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Reddit enrages users again by ditching thank-you coins and awards
(www.businessinsider.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
They want to force redditors to see ads. That's the whole point. Gilding someone was a way of gifting an ad-free experience to a random redditor, and Reddit doesn't like that anymore.
Of course it's also because spez doesn't like seeing too many awards on "fuck spez" comments.
the lengths people will go before installing adblocker
most Reddit users use the official app now, so an adblocker is pretty much useless there
(+ the vast majority don't know how to use an adblocking proxy on their phone)
I imagine having a baked-in method for users with disposable income to avoid seeing any ads isn't exactly an attractive feature for potential advertisers.
That's literally YouTube Premium's value proposition.
I'd expect there's an equilibrium to be found.
Even if you had the hypothetical "ultimate consumer" -- so stupid that they clicked every ad and bought everything they saw-- there would be a finite cap of ad revenue you could get out of them. There are only so many advertisers, and they're only willing to pay so much per ad, because their acquisition budgets are finite and they anticipate much more real world levels of conversion from view to click to sale.
Maybe an "optimal" real-world user is worth $30 per month in ad clicks. Maybe they're worth 30 cents. Either way, it's still a number where you can say "we can offer an ad-free experience for a price anywhere above that, lose no revenue, and provide a premium option."
I'm also surprised there isn't more concern from the investor world about anchoring more and more products and services to the advertising universe-- it's a brittle, finicky bubble that's based on everyone lying to everyone else and hoping nobody checks the books.