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by MrGilbert 2297 days ago
I'm not an expert in ad affairs. With this information on the table, consider the following:

I subscribe to a "price alert" for a product in my sellers app. The price gets triggered, and because there's a lot of demand for this item, I have to be fast.

This, for me, would justify the "push notification".

But, would this also be considered an "ad"? From the definition of the word "advertisement"[1], which says it's "a notice, picture or film telling people about a product, job or service", it would qualify as an ad.

[1]: https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/englis...

2 comments

If there is no way to harass people with notifications for "price alerts", there will also be no incentive to create artificial pricing systems with sudden "promotions", meant to hijack users' attention and cognitive sovereignty.

Don't fall for the tricks. Think about the systems your are engaging with all the way to the end, and consider if you are being manipulated. This is an environment where it pays to be paranoid, because big companies are devoting a huge amount of resources to trick you.

I would say, treat this stuff as one should treat nutrition. Simple is better for your health. If you don't understand how something is made, or what its purpose is, you should probably avoid it.

artificial pricing systems existed before notifications
Sure, and cancer existed before cigarettes. Doesn't mean one should smoke cigarettes.
That’s not an ad, it’s the core functionality of a product you use.