The first ads in the Windows 11 Start menu will look familiar.
The software maker will use the Recommended section of the Start menu, which usually shows file recommendations, to suggest apps from the Microsoft Store.
I have never, not once in my life, clicked on an internet or electronic ad. Even for things I'm ostensibly interested in. Jury's out on just how much manically SEO optimized retail web sites on Google count as "ads," I guess. But other than that: Zilch.
But someone somewhere must be clicking on them because billions of dollars are spent every year pushing the fucking things.
I'm so skewed this direction that I'll scroll past the sponsored version of the link in a Google search to click on the exact, unsponsored version. I don't know why.
Thereās been malware pretending to be legit links that get pushed to the top by being sponsored links. Itās a great idea to never click on sponsored links.
Some marketers believe it doesn't matter if someone clicks as brand recognition has its own value. On the other hand, who hasn't heard of Tiktok by now?
I've only ever clicked on one ad and that was for a cloud host I thought would be cheaper than Vultr. If anyone knows a managed k8s cluster cheaper than Vultr let me know plz.
Go into app or play store and sort by most downloaded. They're pretty exclusively a list of games and apps that you find advertised.
I'm my circle, people are seeming to become more willing to admit they got something from an ad. I feel like there used to be shame behind it
The most frequent lately has been women buying their clothes from Instagram ads. The argument they have made is that they see SO MANY ads, the one they choose to spend money on was because they wanted it and that apparently is a solid vetting process. But this is people in my sphere, I dunno if it's a thing.
I used a Google TV stick and for sick of the bullshit ads and switched to a simple launcher. In reddit and lemmy threads, there are always highly up voted people who are happy to get "popular recommendations".
The generality, I feel like, is people are busy living their lives, don't want to research and learn about everything in their life, and just go with what they see.
Itās gotten really difficult to research products, speaking as someone who does a lot of it, so I donāt think itās about not wanting to do it.
Go look for something like a good dehumidifier and itās all seo-optimized bullshit barely hiding that itās advertisements for cheap Chinese junk on Amazon. And nearly every link is like that. For pages upon pages worth of results.
Itās so so difficult to judge whatās actually legit info and what isnāt. So I donāt blame people for asking other humans for what worked for them. You almost kinda have to unless you know of good legit review sites for every product you might want or need.
I've never clicked an ad on purpose. I use DNS to block all the common click thru domains for ads.
This move by Microsoft will undoubtedly result in more Windows PCs infected by malware as people find tools to remove the ads and some of those tools will turn out to be malware.
I have on search results, but it was for something that I was already looking for. The ad had the same link to the web page as the result below. š¤·āāļø
I intentionally skip these and click the normal link right below it lol. I also realized that I have clicked these in the past by accident because they don't load... Since I block ads
That's what they are testing. Hopefully you are just being silly. People click ads a lot, that's why there are so many and it's a multi billion dollar industry. They work.
noone ever does -- Microsoft, Google and Facebook must be faking their reports on how effective their advertisement platforms are in order to boost their sales. the sales of ads, not the advertised products