Computers, Privacy & the Constitution
-- RobertW - 28 Apr 2008

The Worn-Out Unwelcomeness of Advertisement - 989 Words

Many believe advertisement bombardment in media will grow to a point at which ad-evading measures taken by audiences will end advertising altogether. The truth, however, is that as long as product manufacturers are willing to invest money to present their products to new eyes, advertising in media will remain. (FN1). What will change is the significance of the actual ad to all parties involved -- manufacturer, content provider, and listener. Product manufacturers of yore concentrated on producing a good product, hoping for endorsement by a content provider that would attract many eyes. The product manufacturer is gaining power, however, as his advertising dollars are valued by any content provider that can get them. Content providers are increasingly dependent upon advertising revenue to produce and capture eyes. For the consumer, the role of the ad has changed from a device to inform the consumer of new/useful/ products to consider, to an annoyance in media experience, and, finally, to the status quo. These trends will continue to solidify the place of advertising in our media.

The video game industry is an interesting and fairly novel market with a growing dependency on/utilization of ad- and product placement. In any media source, there is a certain annoyance bar that advertisements must surpass before the people stop coming. The bar is especially high in the gaming realm where there is a split in the audience as to whether ads are welcome or simply interruptive. Many welcome advertisements in genres such as sports and racing games, in which an ad-filled environment in the video game (however unfortunately) mirrors that of the real life environment being mimicked. Others are wary that advertisements will grow to interrupt gameplay. Players don't want to have to wait for Lara Croft to finish her Coke before continuing the next mission in Tomb Raider; however, some will love the presence of commercials in their Superbowl game in John Madden Football. The latter exemplifies how advertisers have created a society that provides a positive feedback mechanism for games.

As in other media, the end result will ultimately depend on how the audience -- gamers -- react, and subsequently how advertisers and content providers re-react. Gamers may react as have internet users, developing softwares or similar mechanisms to block unwanted ads. The video game, however, is more of a 'black box' to current users than are the computer and the internet, making such measures more difficult. Further, companies such as Microsoft are depending upon the failure of any end-user efforts to evade ads in their games. In May, 2006, Microsoft purchased Massive, Inc. -- a 60-employee video game advertising company with $7 million in per annum -- for an estimated $200 million. (FN2). Microsoft has gotten in on the ground floor of video game advertising, realizing that product manufacturer ad money is a resource that will never tap out.

Microsoft need not worry about user threats to this investment. Advertisement bombardment is becoming the status quo. Users will increasingly become inured to such bombardment in any media or other input that they receive. Microsoft's investment likewise indicates that a drop in video game prices is nowhere in site. The status quo includes a lower (if any) user expectation of receiving any benefit as a result of being subjected to ads -- even lower for those who like ads for realism. The NetZero? /RoadRunner business model, as applied broadly, has instead changed the general expectation from "pay less for an ad-filled media" to "pay more to get these ads out of my face." (FN3). Advertisement has become, and will remain, the default, with decreasing audience expectation of resultant benefit. The 2008 version of the Madden game was the first in which EA Sports allowed updateable advertisements, yet the game outpriced and outsold its' predecessors, with users broadly agreeing that the ads were about the only thing updated since the last version. As with any business, the name of the game is the bottom line; why drop the price? (FN4)

Video game media providers also have the advantage of being the "only game in town." Players of popular titles such as Halo will not stop playing simply because the vehicles don Pontiac branding, or because loading times are extended to fit GM commercials, especially not where their life outside of the game is already a constant bombardment of ads. (FN5). Advertisers and game manufacturers will thus have increasingly unchecked power to throw ads at gamers. As gamers have no way out, advertisers will do this to the extent that the game is still playable; and even though "still playable" will probably still include more ads than players desire, they will still continue to come and play. A potential consequence of this is a market flood of ad friendly games: in other words, more football and reality games in which users welcome advertisements, and a decrease in the number of games in which advertisements would be solely interruptive or obvious impediments/annoyances to gameplay. The unfortunate result would be the advertisers' directing the content (especially unfortunate and simply weird in gaming).

