And they're worse than most people could even imagine.
The internet platform is what I'll be covering in this thread.
Old methods of advertising include display ads online.
Two words...
Subliminal messages.
Platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google, Amazon etc. are hiding subliminal messages on their pages.
I don't know exactly how it's being done, but it is indeed being done.
Back in the MySpace days, for example, the pages were customizable by the user, you could make it look however you wanted. But when Facebook came along, it made sure there was absolutely no freedom for the user to change any aspect of the CSS. So they are displaying ads on your profile page and every other page of Facebook, as well as every other site listed above.
At this juncture, this new method of advertising is exclusive, being reserved for the big brands that own everything. Because how are you going to explain it to every Tom, Dick and Harry who wants to display ads on their own site?? They're working on some kind of way to slip it in without openly admitting just what the hell it really is.
It's in testing phases right now... all the corporations are testing the subliminal ads to see how effective they truly are, and they are loving the findings. Their appetite for money knows no bounds, and they will do anything to get more.
Don't get me wrong... this has been tested for MANY years, it's been going on for MANY years already. But it's just now being adopted as 'the new way'.
Once they develop the 'language' that will 'explain' the method to more advertising clients without jeopardizing the operation or making people 'too uncomfortable', they'll roll it out for wider use.
I have no idea how they are gonna frame this to make it passable. I find it hard to believe they'll come right out with it and admit to subliminally advertising on these platforms. I think even the sheeple of today would be freaked out by it.
We'll see how they approach it... regardless, it's already going on right now.
Display ads (banners, etc.) on sites which still use that old method are TOTALLY ridiculous and out of control. It's laughable at this juncture and that system will fail entirely soon, it is already crashing and there is no solution for that method (whatsoever).
So when you randomly get the urge to buy a certain product, but you don't remember hearing about it or even seeing it recently... you may be effected by a subliminal ad campaign.
Trust your feelings... you can't necessarily trust your linguistic thoughts anymore. I am not trying to instill any paranoia or sound crazy or anything... but it is simply something that we have to realize. Our feelings themselves, which are non-linguistic, are less likely to be leading us to buy a product, for example, than a linguistic line of thought which makes us think, "Gee, I want a box of Twinkies!" or "Darn, I'd like to have some Pepsi!"
Discernment and self-examination is more important these days than ever. They're playing with our minds, and therefore we have to be sure that we have mastered our own minds and know our inner landscape.
The internet platform is what I'll be covering in this thread.
Old methods of advertising include display ads online.
Two words...
Subliminal messages.
Platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google, Amazon etc. are hiding subliminal messages on their pages.
I don't know exactly how it's being done, but it is indeed being done.
Back in the MySpace days, for example, the pages were customizable by the user, you could make it look however you wanted. But when Facebook came along, it made sure there was absolutely no freedom for the user to change any aspect of the CSS. So they are displaying ads on your profile page and every other page of Facebook, as well as every other site listed above.
At this juncture, this new method of advertising is exclusive, being reserved for the big brands that own everything. Because how are you going to explain it to every Tom, Dick and Harry who wants to display ads on their own site?? They're working on some kind of way to slip it in without openly admitting just what the hell it really is.
It's in testing phases right now... all the corporations are testing the subliminal ads to see how effective they truly are, and they are loving the findings. Their appetite for money knows no bounds, and they will do anything to get more.
Don't get me wrong... this has been tested for MANY years, it's been going on for MANY years already. But it's just now being adopted as 'the new way'.
Once they develop the 'language' that will 'explain' the method to more advertising clients without jeopardizing the operation or making people 'too uncomfortable', they'll roll it out for wider use.
I have no idea how they are gonna frame this to make it passable. I find it hard to believe they'll come right out with it and admit to subliminally advertising on these platforms. I think even the sheeple of today would be freaked out by it.
We'll see how they approach it... regardless, it's already going on right now.
Display ads (banners, etc.) on sites which still use that old method are TOTALLY ridiculous and out of control. It's laughable at this juncture and that system will fail entirely soon, it is already crashing and there is no solution for that method (whatsoever).
So when you randomly get the urge to buy a certain product, but you don't remember hearing about it or even seeing it recently... you may be effected by a subliminal ad campaign.
Trust your feelings... you can't necessarily trust your linguistic thoughts anymore. I am not trying to instill any paranoia or sound crazy or anything... but it is simply something that we have to realize. Our feelings themselves, which are non-linguistic, are less likely to be leading us to buy a product, for example, than a linguistic line of thought which makes us think, "Gee, I want a box of Twinkies!" or "Darn, I'd like to have some Pepsi!"
Discernment and self-examination is more important these days than ever. They're playing with our minds, and therefore we have to be sure that we have mastered our own minds and know our inner landscape.