this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2026
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I want to get as far away from the ad economy and ad culture as possible. Since there's a 0% chance the morons supporting it will ever learn from their mistakes, I'm starting to realize the only option going forward is to create new places where we aren't stuck with the "tunnel vision of the stupids."

It doesn't have to be large, start small and work our way out. It also doesn't have to be expensive. It shouldn't be too difficult to enforce a ban on physical advertisements within the borders, but digital advertising is a whole 'nother ballgame.

Even for a small town, would it be possible to sue companies for running ads in it? Similar to how the same company will show different content on their web services depending on where the user connects from to adhere to local laws. It would be fine if they just blocked connections from where advertising is illegal, but it's not okay for them to show ads to our residents.

Any insight into this besides useful idiots saying advertising is good or necessary would be greatly appreciated!

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[–] jdr@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Sao Paolo has a ban on outdoor advertising and it works brilliantly. There's still tons of money and commerce, but the city is so much nicer for not having all the attention-stealing visual pollution.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cidade_Limpa

[–] alonsohmtz@feddit.uk 3 points 1 day ago
[–] melsaskca@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Just pass laws that an individual can legally opt out from ads. Then you wouldn't have companies charging you more for "ad free" (even corps think ads are a punishment (or maybe even yet another revenue stream)).

[–] Wispy2891@lemmy.world 3 points 22 hours ago

Corps like facebook have entire departments filled with assholes trying to be maliciously compliant with your laws.

Like "as the law required, we opened WhatsApp to third party apps".

Then you go to watch this third party app, and it's birdchat, never heard before, with only 200 global downloads, with more devs than actual users, launched like one week earlier. And if WhatsApp users want to chat with those dozens of birdchat users, they need to opt-in in a hidden toggle buried in the settings. And when they toggle the opt-in they need to confirm thrice on some scary "are you sure?" dialogs. I don't think that a single message will be exchanged between the platforms in the whole 2026

So for your anti ads laws, they will argue "this is not advertising, is simply suggesting a feature or product..."

[–] Adalast@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yes please. Or at the very minimum let us ban sections of advertising. My wife and I hate horror movies, but when we watch YouTube we are bombarded with horror ads. We have a young child that we are working hard to not expose to certain imagery. Let us ban fucking horror movie ads.

[–] Wispy2891@lemmy.world 2 points 22 hours ago

That is also on Google side. I also got an ad for a horror movie during a numberblocks video. It should not be hard to have a check "if the video is designed for kids, then ads can't be violent, graphic, deceiving or predatory"

[–] Tigeroovy@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 day ago

I dunno but it would be hard to advertise it.

[–] Ryoae@piefed.social 3 points 1 day ago

You would have to commit political suicide to even get a bill on the docket to limit the amount of commercial pollution. It is just one of those things that's so knee-deep, it would take tireless efforts to overcome.

[–] steeznson@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

I work at a big company that advertises often at big events. We have internal discussions about making the ads less obnoxious.

[–] hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world 56 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I see the following issue:

What is an ad? Is it an ad spot in the middle of a TV show? A big billboard? A banner on a website? Someone talking about a brand? Just writing or saying a brand name? Subtle algorithmic nudging?

You gotta put a line in the sand, and depending on where you put it, it'll be harder to influence anyone or harder to address brands or products. There's always a trade off.

And then additionally we gotta address any behavioural adaptions of big companies. Imagine if companies started striking illegal deals with social media companies for favourable algorithms? How do you control that? And on the other hand, imagine you were talking about a product and suddenly people accuse you of illegal advertising? How do you make sure people don't skirt the line and also no one is wrongly convicted?

I'm not saying this is a dumb idea, I actually agree cracking down on forceful or manipulative advertising is an interesting idea, I just think that these broad stroke ideas an insane amount of continuous planning, validation and readdressing.

[–] alonsohmtz@feddit.uk 20 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Great points, and it's important we address this from a realistic perspective.

I don't have all the answers, but I would start with the low-hanging fruit to avoid penalizing innocent people. Pretty much everything we can all agree on is an ad would be prohibited, you could think of it as "systemic advertising." (ads in the middle of videos, billboards, banners). Would somebody wearing a branded shirt be considered advertising? Probably not. Would somebody standing on the side of the road twirling a sign for a business be advertising? Absolutely.

I don't think there's a "perfect" solution and some viral marketing is bound to get through. As with any crime, stopping it would depend on the resources available to the community.

I would consider a place where systemic advertising is illegal and penalties are enforced to be a success.

[–] MagicShel@lemmy.zip 19 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I think rather than address all advertising, it would be best and easiest to create a more specific "obnoxious advertising" category and put things in it as needed. Honestly I don't really care if someone twirls a sign, but if that becomes the go to and there are twirlers on every block then I'd get sick of them really fast.

