Unboxing Predatory Advertising

I’d like to discuss a serious topic, a subject I feel strongly about: advertising towards children in the digital age.

I have one five year old. He is now able to operate a tablet, browse Youtube, use some learning apps, and play some basic games. He is just passing the point where he has a basic concept of money, though to him it is still a binary concept.

I’m going to argue here that, a lot of what he has seen over the past three years, at best, should be viewed as predatory. At worst, it should be illegal.

Kids Are Not Adults

I want to preface my argument by saying, I am as close to an “anarchist” as you could reasonably get for adults. Many of the things that are illegal today should not be. As long as you are not hurting anyone else, I think you should be able to do pretty much whatever you’d like – life is short, do what makes you happy. If you, in the privacy of your home, want to go eat some mushrooms and stare at your ceiling listening to Tool for 12 hours, I am in complete support. The “sin tax” on such activities should be high enough to compensate for the overall effect it can have on the healthcare system, but at some sufficient price, you should be able to lick all the frogs you want.

That said, children are different. The reason society has an established an “age of consent” for many of life’s “activities” – driving, military enlistment, alcohol, smoking, other substances, sexual activities, body modification, etc – is because we believe humans are unable to make informed choices before various stages of brain development.

Kids progress through a series of milestones as they age, finally reaching capacity at about 25. It seems the consensus is that “around 6”, kids start understanding the finite nature of money, and by 8, they understand the concept of bills and maybe some budgeting (“my allowance is X – I might have to save up for this for a few months”). They suggest starting an allowance at age six to start teaching these habits. Before this, they do not really understand money. At a broad level, they know that “parents work for money, which buys toys” but to them, money is a “binary thing” – you have money (or you don’t). There is no concept of cost or budgeting.

The Modern Day Onslaught

Now, onto the villain of this rant – modern day advertising.

In the days of old, lets say the century from 1900-2000, happy families would browse the toy store a few times a year – before Christmas, birthdays, and after major achievements like strait A’s. This was a healthy system of expectations and work/reward. Even for a five year old, if you cleaned your room, every day all month, mom might take you to Toys R’ Us, and boy what fun that would be.

Kids looked forward to those rewarding moments. You might be filled with anticipation, possibly having to wait for weeks, to get the latest issue of Lego magazine in the mail, so that you could show dad all the amazing new sets that Santa should be informed of.

I see no positives for our families to this rapid increase in advertising, regardless of income level. Constant ads encourage longing, not being happy with what we have, waste (who needs that toy from last week – look at this new thing!), and teaches us to constantly seek the next best thing. The only beneficiary here are the corporations making and selling these products, of course. While all of this is probably true for adults too, children, unlike us, do not understand how advertising is a numbers game. We can reason that we see 100 ads a day so that maybe we will purchase one of the items – they cannot.

On Consent

Progress

In the United Kingdom, Greece, Denmark, and Belgium advertising to children is restricted. In Norway and Quebec advertising to children under the age of 12 is illegal.

Good luck to all the fellow moms and dads out there, navigating this sea of bits.

~

Footnotes

[1] One could argue that not all of these “restrictions” are consistent. For example, I think it’s ridiculous that you can go enlist in war – maybe even give your life on a tour of duty, but can’t come home and [legally] have a pint afterwards?


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