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by alkonaut 1050 days ago
I think the logic of people not wanting their data/actions used for ad targeting being "free riders" is a step too far. Just target ads based on data I'm willing to be targeted on. Ask for it explicitly and I'll give the data (location, interests, whatever). But don't use the fact that I looked too long at a clip of a guitar on instagram to show me a targeted ad for a guitar in my facebook feed.
1 comments

I didn't say that people who don't want to use their data for ad targeting are free riders, but they do become so when Meta is compelled to provide them services even if it is at a loss. It is literally definitionally free ridership.
Meta is free to charge for the services they provide. The EU isn't mandating that they provide services at no cost to the user. It's Meta's choice to finance those services with ad money.
“The prevalent regulatory approach in Europe is that currently advocated by the European Data Protection Board ('EDPB') in its Guidelines 05/2020 on Consent under Regulation 2016/679 whereby the EDPB provides in no uncertain terms that '[i]n order for consent to be freely given, access to services and functionalities must not be made conditional on the consent of a user to the storing of information, or gaining of access to information (paragraph 39 of the Guidelines)'." [0]

There was a recent decision in France suggesting otherwise, but this is not the opinion of the primary EU regulatory guidance nor has it been seriously tested. Either way, it will become fully illegal to refuse under the DMA.

[0]: https://www.dataguidance.com/opinion/france-cnil-opens-door-....

What I mean is that I find the idea of giving users the impression that they are giving ip data for something else (For social network use) but using that data for ad targeting is wrong. And I agree with the GDPR (non-french interpretation) that services should not be conditioned on that use of their data. And I STILL don't think it's free ridership. They can show ads all they want. But they can't target them using data they didn't agree to. What it all comes down to is I don't think people should be ALLOWED to make the transaction of service-for-targeting, at all.
I agree with your first statement, but your second statement means that you think FB should be compelled to serve free riders. If you are being compelled to serve users that are unprofitable, a clear implication of the GDPR, then you are compelling free ridership. The difference between targeting and not is the different between net profit or not for many users.
I think the end game is that if ads are generally NOT targeted based on a huge volume of information, then the pay for ads with less targeting will go up. During a transition those who show pinpoint targeted ads while others don't will make more money. But eventually if the whole 2000-2025 era of ad targeting is confined to the historybooks, then we could have a better internet. And the amount of ad spend in total will be unchanged (perhaps some of money will return to print/tv etc. since internet ads will be relatively less effective). But the bottom line is I think it SHOULD be profitable to show ads with less targeting, not that it WILL be. And I think regulators have the power to ensure that this is the future.

> The difference between targeting and not is the different between net profit or not for many users

I don't think it's a bad idea to have regulation that makes entire regions of an industry unprofitable over night, if that's what it takes.

> And the amount of ad spend in total will be unchanged

Citation very very much needed as that is not at all what standard economic theory would predict.

As I said, there are lots of niche small businesses that literally could not survive without targeted advertising so that demand goes away as soon as these bans go into effect.

> I don't think it's a bad idea to have regulation that makes entire regions of an industry unprofitable over night, if that's what it takes.

Yes but I think if the choice were actually presented as “pay for FB or repeal this regulation” and the EU had a referenda on it, the regulation would be banned. The only way this is getting through is because the public is being convinced that they can have their cake and eat it too. They might be right, but only because they are being subsidized by users in the rest of the world.

> Citation very very much needed as that is not at all what standard economic theory would predict.

That was assuming that the total ad spend is constant as a fraction of revenue and that revenue would be unchanged. If less effective ads overall would lead to lower revenues then the ad spends would shrink. But they would shrink equally for everyone, at least.

> there are lots of niche small businesses that literally could not survive without targeted advertising

There is nothing banning targeting. The problem is using info that users don't know/think is used for targeting, and using it for targeting. I'd be happy to take a 200 question survey as a condition for using facebook, where they ask me about my hobbies and whereabouts and clearly say it's for ad targeting. Obviously I could say "I'd rather not tell" instead of "I like guitars", but in such a scenario I'd happily give up my targeting info. But I don't want to be shown a guitar ad because I looked at one on an unrelated site with a facebook tracking pixel on it. It's absolutely dystopian.

> public is being convinced that they can have their cake and eat it too.

Yes I'm sure many think that. But I think the only way of changing the status quo is through heavy handed regulation and making initially impopular decisions and risking the death of a lot of business in the process.

> If you are being compelled to serve users that are unprofitable, a clear implication of the GDPR, then you are compelling free ridership.

Facebook are the ones who've structured their business like this though — they could profitable with a subscription model instead, they've just chosen to make their product free at the point of use.

Exactly. There is no one proposing anyone provide anything for nothing. It's only one particular transaction that is disallowed. You can show dumb ads, use subscriptions and also freely target based on info that people are aware is used for targeting. That's by no means "free" in any of those scenarios.
That's the actual idea if the GDPR.

A service provider must provide its offerings regardless of the user accepting to be tracked or not. The provider is not even allowed to make it cumbersome to opt out.

If Meta doesn't like it they're free to either be fined into oblivion or, alternatively, to just fuck off from the European market.

The law in question is quite unambiguous.