But you also have to allow for things folks might genuinely want to know. If a local restaurant has a grand opening and you don't let them tell people, they at might have trouble getting foot traffic after they open. If I start up a competitor to a trash service, ads are likely the only way people are going to know my service is 15% cheaper.

I don't like advertising, but I do acknowledge a certain amount is probably necessary.

This is how you do it. You create clear and direct laws that specify what isn't okay. New Hampshire banned all billboards. I believe Vietnam recently banned all ads longer than 15 seconds online. These make it absolutely clear what is and isn't okay, and leave no wiggle room for companies to try to circumvent the laws on technicalities.

[–] IronBird@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

the post office has the cheapest targeted door-to-door advos you can get (which big corps/politicians abuse to absolutely spam the shit...which means people throw the shit away immediately. ironically the post office should charge more, or have some kind of local discount thing idk...)

[–] MrQuallzin@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

everything we agree on is an ad would be prohibited

And that's part of the issue; this assumes that we've somehow come to a consensus on what 'ads' are, or which are 'bad'. I can get behind getting rid of obtrusive ads, such as pop-ups and video interruptions, but I also actually like billboard advertisements (As long as they are in locations that respect what's around them, are legible from a distance (not wordy, I'm trying to drive!), and don't have eye-searing lights). When I travel, billboards often bring us to some interesting locations we may not have thought of before.

Personally, I'd look at making policies restricting "obtrusive advertising". I don't mind the advertising, I mind the delivery.

[–] Sunsofold@lemmings.world 6 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Already had this discussion with people a dozen times.

Ban:

An individual or group providing money and/or goods and/or services to another individual or group to encourage or contract them to display, broadcast, or otherwise disseminate a piece of media or information to a third individual or group, in particular and/or in general, which the receiver/listener/viewer(s) has/have not specifically requested to receive.

Accepting, as an individual or as part of a group, money and/or goods and/or services by another individual or group to be encouraged or contracted to display, broadcast, or otherwise disseminate a piece of media or information to a third individual or group, in particular and/or in general, which the receiver/listener/viewer(s) has/have not specifically requested to receive.

Tying request of one piece of media to a noticeably disconnected/unrelated piece of media.

The ban on providing shall apply only to individuals or groups that have a gross revenue of greater than ~25x the annualized median wage for the smallest political jurisdiction which fully contains the territories they conduct business in. (For context, this would be ~$1,000,000 for a business in the US that conducts business across state lines)

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A simple line is if the ad was paid for. So sign twirlers... paid for. Person walking down the street in a brand shirt they paid for is not an ad. Talking about a product... did you get paid, ad. And of course free or discounted services and such equals getting paid. No more free X if you review a place on yelp. And don't worry about a new garbage service. People will talk even without getti g paid. And I think a carve out for an ad service that people can choose to view as needed. I don't have ads in my tv viewing. So I intentionally surf trailers once in a while. Much better experience.

[–] ptychodus@lemmy.world 17 points 2 days ago

From near Nashville Tennessee through North Alabama and Mississippi to the Louisiana border there exists a 444-mile roadway called the Natchez Trace Parkway. The only signage you will see is related to non-commercial scenic viewpoints. No billboards. No businesses. Nothing but forests and fresh air. Furthermore, no commercial traffic is allowed whatsoever on the full length of the byway, and the authorities strictly enforce that rule.

It's glorious. Waterfalls, walking and biking trails, Indian mounds, and miles and miles of advertising-free roadway.

https://www.natcheztracetravel.com/

[–] MimicJar@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Within the US, the states of Maine, Vermont, Alaska & Hawaii all have a ban billboards. The general logic behind it is, "They ugly, nature pretty." So as long as you live somewhere where "nature pretty" fits, you can probably argue based on that logic.

However no matter how far you stretch that argument, it probably only goes as far as public goods. Once we get into private business I don't think you'll have much luck.

As you walk into your nearest grocery store the outside might be covered in ads. Buy Pepsi. Buy Coke. Half off generic cola!

You pop into your local diner and the placemats have advertisements for a dozen local mechanics.

[–] exaybachae@startrek.website 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

There's at least one town in Florida too, but I won't name it, it's a closely kept secret.

[–] jdr@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Is it Boca Raton?

[–] WoodScientist@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Private businesses have regulations on their ads all the time. Cities across the country regulate how large shop ads can be.

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[–] chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 day ago

There's also a commercial logic and interest to that, maintaining the brand of the state as a tourist destination, where unmarred natural beauty is seen as an economic commons, and the lack of billboards being something that people may be indirectly willing to pay for. Pictures of the state that do not feature billboards are themselves advertisements for its local businesses.

