90 Percent of Affiliate Ads on YouTube and Pinterest Aren't Disclosed, Says Study (theverge.com) 39
A new research paper [PDF] from Princeton University has found that 90 percent of affiliate posts on YouTube and Pinterest aren't disclosed to users. From a report: Affiliate links are customized URLs that content publishers can include in their posts. They're essentially ads, and publishers receive money from companies when users click on them. In the US, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) requires that content makers identify when they're being paid to post something, but despite that, influencers continue to skirt around disclosures. The FTC has previously sent out letters to influencers reminding them of the requirement to communicate paid relationships with brands to their followers. The paper from Princeton analyzed over 500,000 YouTube videos and 2.1 million unique pins on Pinterest. Of those, 0.67 percent, or 3,472 videos on YouTube, and 0.85 percent, or 18,237 pins, contained affiliate links.
What is this "pinterest" you speak of? (Score:2)
Never heard of it before.
Re: (Score:3)
It's Facebook for the faceless.
Re: (Score:2)
Never imagined what a mess advertising would becom (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Never imagined what a mess advertising would be (Score:4, Insightful)
Really?
Before or after:
- Punch the monkey and win the prize! Flash ads WITH SOUND.
- Pop ups with stroke lights and dicks
- Pop UNDERS
- Closing a pop up opens ANOTHER pop up.
Re: (Score:2)
When I was young ads were on billboards, TV, and in newspapers or magazines. There was no internet like we know it today and cell phone looked like this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, no kidding ... internet ads have been shady for as long as you've been able to explain to your mother WTF the internet is. Those of us who have been around long enough to remember every example you gave know too well that it's been a shithole since the first companies started put
Re: (Score:2)
I would say before, you young whipper-snapper.
Back before those days. Advertisement on the information super highway was considered a godsend where we were allowed to access services that were once either had to pay to access, or was too small to be fully useful. Because the cost of operating a full website was too expensive for most hobbyist.
A single 468x60 pixel banner per page load, for an advertisement roughly related to the content of the site, that took 10 seconds to load off of a modem. was well wor
Re: (Score:2)
Back then the advertising was obvious and obnoxious but it was on a website with content.
Now the site you use is a sophisticated, often gamified means of collecting your most intimate details so they can sell that information to advertisers (or other agents interested in demographic information...) Ad networks pay for a slot on every site you visit so they can gather even more creepy information about you while also shoving their highly targeted ads in yo face.
Monkey Punching I could ignore, having to recip
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Affiliate Links (Score:3)
It encourages reviewers to give good reviews of bad products. If they say "this sucks, don't buy it" few people will follow the link and make the reviewer cash.
Re: (Score:1)
It's like searching through a c:\windows directory c:\user directories and finding that there are a million subfolders and 0 Byte files and saying that there is 90% mor
Re: (Score:2)
Nothing wrong with it, just something that should be disclosed, that's all.
If you see a video of someone shilling a new product, you sort of want to know if they're being paid for it (either directly or indirectly via say, those links). Mostly because what they say can be influenced by whether or not they're being paid to say it.
It isn't unusual for c
Re: (Score:2)
These regulations are important. ProPublica recently did an article about political ads on Facebook (they gave me some praise, although I generally dislike ProPublica's reporting). FEC has been on and off about only requiring a link to a landing page with a disclaimer or requiring disclosure in the ad; all Facebook ads link back to a page which has a disclaimer.
I essentially get a pass almost all the time: the FEC has a safe-harbor for TV ads (which I would use as a primary legal argument) if your fac
Not accounting for fake it til you make it. (Score:1)
In my opinion, there are more people trying to fake it til they make it, since that's what a lot of leaders in t
Do it via irs (Score:1)
What would help (Score:2)