When comments are enabled on free-form ads, there’s an increase in community engagement, Reddit claimed, without indicating whether that increase was positive or not.
I remember a long time ago, like maybe a decade or more, the regular we-can-see-they’re-ads ads on Reddit could have comments enabled if the ad buyer wanted. I remember jumping in on a few of them and they actually weren’t bad, at least in the ones I went into (a biased sample to be sure). If the ads weren’t obnoxious or misleading I could see it going not too badly.
At some point adblock got good enough that I stopped seeing ads on Reddit any more, though, so I don’t know when they stopped that practice.
Ok this part made me snarf:
I remember a long time ago, like maybe a decade or more, the regular we-can-see-they’re-ads ads on Reddit could have comments enabled if the ad buyer wanted. I remember jumping in on a few of them and they actually weren’t bad, at least in the ones I went into (a biased sample to be sure). If the ads weren’t obnoxious or misleading I could see it going not too badly.
At some point adblock got good enough that I stopped seeing ads on Reddit any more, though, so I don’t know when they stopped that practice.
A long time ago the only ads on reddit were for communities inside itself.
I remember reddit was the only exception in my block rules.
Yeah I never understood that. Was it just to drive engagement? Were the moderators paying for those?
Advertisers stopped enabling it around the time it became mostly “MeUndies”, “HeGetsUs” and “kraft” ads.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_wC46bW1kI4
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://m.piped.video/watch?v=_wC46bW1kI4
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
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