-
19 votes
-
Exposing the Honey influencer scam
67 votes -
Spotify takes down Andrew Tate pimping podcast after complaints
31 votes -
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and US influencers bash seed oils, baffling nutrition scientists
52 votes -
Honey did nothing wrong
OK, maybe they did something wrong; not actually giving people all potentially available discount codes when you say you will is wrong. But I don't think they did anything wrong by overriding...
OK, maybe they did something wrong; not actually giving people all potentially available discount codes when you say you will is wrong. But I don't think they did anything wrong by overriding affiliate links, and I think it's dangerous to let people convince you otherwise.
Even if replacing affiniate codes has negative consequences, in the form of lost revenue and uncounted sales, for the affiliates, it is happening entirely in the end user's browser, and in that environment the user has the right to do whatever they want. One can get extensions that strip off all affiliate codes. A user might have a case that their informed consent was not obtained by Honey for one feature or another, but if a user wants to install a browser extension that replaces all the affiliate codes in links they click, they have a right to do that and no affiliate marketer can be rightly empowered to stop them.
If we admit some right to control the user's browser's behavior on the part of affiliate marketers, why would that right stop at interference by Honey? Wouldn't any extension interfering with the sanctity of the affiliate marketing referral data then be a legally actionable offense?
24 votes -
A lesson un-learned: two "influencers" drown after refusing to wear life jackets so not to ruin their tans
30 votes -
Google threatened tech influencers unless they 'preferred' the Pixel
28 votes -
The golden age of US reality TV might be changing, possibly declining
18 votes -
Court says Andrew Tate can leave Romania but remain in EU as he awaits trial
18 votes -
How influencer cartels manipulate social media: fraudulent behaviour hidden in plain sight
19 votes -
The influencer who “reverses” Lupus with smoothies. Psychiatrist Brooke Goldner makes extraordinary claims about incurable diseases. It’s brought her a mansion, a Ferrari, and a huge social following.
18 votes -
Generative AI - We aren’t ready
27 votes -
Everyone’s a sellout now
33 votes -
The tyranny of the algorithm: why every coffee shop looks the same
23 votes -
Charity for profit: Brandfluence/Softgiving, the marketing agency behind some of Twitch's most successful fundraising streams quietly collected 42% of donations
26 votes -
Inside an OnlyFans empire: Sex, influence and the new American Dream
32 votes -
A handful of influencers are trying to turn the tide on toxic masculinity. But can they get anyone to listen?
36 votes -
The food industry pays ‘influencer’ dietitians to shape your eating habits
34 votes -
Social media decline: Users are shifting to messaging apps and group chats
36 votes -
Naomi Wu and the silence that speaks volumes
32 votes -
It's not just male influencers who preach problematic manipulation
21 votes -
Illinois just passed the first law in the US protecting financial rights of children of influencers
35 votes -
‘I can’t stress how much BookTok sells’: Teen literary influencers swaying publishers
13 votes -
Inside Big Beef’s climate messaging machine: Confuse, defend and downplay
8 votes -
Crushed
7 votes -
Romania detains ex-kickboxer Andrew Tate in human trafficking case
24 votes -
The weed influencer and the scientist feuding over why some stoners incessantly puke
10 votes -
Daily Harvest sued over US illness linked to lentils; cause remains a medical mystery
11 votes -
Two-thirds of anti-vax propaganda online created by just twelve influencers, research finds
23 votes -
How Beijing influences the influencers
5 votes -
New Norwegian law will require advertisements where a body's shape, size, or skin has been retouched to be labeled
16 votes -
J. Kenji López-Alt is Seattle’s most powerful food influencer — and its most reluctant one
10 votes -
The big business of manifesting money
3 votes -
Why do people follow social media from those presenting a perfect life when it makes them feel inadequate?
I've never been one to follow much social media - certainly not the kind that is just a (almost certainly fake) presentation of a perfect life. Someone's highlight reel. But I did catch myself on...
I've never been one to follow much social media - certainly not the kind that is just a (almost certainly fake) presentation of a perfect life. Someone's highlight reel. But I did catch myself on the other side of this. I spent hours on some days baking or cooking specifically to flex on people with well-crafted photos of the finished food. I still enjoyed it, but once I realized what I was doing I started cooking much more reasonably difficult dishes - so I'm sure it was motivated by a wish to instill envy in others.
So I think I understand that side of the equation. But I had a more or less captive audience (a Slack #food channel). Can anyone speak from the side of the willing consumer? The avid subscriber?
14 votes -
The future of building for digital: Experts talk about changing customer expectations
2 votes -
The impact of toxic influencers on communities
11 votes -
Finland enlists social influencers in fight against Covid-19 – government advice sent to bloggers, rappers and writers to get to those not reached by traditional media
5 votes -
Social media influencer sentenced to fourteen years in federal prison after plotting to hijack internet domain at gunpoint
19 votes -
The story of Caroline Calloway and her ghostwriter Natalie
5 votes -
Over-tourism and photo-seekers have been damaging the world's most beautiful places, and even causing some to close to visitors entirely
11 votes -
Denmark plans regulation of influencers following suicide note
7 votes -
Icelanders tire of disrespectful Instagram influencers
14 votes -
How we fell for cheap old houses
8 votes -
"It's not play if you're making money": How Instagram and YouTube disrupted child labor laws
9 votes -
The vigilante shaming influencers for bad behavior in national parks
15 votes -
‘It’s genuine, you know?’: Why the online influencer industry is going ‘authentic’
8 votes -
Documents show the US government created a secret database of activists, journalists, and social media influencers tied to the migrant caravan and in some cases, placed alerts on their passports
12 votes -
For sale: Instagram account, lightly used
12 votes -
A penthouse made for Instagram
15 votes -
The Lil Tay saga reaches its logical conclusion
11 votes