You have people who find ads annoying in themselves and would have a positive attitude towards some ban or another, but these people aren't especially organized or informed about it. It's only actually getting done when this aligns with economic actors who stand to benefit, and probably inevitable that whatever shape an advertising ban takes will have been crafted with the advancement of some particular business interest in mind.

[–] NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

How would this work? Got a sign outside your store: that's an ad. Want to put thing up for sale, how do you let people know about it?

I guess what you need is a town that bans selling services and things, because that's the only way to not have ads.

Or have a place in town that has a directory where that space is the only space for ads.

[–] Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 1 points 22 hours ago

Just ban paying for advertising would probably do enough

[–] Lexam@lemmy.world 22 points 2 days ago

Step 1. Create a great marketing campaign to sell your idea!

[–] butbut@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Butbut, how would I know what to want?

[–] Iconoclast@feddit.uk 17 points 2 days ago (5 children)

I'm running a one person handyman business that would die instantly if I wasn't allowed to advertise. Nobody would even know I exist.

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[–] otter@lemmy.ca 17 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Some places already ban physical ads. There are better sources than these but this is what I found so far:

Digital ads would be harder to get rid of. At the individual level, it's relatively easy to disable an adblocker if something breaks. That's harder to do if you block it city wide.

A PSA campaign might work better to get people to turn on adblockers

[–] GraniteM@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Billboards are illegal in the state of Vermont.

[–] Nomecks@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 days ago

Bermuda bans all physical advertising as well.

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[–] Fermion@mander.xyz 9 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I've thought about this quite a bit and really consider advertising to be a form of assault on attention. The presumption that companies are entitled to our attention without our consent feels like an attack on our own agency.

Before we get to banning advertising though we first need to figure out how to connect people to businesses that have goods and services they actually want to seek out. Word of mouth is great, but it's insufficient. We need some sort of directory. The yellow pages were surprisingly functional, but some modern accessibility and ability to update info is needed. I think the 10,000 pound gorilla in this space is Google maps. However, alphabet is fundamentally an advertising company at this point and prioritizes selling ad placement over user experience. Could organic maps eventually serve as a searchable business directory? I'm not sure. I think any open source initiative would quickly be ruined if companies thought that rigging that system woild get them more customers.

Is a public option viable? I'm not sure. There's a lot of equal access and gatekeeping concerns there. We shouldn't allow obvious scams to be listed, but what's the threshold and who makes that determination? Is someone's Mary Kay mlm a legitimate business or scam? The potential for corruption is very high in an endeavor like this. Imagine if someone is buddies with an administrator and can get their competition completely delisted. Such an endeavor would likely face lots of litigation over claims of unfair treatment.

Many companies I think would be eager to stop paying for advertising if they had a means of connecting to customers that was effective and lower cost, but to achieve this, you're literally trying to compete with the entirety of google/alphabet.

[–] Sunsofold@lemmings.world 3 points 2 days ago

Before we get to banning advertising though we first need to figure out how to connect people to businesses that have goods and services they actually want to seek out

No.

Advertising is malign. We don't stop to consider how the poor cotton farmer will harvest his cotton before abolishing slavery. We don't stop to consider how the lead mine owner will make a profit before we swap to unleaded fuel. We don't stop to consider how the poor government officials will afford their expensive lifestyle before we ban bribes. We prevent the harm. If anyone is benefitting from harming people, losing out on that benefit is the most lenient punishment they should ever hope for.

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[–] Libb@piefed.social 13 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

God knows I'm hostile to the marketing shit filled world we live in, but ads are... there would not even be a society without the ability to advertise, aka to share information (be it paid for or not) with other people.

The issue, my issue, is with marketing.

Any insight into this besides useful idiots saying advertising is good or necessary would be greatly appreciated!

A single one? That may be too little to be helpful but here it is: insulting people is probably not the best way to attract them to your cause.

edit: typos/ missing word

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[–] surewhynotlem@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Assuming you're in America, it's impossible to outright ban ads.

You can make whatever laws you want, but those laws can't supersede the Constitution. And the Constitution says that companies and people have the right to free speech. And that the government, I.e the laws you just created, can't infringe on that (with some reasonable exceptions).

At best you can make certain advertising types illegal. I lived in a wonderful town that banned roadway signs, for example. You could ban billboards over a certain height. You could regulate the color palette used for signs on shops. You could say no signs posted on roadside easements.

So progress could be made, but not an outright ban.

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[–] xylogx@lemmy.world 7 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Banning ads seems like overkill. Going after deceptive practices aggressively and having strict regulation makes more sense IMHO.

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[–] Quilotoa@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 days ago (5 children)

Websites, newspapers, t.v., blogs, etc. pay their workers and expenses through ads. Are you suggesting all these become pay per use?

