In defense of the position df fd took, you’re playing a very asymmetric game here. Advertisers are investing very large sums of money and lots of person-hours of work to figure out how to change people’s preferences with those 15-second ads. There’s not a comparable degree of investment in developing techniques for making sure your desires aren’t manipulated. I think it’s hard to be totally sure that ads aren’t subtly creating new associations or preferences that are intended to benefit the advertiser (potentially at the reader’s expense).
Taking a bigger look, I think most people would agree that the average person in the United States makes at least a few irrational consumption decisions (such as buying a large expensive car, eating an unhealthy diet, or spending money on mobile games). There are lots of things one could point to in order to try and explain why that is, but I think it’s potentially good evidence that people overall are susceptible to having their desires changed by advertising.
In defense of the position df fd took, you’re playing a very asymmetric game here. Advertisers are investing very large sums of money and lots of person-hours of work to figure out how to change people’s preferences with those 15-second ads. There’s not a comparable degree of investment in developing techniques for making sure your desires aren’t manipulated. I think it’s hard to be totally sure that ads aren’t subtly creating new associations or preferences that are intended to benefit the advertiser (potentially at the reader’s expense).
Taking a bigger look, I think most people would agree that the average person in the United States makes at least a few irrational consumption decisions (such as buying a large expensive car, eating an unhealthy diet, or spending money on mobile games). There are lots of things one could point to in order to try and explain why that is, but I think it’s potentially good evidence that people overall are susceptible to having their desires changed by advertising.