speakers too."
Personally, I am amazed advertising has worked this far at all. We saw how HORRIBLY it failed at supporting websites. What if this (counting ad skips) is effectually the same as counting the lack of clicks on a banner? will advertising firms start to lose money, stop paying content providers for space, causing them to lose money?
Sponsorship instead of Ads (Score:3, Interesting)
This quote is exactly what I want to see. A couple years ago, Schindler's List ran uninterrupted except for an intermission on TV and was sponsored by Ford. The only mention of Ford was a brought to you by Ford message and a logo suring the intermission and at the beginning and end. No, I didn't have to look up who sponsored Schindler's List, I actually remembered, thanks Ford. This is similar to what PBS does minus the telethon. I've actually watched who the sponsors are for some of the shows on PBS, simply because they have a relevant product or service that *gasp* I may actually be interested in.
Are you listening big media and advertising?
IMHO here's what's happening (Score:5, Insightful)
The inverse relationship between rating and getting to show ads, and the variable stickiness, is no surprise at all if you watch what a Tivo user does. Here is what is happening, and it's so simple: Tivo gets to play the ad, if the user isn't paying attention. Tivo doesn't get to play ads, if the user is intently watching the show.
That's all there is to it. I play The Simpsons and it's some lame episode that I've already seen way too many times, so I get bored and surf Slashdot. Being a stupid monkey, I don't just stop The Simpsons and watch something else, because I like The Simpsons so I think I want to watch it. But nevertheless, since I've seen the episode too many times, I am bored. I just don't realize I'm bored. So I let the episode play. I'm not watching. A commercial break happens. I don't notice for a minute, because I'm in the midst of writing a troll that requires all my concentration. Then somewhere in the back of my head, I hear that someone is selling cars, and I wake up from my TrollTrance and look over at the TV outraged, screaming "Commercial!!! Kill! Kill! Kill!" and fast forward until I see The Simpsons again. Then I go back to writing my troll.
Now suppose I'm watching Futurama, and it's an episode that I somehow missed the first time around. I'm fascinated. Instead of making an ass of myself on the internet, I watch TV. I am paying attention and following along. When a commercial break happens, I automatically skip over it.
Back to the stats:
That's because 70% were actually watching the show while playing it. I've never seen it, but it sounds like it might be a good show; I should give it a try. The other 30% were bored and trolling Slashdot. That's because the bored Tivo user wasn't really watching the show. He's just using the TV to make reassuring background noise in his meaningless life. Tivo thinks he is "watching the ads" but really he is explaining to somebody, the finer points of pouring hot grits. The user is watching. The user is not watching.Skip commercials, go to jail (Score:4, Informative)
From the plaintiff's filing in Paramount vs. SonicBlue:
So there.
the reality of it (Score:2)
Nova
Frontline
Survivor
Big Brother
Fear Factor
Dog Eat Dog
The Great Race
Frasier (when it's not up against one of the above)
Letterman/Leno when there's something to watch and I'm not so annoyed by the commercials I turn the sumbitch off and open winamp
Now, watch any of those prime time shows (except the ones on PBS) and note carefully all the product placement. Then note the comments in the article about fast fo
Death of Popular TV? (Score:2)
Not that they would conciously try to kill the shows people like to watch, just that the economics seem to say those are the shows that won't get funded.
Could this do to TV what the top-40 format has
Re:Death of Popular TV? (Score:3, Informative)
In other words, would you rather your ad be seen by 5% of 1,000,000 people, or 75% of 500 people?
To use the numbers from the article, The Practice had 8.9% of viewers, and they watched 30% of the ads. That's 2.67% of viewers. The Weakest Link viewers, being 0.9% of viewers, would have to record commercials and watch them three times each to match that.
How do they know if I'm watching live? (Score:4, Insightful)
The article discusses how some live events and reality television have a larger percentage of watched ads. I would guess that would be because most people watch those shows when they're actually being broadcast, as opposed to watching them later. It would be more interesting to see statistics of what % of the commercials are watched when it was watched live versus what % people are watching when watching it previously recorded.
For the live/reality events, those are conversation pieces for some people at work the next day (*gasp* Did you see who the Bachelor picked?). I'd bet that those programs are watched live more, and therefore people are unable to skip the commercials.
I don't watch TV you insensitive clod! (Score:2)
I'd rather read, or exercise. I don't need no stinking TV.
strategies (Score:4, Insightful)
Friday blowout! (Score:4, Insightful)
I hate the little dramas they try to play out as if we're supposed to believe we're seeing real people. I don't care if some damn, whiny bitch isn't feeling "fresh". Welcome to the world of evolution and genetics. You don't feel fresh. I lose my hair at age 40 and my refractory period has hit 2 weeks. Welcome to the Miserable Hearts Club. Now shut up about it.
Or the stupid jingles or the grating voiceovers. Everyone sounds like a used car salesman or a politician. Everybody in ad-land has happy nuclear familes in Whitebreadville, except for the Black targeted ads that are invariably accompanied by some sort of stereotypical blues jingle. I wanna see a Burger King commercial with Menace Klan's "Kill Whitey" in the background. Have a BK Fish, G, and tap some of that ass!
