In elaborate terms: you have the ability to change any one of the protocols, specifications, designs or standards of the above at their proposal stage or before their mass adoption. You may choose to modify or reject an existing one or create one by yourself.

Some users and I would have common ideas in mind, however I would love to see some esoteric ideas as well.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    You’d need to still have a whitelist, so putting the name of your store on the front of the store or telling a friend about a cool new thing you bought is allowed. But yes.

    In a similar vein, letting websites render whatever they can imagine has proven ripe for abuse. Basic HTML is a kind of whitelist of it’s own.

    • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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      1 day ago

      The best definition I have come up with so far is to ban ‘Party A compensating party B via money, goods, or services for displaying and/or broadcasting media to party C, in particular and/or in general, without party C’s specific consent and request.’ The only exception might be to allow it for companies that both A. have an annualized revenue less than 10x the median wage, and B. are not making a profit. That would be just to allow small businesses to get the word out at the start but would cut off anything getting to the point where it should be self-sustaining.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        19 hours ago

        So you could advertise on via own platform as much as you want? Billboards, sign spinners, flyers, door-to-door sales.

        It would kill surveillance capitalism as we know it, I guess, but it seems like if you’re killing advertising you might as well go all the way.

        The small business carveout is nice, though.

        • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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          14 hours ago

          Sort of.

          Billboards are not owned by stores. They are owned by marketers and rented to advertisers. An additional element may be needed to require ‘own space’ advertising to only advertise products and/or services available at that location. (i.e. within ~100meters)

          Sign spinners are being paid to display their sign. They’re gone.

          Flyers are not delivered with explicit consent and request. They’re gone.

          Door-to-door is tougher to classify because it has variance in form, but probably would be allowed on the condition that the first thing the potential customer sees is a person requesting consent and not some piece of media.

          Also, I think I’d have to simplify the start to ‘issuing or accepting payment’ rather than targeting a single party. Advertisers and marketers should both face punishment.