Introducing the Internet without Ads: A Warm Welcome

Introducing the Internet without Ads: A Warm Welcome

Welcome to the​ ad-free internet

For a preview of what lies wrapped beneath the Christmas tree, ‌log ​in‌ to Facebook. The social network tracks its users’ behaviour so‌ intimately that ‌it is able to personalise ads ⁤with a precision⁤ that sometimes verges‍ on mind-reading. Its ad-stuffed newsfeed at this time⁤ of year embodies the‌ internet’s great trade-off: consumers enjoy free services, but must submit to bombardment with commercials from companies that know who has been naughty or nice.

Yet increasingly, those with​ deep enough pockets are getting the chance to escape the⁣ online admen. Last month Facebook’s owner,⁤ Meta, began offering customers in Europe ad-free ⁢subscriptions to Facebook and​ its sister network, Instagram, for €9.99 ($10.85) ​a month. ‌In October X (formerly ‍Twitter) launched an‍ ad-free option. In the same month TikTok, a ‍fast-growing Chinese-owned video app, announced that it was testing an ad-free subscription. The following⁣ month Snapchat, ‌another social-media rival, said ⁢it was ⁣doing the same.

Social networks ⁢are not the only medium allowing the group that advertisers most covet—the better-off with⁤ money to splurge—to wriggle beyond their reach. From video ⁣and ⁢audio to news and gaming, a combination⁤ of regulation and technological change is ⁤encouraging media companies‌ to offer alternatives. “We are in a world where it will be increasingly possible to avoid ads,” says Brian ⁢Wieser ⁢of Madison‍ and Wall, an advertising consultancy. As the rich opt out of commercials on some platforms, advertisers are therefore⁤ looking for new places to catch them.

2023-12-11 16:44:43
Post from​ www.economist.com

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