Also, a depression test? Some people certainly would benefit from know that a) no showing these symptoms is neither normal nor healthy, and b) there can be something done against this.
Comment on Inappropriate Ads on Child-Directed Websites: Weight Loss Pills and Depression Tests for Kids.
Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 days ago
Adding an “are you gay?” quiz to the list of inappropriate ads shown to children immediately makes me question the researcher biases and methodology. Unless those have gotten WAY spicier since I was a kid, I remember passing so many quizzes like that around with my friends at that age.
How many ads related to heterosexuality were classified as appropriate? How does that compare to their classification of LGBT ads?
einkorn@feddit.org 3 days ago
WhatsTheHoldup@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
This thread seems scarily naive for people who are technically knowledgeable enough to be on lemmy.
depression test? Some people certainly would benefit from knowing that a) no, showing these symptoms is neither normal nor healthy, and b) there can be something done against this.
Yes, someone depressed absolutely could benefit from a psychologically administered depression test.
Do you know what they absolutely would not benefit from? A targetted ad directed at them because analytics flagged them as vulnerable which under the guise of the “depression test” gets them to enter a bunch of personal information which they sell to a bunch of spam companies so said depressed person is now getting woken up at 3 am to 30 spam calls.
And now better help is being spammed to you all over YouTube and ads and instead of going to a reputable therapist you get yourself scammed and don’t actually get the real therapist who can help.
Do you genuinely think reliable medical tests are being targeted at you through ads?
einkorn@feddit.org 3 days ago
Do you genuinely think reliable medical tests are being targeted at you through ads?
Nope, but that is an entirely different problem. Major platforms have to be legislated to tightly control which ads they run. The amount of misinformation spread through ads is enormous.
WhatsTheHoldup@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
Nope, but that is an entirely different problem.
Is it? In your last comment you had said?
Also, a depression test? Some people certainly would benefit from knowing that a) no, showing these symptoms is neither normal nor healthy, and b) there can be something done against this.
If you acknowledge that the “depression tests” which show up in targetted ads are not reliable, then I think we both realize a) and b) are not the goals of these tests. Making money is.
So people actually wouldn’t benefit from seeing this, it might actually harm them by giving a bad impression and push them away from legitimate mental health professionals.
acosmichippo@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Major platforms have to be legislated to tightly control which ads they run.
or maybe which age groups are allowed to see them?
Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 days ago
Absolutely true! If the quiz contents were inappropriate in some way beyond like… acknowledging LGBT people and depression exists, I would like to hear about that part.
WhatsTheHoldup@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
Now I’m questioning your biases.
There’s nothing wrong or inappropriate with discussing sexuality/homosexuality with your kids but it absolutely is inappropriate for advertisers to try to target children’s insecurities with “are you gay?” tests.
And these are not actual “tests”. They’re malware. You click on the “test” and a million porn pop ups will open and it starts asking for your email and phone number.
Kids should not be exposed to these. Hell, adults shouldn’t even be.
I don’t think spam pop ups need you defending its right to scam children.
All of them I’d hope. Those gross underwear ads, porn ads, etc. Kids should not be exposed to sexual advertisements over the internet.
It seems like you’re trying to pull a narrative out of thin air to imply the researchers are homophobic?
madjo@feddit.nl 3 days ago
In the current political climate, where even just telling kids that trans and/or gay people exist seems to be seen as bad, that’s not too weird to have questions about.
WhatsTheHoldup@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
I fully agree.
I think that the way in which we ask those questions is also very important.
They make a good case these tests are exploiting the political climate and illegally targeting minors to make themselves money.
I believe we do this conversation a disservice if we prejudge researchers and jump to conclusions too early when they point out this relationship might be inappropriate.
Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 days ago
You’re classifying all of these as malicious by virtue of being ads, which the researchers obviously didn’t. Take that up with them.
Knowing that queer people exist and that you could be queer isn’t “sexual advertisement,” by the way. Which is why I wanted to know more about how the researchers came to the conclusion that these particular ads were inappropriate.
WhatsTheHoldup@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
I think you misunderstood the researchers. Quoting the article:
It appears as though the researchers in the article are the ones painting all targeted ads as inherently malicious, involving psychological manipulation.
Which is 73% of them.
As children are especially vulnerable to manipulation, there seems to be a correct moral stance and it’s not “advertisers should be free to psychologically manipulate children”.
It comes across like you feel we can’t protect gay/minority children from being exploited by huge corporations online because it would be homophobic to protect gay kids from psychological manipulation.
The researchers didn’t classify anything as inappropriate based on pop up ads. That was me explaining to you how they work.
The ad pages have links on them to other ad pages so it’s all one big beast and in action clicking on a gay test could lead to an overtly sexual one or vice versa. Sometimes they both open at the same time in different tabs.
The article explains the researchers downloaded the ads offline and so didn’t interact with them through normal means.
So it’s a combo of pop ups and banner ads.
Yeah… obviously I agree that a PSA on gay rights and an “are you gay?” test are not the same thing.
Letting the wider public know queer people exist, and then using psychological manipulation to (illegally remember) target gay children and try to exploit their vulnerabilities are two hugely different things.
The PSA is protecting gay kids, the spam test is attacking them.
What is your point?
Fair question, I’d like to know also. But while raising the question you assumed ill intent and were questioning their biases.
All it says is that it’s considered inappropriate.
Ads for engagement rings being listed along the “are you gay?” tests shows me that both heterosexuality and homosexuality are being treated more or less equally here. Engagement rings aren’t particularly inappropriate except that they’re used for marriage.
Psychologically manipulating children using the most vulnerable groups as clickbait to try to get them to enter personal information is wrong and children haven’t developed their brains enough to protect them.
These aren’t tests made by queer people to promote innocuous queer products. These are tests made by soulless capitalists trying to exploit insecurity to make them money.
Why should these companies have a right to exploit the insecurities of young kids?
It’s not homophobic to prevent minorities from being manipulated.
Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 days ago
This is some weird ass fanfic you are writing about me for asking how the researchers came to their conclusions about LGBT ads, specifically, being judged to be inappropriate.