trying to sell the higher ‘resale’ or ‘trade in’ value of the phone… like a five-year-old 64gb se has a trade in ‘value’ at bby that’s 10x higher than that of a lower-mid android of the same age and storage. that’s 40-50usd vs 3-5usd (the phone that can’t even ‘pay for lunch’). but forgetting completely that you pay several hundred more for the handset to get that ‘extra’ 40 bucks five years later.
To be fair if you take a flagship Android that cost similarly to what the pro iPhone cost the iPhone resell value is still usually way higher as the years go on even though the initial prices were the same.
Not entirely sure if this is the case, but I’ve started using AI to generate my ad text. The way it works is my campaign is optimized for app downloads, so it tries different texts (based around what my app is about) and sees which ones lead to the most downloads - i.e. it self optimizes.
I don’t feel bad at all for using AI tools to advertise. I’m competing with hundreds of thousands of other companies doing this, so I am in a losing position either way. The advertising industry as a whole is rotten to the core. It’s a symptom of a consumption economy that is in the process of rotting.
People should use ad blockers. People should be using free and open source tools. But they don’t. So I don’t feel bad taking advantage of that.
So you see something that you know is wrong and instead of trying to make it better you actively make it worse, and say fuck the people who are already suffering?
Yeah, I tend to be an accelerationist when systems are beyond repair. I was very happy to see someone add that word to my vocab two months ago: https://lemmy.ml/comment/16339575
Stop the suffering by ending it early, so we can make a new, better system. I’m not going to limit my potential to help a broken system last longer.
I actually know people who operate like this. My old neighbor was a paycheck to paycheck kind of guy who’d always instantly spend all of his money on any trash you can think of. One day he came home with 3(!) Michael Bay Turtle movie collectors editions because they were on sale (“fantastic value!”) and by the end of the month he didn’t have money for food. That’s how bad his financial decisions were.
Anyway instead of proper budgeting he’d come up with these horrible ways to make sure he’d have money “stashed away”. E.g. he’d prepay 100 bucks per month for his electricity and then get half of it back after a year. That was his way of saving up money. Funniest thing about this was him calling the utility company and explaining to them why he wanted the highest possible monthly payment despite using so little power. They had some trouble understanding his investment strategy.
Another classic was buying expensive things and selling them for half of what he payed. That’s pretty much what the picture implies. If you buy a $200 android phone and spend $1000 on useless crap then you won’t be able to sell your phone to pay the bills. The $1200 iphone on the other hand will get you $600 in an emergency. It’s the idiot’s piggy bank.
Reminds me of people purposefully paying too high income taxt. “It’s a nice bonus when I get it back”. I guess some sort of reasoning is that you’re then forced to put some money away and can’t spend it, but those same people will also take high-interest loans that’ll cost them dearly because now they don’t have that money at hand. And this is an actual person I know who has done this.
It reminds me of my ex’s math. She’d use her credit card to buy something useless for “us” that we didn’t need. Then ask me to pay her back for half of it, since it was for us, in cash. At the end of the month, she’d ask me for help paying her credit cards. Finally, she’d eBay whatever it was she bought because “we weren’t really using it”, and keep the money.
If this is real, what message are they actually trying to send? Surely it’s a shit post
trying to sell the higher ‘resale’ or ‘trade in’ value of the phone… like a five-year-old 64gb se has a trade in ‘value’ at bby that’s 10x higher than that of a lower-mid android of the same age and storage. that’s 40-50usd vs 3-5usd (the phone that can’t even ‘pay for lunch’). but forgetting completely that you pay several hundred more for the handset to get that ‘extra’ 40 bucks five years later.
To be fair if you take a flagship Android that cost similarly to what the pro iPhone cost the iPhone resell value is still usually way higher as the years go on even though the initial prices were the same.
But does it really matter?
Not entirely sure if this is the case, but I’ve started using AI to generate my ad text. The way it works is my campaign is optimized for app downloads, so it tries different texts (based around what my app is about) and sees which ones lead to the most downloads - i.e. it self optimizes.
Do you see how this behaviour was evil and not care, or did you just not even think about what you were doing?
I don’t care, people should have ad blockers anyways
It’s fine to put poison in the water, everyone should be drinking the antidote anyway!
You’re part of the problem, you sociopath.
You’re missing the forest for the trees.
I don’t feel bad at all for using AI tools to advertise. I’m competing with hundreds of thousands of other companies doing this, so I am in a losing position either way. The advertising industry as a whole is rotten to the core. It’s a symptom of a consumption economy that is in the process of rotting.
People should use ad blockers. People should be using free and open source tools. But they don’t. So I don’t feel bad taking advantage of that.
So you see something that you know is wrong and instead of trying to make it better you actively make it worse, and say fuck the people who are already suffering?
Yeah, I tend to be an accelerationist when systems are beyond repair. I was very happy to see someone add that word to my vocab two months ago: https://lemmy.ml/comment/16339575
Stop the suffering by ending it early, so we can make a new, better system. I’m not going to limit my potential to help a broken system last longer.
Gross.
I actually know people who operate like this. My old neighbor was a paycheck to paycheck kind of guy who’d always instantly spend all of his money on any trash you can think of. One day he came home with 3(!) Michael Bay Turtle movie collectors editions because they were on sale (“fantastic value!”) and by the end of the month he didn’t have money for food. That’s how bad his financial decisions were.
Anyway instead of proper budgeting he’d come up with these horrible ways to make sure he’d have money “stashed away”. E.g. he’d prepay 100 bucks per month for his electricity and then get half of it back after a year. That was his way of saving up money. Funniest thing about this was him calling the utility company and explaining to them why he wanted the highest possible monthly payment despite using so little power. They had some trouble understanding his investment strategy. Another classic was buying expensive things and selling them for half of what he payed. That’s pretty much what the picture implies. If you buy a $200 android phone and spend $1000 on useless crap then you won’t be able to sell your phone to pay the bills. The $1200 iphone on the other hand will get you $600 in an emergency. It’s the idiot’s piggy bank.
Reminds me of people purposefully paying too high income taxt. “It’s a nice bonus when I get it back”. I guess some sort of reasoning is that you’re then forced to put some money away and can’t spend it, but those same people will also take high-interest loans that’ll cost them dearly because now they don’t have that money at hand. And this is an actual person I know who has done this.
Crazy logic.
And in the meantime you have a $1200 iPhone! Genius!
It reminds me of my ex’s math. She’d use her credit card to buy something useless for “us” that we didn’t need. Then ask me to pay her back for half of it, since it was for us, in cash. At the end of the month, she’d ask me for help paying her credit cards. Finally, she’d eBay whatever it was she bought because “we weren’t really using it”, and keep the money.
She was buying drugs.