Or any alcohol ad. "You're all losers, so you need to dull your mind even further before you can have fun! May we suggest you consume large quantites of our cheap, watery beer. Oh, and drink responsibly! Wink! Wink!" Jackass, if I wanted to drink responsibly, I'd have a glass of orange juice. Wink wink at my spinchter, assface.
Whatever happened to those goddamned Mentos commercials? Mentos - breath mint of the master race. Christ, I don't even know what that meant! And if anyone actually smiled as wide as they do in toothpaste commercials, their brains would pop out. I guess it's a good thing that these dogfood grade morons with the idiot grins plastered on their botoxed lippage don't have brains in the first place.
And smoker's toothpolish. How dick is that? "Bob! You quit smoking!" says whore. "DID I?" says Bob. "Hmm, no. I guess not," says whore. "I can still smell the fetid stench of your filthy brain damaged habit wafting from your smoke encrusted clothing. Bleah. It's an extra $200 if you expect me to deal with your Marlboro funk."
Argh! Don't get me started on commercials!
If anything, isn't Tivo cutting its own throat? (Score:3, Interesting)
Ads need to be designed for PVRs (Score:3, Informative)
This means I almost always see the first couple of seconds of the first ad, and if it is interesting, I'll watch it.
Same goes for the last ad in the block...I'll see the end of it, and if the end is very interesting, I'll back up and watch.
So, to reach me, the best shot the advertisers have is at the ends of commercial blocks. An ad in the middle only has a chance if it is so interesting that in the time it it takes me to recognize it is not the show as I skip past, I'll be grabbed, or if the ad next to it is interesting enough that I decide to watch that neighbor ad, and while skipping to the start of that, the other ad catches me.
That gives these rules for ads if you want the PVR crowd to see them:
The first ad in the block needs be interesting from the beginning.
The last ad in the block needs to end in a way that will be interesting to people who haven't seen the begining of the ad.
The value of interior spots depends on what is around them.
A clever advertiser could use this to try to get people to skip the following ads, which might make it more likely the consumer will remember their ad. For example, instead of spending all 30 seconds on your product, do a 20 second interesting ad, and a 10 second boring ad or public service announcement or something--the idea is to give people some time to start skipping before some other company's ad can start. If the only ad people see during a break is yours, you've won.
Television will not continue in its current state (Score:3, Interesting)
You may have noticed that a lot of major websites make you watch a couple of commercials before watching a video clip these days. This is essentially the way television is going to work in the future. You'll have a dedicated device or piece of software (Hello, "trusted" computing platforms) which reads and interprets the incoming streams, and requires you to do something interactive in between chunks of a program in order to continue watching it. Hardcore hackers will of course find a way to automate these processes and avoid watching commercials just as they have always circumvented stupidity, but this will keep the vast majority of people on the straight and narrow path, so to speak.
Of course, it's going to be a while before that happens; Content creators and providers who are tied to the current infrastructure and their investments in it -- read: broadcast television outlets and media networks -- will continue to try to legislate rather than innovate. While you can expect them to enjoy some limited success (We have seen some already) ultimately they will have to solve the problem with technology.
How to really stop ad fast forwarding (Score:3, Interesting)
In contrast, TiVo points out that there almost always are several ads that air during the Super Bowl that actually get people to rewind back to them to see the ad again... wow, an ad that's so good people actually want to see it, what a concept!
TiVo's good at brokering this kind of compromise between the industry and end users, as opposed to Microsoft whose DVR errored in being too pro-industry and ReplayTV whose DVR errored in being too anti-industry. TiVo seems to be able to come up with a product that both expands user's abilities and keeps the industry lawyers away...
More popular shows still get more ads played (Score:4, Informative)
Even though the percentage of ads skipped increases with the popularity of the show, the popular shows still get more ads played through overall.
With the 8.9 show above, 30% of that show's viewers played the ads, which means those ads were played through by 30% of 8.9% = 2.67% of viewers. With the 0.9 show, 78% of its viewers played the ads, and 78% of 0.9% = 0.702% overall. So the ads that air with the most popular shows still get the most eyeballs, despite the inverse relationship mentioned in the article.
There's 3 types of ads (Score:5, Interesting)
2. Ads I ignore. This is 90% of the TV ads. If I'm watching live I'll probably see/hear part of it while I go to the bathroom/kitchen/stick my nose in a book. Otherwise, I'll FF past it.
3. Ads I can't stand. Bad sound effects will piss me off everytime. If I'm watching delayed, I'll FF past it. If I'm watching live, I'll "mute" until the show resumes, then pause for 15 minutes to ensure I won't have to suffer through any more commercials! If I didn't have the option of FFing or muteing, I'd go bonkers, destroy the TV with an axe, then go after the advertiser!
Re:reason (Score:2)
In addition you can opt out and not have your info recorded at all.
Re:reason (Score:2)
Re:Wall Street like the invasion of pricacy. (Score:3, Insightful)
I am a TiVo owner. Are you suggesting that the fact that TiVo tells somebody that, say, 9.2% of TiVo owners watched a particular commercial is an invasion of my privacy?
I support this sort of data gathering. The less crappy, brainless advertising out there the better.
Re: (Score:2)