Comment by aleph_minus_one

8 days ago

> It will ruin places where some kinds of commercial speech is wanted (say, asking for a recommendation on reddit).

There is also a dependence on the culture. For example, what in the USA would be considered a "recommendation" (such as on Reddit) would often be considered "insanely pushy advertising" in Germany.

With this in mind, wouldn't a pertial solution also be to become less tolerant of such pushy advertisement in such places (say on Reddit), even if they are done by honest users?

When it's obvious that entire posts and users are fake, and knowing that product pages on Amazon (which are also sometimes fake) can change what product they list for sale, and since it is known that upvotes/likes/shares are openly for sale, is it really such a stretch to assume that all "recommendations" are as fake as the original question also likely is, until we have evidence to the contrary?