[–] CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social 4 points 2 days ago

I mean, while that sounds like it makes things more expensive, I'm not entirely sure that it does, given that:

It doesn't really make sense to run ads unless the average person watching the ad will ultimately buy enough that they wouldn't otherwise from the company the ad is for that the extra profit exceeds the ad cost, thus still making watching ads have a cost that just isnt visible

Or, ads might be run to simply get people to switch what product in a category they buy without increasing the amount, in which case, they become a required cost to stay competitive, and because suppliers must now all pay that extra cost, the cost to buy products in that category must be increased, again making the ads cost the viewer in a non-visible way

Or, we could be seeing things like political ads that dont ask one to buy things, just support a politician or policy. However even here, the policies most likely to get ad spending are those most beneficial to people that already have money (since they're the ones that can most easily afford to run ads) and in general, benefiting those people means giving them a bigger share of the economies wealth, which means the average person has a smaller share when the ads are effective, again costing the viewer in an roundabout way.

If people are going to end up paying for the use of these things in some way anyway, doing it directly seems more honest to me.

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[–] fonix232@fedia.io 5 points 2 days ago

Making all advertising illegal would quickly collapse society.

Why? Because for any given service, how would you even know it's available at all, let alone the people providing it?

Our entire society as of now, and for the past few thousand years, has been so complex that people need to specialise and rely on each other for a lot of things. You rely on farmers, millers, bakers, butchers, etc. to provide your daily food. You rely on bus drivers, taxicabs, etc., for your transportation. On plumbers, sparkies, et cetera all for your home maintenance needs. Not to mention companies manufacturing and selling even more complex products you buy.

Without advertisement, how would you know what restaurants are nearby? Or who can repair your broken sink? Who can come out and repair that in-wall conduit? who you can hire to build your new house? where you can go to get entertained? are we banning adverts for the local theatre's new plays? are we banning the local handyman from letting people know he provides said service?

I agree that today's overkill advertisements are an issue, exacerbated by late stage capitalism that simultaneously wants to siphon your income both before and after you receive it, that having advertisements shoved down one's throat should stop... But do you really think that banning ALL advertising is the way to go?

Unless you're proposing the absolutely moronic libertarian stance of everyone relying upon themselves only for survival and continued existence, you can't just ban all advertisements.

What would work is an incredibly heavy handed set of regulations that ensure the big players play fair, that ads aren't using various psychological tricks to make you buy new shit you don't need, that ads aren't malicious and overwhelming, and so on. But even that is a scope of discussion that needs to take place over years, with a multitude of experts involved, not just one person willy nilly going "ads are bad mmmmkay so they're now banned".

[–] ns1@feddit.uk 3 points 2 days ago

I find this idea very interesting even if it might seem kind of wacky and unrealistic in our current world.

I can see it being possible to make a somewhat-convincing "moral" case for banning advertising. The argument would go that advertising is manipulating the consumer, preventing them from making an unbiased decision. It provides an unfair advantage over the competition, since a company that spends on advertising can get more sales without improving their product or lowering prices. And it creates an environment where the competition has to respond with advertising of their own, with the end result being large advertising budgets when those resources could be used to improve the company's products or services. The case would be much weaker when it comes to small businesses, charity fundraising, political adverts and government campaigns. To be clear this is a thought experiment, no criticism of anyone involved in advertising in real life.

You can make a distinction between paid and unpaid advertising, for example a community noticeboard or directory where businesses can post for free is more acceptable because they're not gaining any unfair visibility over competitors, and consumers would only go there when they're looking for something. Like a few other people have said it would be essential to propose alternative ways that consumers can discover new products. Sadly there are probably people whose only source of information is advertising and you need to somehow give them a way to stay informed.

More realistically, limitations on advertising are either going to take the form of making specific places ad-free like you mention, or restricting advertising of certain products, kind of like how many places already ban adverts for things like gambling, tobacco, alcohol or adverts targeting children. I could easily see this being extended to anything remotely controversial, like social media or fast food.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I think a ban on displaying ads in public spaces, especially big billboards, would be a really good start. A ban on online ads would be more difficult, because AFAIK ad targeting isn't actually that good; you'd think that would be their bread and butter, what all the data collection is actually about, but at least a couple of years ago it was actually really difficult to buy online ads that only get shown to people in one city (e.g. if you're a political party and want to advertise in a local election). Seems like the ad syndicalists just do whatever and then lie about it. If true, they'd need to overhaul their tech to adhere to a local-level ad ban.

Some media is also primarily paid by ads, like radio and local newspapers. Might need to subsidize those, and IDK how you'd even deal with radio and newspaper from outside of the local area - radio especially is built on the idea that access is unrestricted, and one radio antenna can service an area the size of a small country.

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