MESSAGE
DATE | 2004-11-29 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] Some good political action advise
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Read the end of this posting from slashdot on how to protest right. It's pretty good.
BTW - the subject of this protest is LinuxToday.com , who really do suck.
Ruben ------------------
The advertiser's intent is actually not foiled at all.
Why not?
Well, let's first start with what a boycott is supposed to achieve. The intent of a boycott is to make a manufacturer, publisher, or other organization changes its practices by hurting it financially if it doesn't. If you remember the boycott against Nestle over baby formula advertising, you'll recall that people were upset that their advertising strongly implied (if not outright stated) that formula was better than breast milk for babies. Nestle was hardly alone in that, but as probably the biggest player in the market, they became the lightning rod for the criticism.
The trouble with that implying that formula is better, besides the fact that it's simply untrue, is that baby formula needs to be mixed with water. However, in many of the developing countries where they were aggressively marketing formula, both sources of adequately clean water and knowledge of basic practices like boiling the water to make it clean and then using it immediately, refrigerating mixed formula and how long it can be kept, etc., were very scarce. However, the advertising campaigns showing pictures of fat, healthy, smiling babies (in countries where skinny, undernourished babies with inadequate medical care were common) was highly effective. A lot of formula was being needlessly sold to poorly informed parents. The sale of formula is not in itself wrong, of course, nor is formula. Some mothers do not have their milk come on and could not feed their babies without formula. Others don't have enough milk, especially if they have twins or triplets. In those cases, formula is literally a life-saver.
However, because of the scarcity of proper information as to how to properly prepare and store formula, and of its relative value Vs. breast milk causing it to be bought needlessly, many babies were becoming sick, and quite a few dying, as a result of being fed on formula instead of breast milk. Not to mention, of course, that formula is expensive and many poor people were being led to buy it unnecessarily. I used to live in SE Asia and both my kids were born there. Imported, western-brand formula was about 1/3 the price it is here in the U.S., but the average national income where I was living is about $100/month. It was more in the large cities, of course, but that gives you some idea of the relative cost of baby formula.
Now, if you look at a can of baby formula in poor countires, it has instructions on how to prepare formula and boil water written in the local language, and it also states clearly on the can that breast milk is best for your baby.
The boycott worked because a lot of people refused to buy any Nestle product. This hurt Nestle financially and they modified their practices to satisfy their critics and the boycott was called off.
Now, let's relate this to your use of privoxy.
You never see the ad. /. gets the money. Why do they get the money? B/c no one knows you never see the ad (unless they are paid on click-through, in which case they wouldn't get paid anyway unless you clicked the ad). That's problem one.
Problem two is that the ads aren't aimed at you. You are convinced. The ads are aimed at people who are on the fence or who are currently using Windows but are curious about alternatives such as Linux. You can rest assured that most of them are not using an ad blocker. So, they see the add, some may click through, and some of those will buy into the FUD and the advertiser's intent is achieved: a potential defector from Windows to Linux was stopped.
Now, the founder of Linux Today doesn't seem to get how to boycott, either. If you want to effectively boycott a publication (either Internet-based or paper-based, it doesn't matter), you need to do these things:
1) Write to them and tell them you are boycotting their publication and all of its advertisers, and tell them why;
2) Contact each of those advertisers and tell them the same thing, making sure they understand that you will not buy any of your products until they stop advertising in that publication until that publication fixes the reason for the boycott;
3) Really don't buy any of their stuff. If there is a boycott on, they will track sales and decide if it's hurting them or not. If it's not, they will ignore the boycott and do whatever they want to do. No company cares about negative public opinion if it believes it's not being harmed by it and can act with impunity. Look at Microsoft;
4) Tell other people. OK, this isn't totally mandatory, but if you're boycotting something, you want as many people as possible involved, to make the boycott hurt as much as possible. If you don't tell anybody, the boycott doesn't spread. Not many people would be using Linux today if back in the 1990s those who were had not evangelized it extensively. That's how I started using it back in '97. I heard about it from others, and that led to my eventually chucking Windows completely.
That's how you change things. Under your approach, the website still gets paid and the advertiser still hits its target market. All you're achieving is to avoid looking at the annoying ads yourself, nothing more.
____________________________ NYLXS: New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless.... NYLXS is a trademark of NYLXS, Inc
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