The conclusion of this ordeal will ultimately depend on which side takes the reigns in affecting change. The listeners may stand up in various ways -- developing technological and other means to dodge advertisements until they are no longer cost effective for the advertiser. To the contrary, content providers, dependent upon advertiser income, may do just as they have done in other media -- find new ways to get around audience efforts, in order to keep the audience's eyes on the cash-producing prize. The conclusion will most likely be this constant race. The end of it is audience against content provider and advertiser. Society's demand for new content will never decrease, as won't content-providers' desire to line their pockets with the perpetual surplusage of advertising dollars. With the solidifying role of advertisement as status quo, and continuing splits in opinion on its value to our media, the coexistence of content provider and audience will therefore be that race.

FN1: This is not to say that advertising is needed to have any content at all, but instead, to make the point that there will never e a shortage of content to put these advertising dollars to use.

FN2: See also AdverGame? at www.advergame.com; and Unicast at www.unicast.com

FN3: The Earthlink/PeoplePC/NetZero Model: a business (1) offers content for free; (2) recruits advertising revenue based on the eyes it has captured; (3) offers users the same service, without the ads that the service now has, for a price.

FN4: EA Representative Shelby Cox: “EA is committed to providing both great entertainment experiences for gamers and effective advertising solutions for brands and marketers. Massive has proven its ability to deliver relevant ads in a seamless, nondisruptive way that enhances the realism of the game environment.” at http://arstechnica.com/journals/thumbs.ars/2007/07/25/ea-and-microsoft-launch-dynamic-in-game-advertising-system. Committed to providing advertising solutions for brands and marketers, NOT to giving the gamer a break.

FN5: A player of EA Sports’ Fight Night boxing game: “Terrific game. Worth buying, not just renting. 5 stars for the game, 1 off for taking advantage of me as a fan and customer. I should really ding it harder for that, but the game is too fun to let something sort of sleazy take away from it.” Another player: “I would almost pay extra money for some sort of a cheat code / hack to replace all of those ads with blank space. Maybe they'll let me download that from XBox Live in the near future.” From reviews at http://www.amazon.com/Electronic-Arts-15173-Fight-Night/dp/B000CRSBLQ.

Other - http://www.gamespot.com/news/6148363.html : In-game advertising is clearly poised to grow in the coming years, but there's debate over just how rapid that growth will be. Earlier this month, Massive's own CEO pegged the market at $1.8 billion by the end of the decade, while the managing director of The Wall Street Transcript showed even more enthusiasm in January by projecting the market to reach $4 billion by the end of 2008. - EA claims that Madden took 20 Million to produce, yet fans everywhere agree that it is the same game as last year with an updated roster.

  • Don't you think it's silly to put footnotes in a web document? Please just link the sources from the text. Can you imagine footnotes on a newspaper Op-Ed page?

  • I don't understand the logic of this paper, possibly because I don't play computer games, and wouldn't buy ones implemented in proprietary software that only runs on proprietary operating systems even if I did. But the point about software freedom, as I keep pointing out, is that it makes all user-entrapment social strategies either obsolete or doomed. Software-delivered advertising is simply one of those strategies. Already those of us who want nothing to do with advertising on the web use AdBlock for Firefox, or a privacy-enhancement adblocking proxy like Privoxy, and except for people trapped by ignorance into using Internet Explorer or Safari (which of course provide no relief from advertising), web advertisements of all sorts, including not just popups but banners, inserted graphics, and even sponsored links on search pages are things unseen. Similarly, the power of games manufacturers to sell in-game advertising is no benefit to the user, and as free games replace proprietary games, advertising in this market too will go extinct. The ownership of culture includes, of course, the ownership exercised by advertisers, and it--like all other forms of cultural ownership--will have been outcompeted by free within one generation. So are you writing to say that free software isn't going to win? On what basis?

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r10 - 14 Jan 2015 - 22:44:50 - IanSullivan
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