Consumer groups file complaint against SHEIN for dark patterns fuelling over-consumption
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It is definitely propaganda against propaganda, everything is propaganda.
There's "good" propaganda and "bad" propaganda, and whether you think any propaganda is "good" or "bad' is propaganda in itself just by sharing such an opinion.
It can also be propaganda against something that obviously true. It can be used to gaslight people into not believing their own eyes. Like being told that Trump isn't leading to a more hateful country and it's only twitter memes that make him look bad.
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It can also be propaganda against something that obviously true. It can be used to gaslight people into not believing their own eyes. Like being told that Trump isn't leading to a more hateful country and it's only twitter memes that make him look bad.
Absolutely, and being repeatedly reminded to get your COVID or measles shots is "positive" propaganda. Herd immunity is objectively a good thing, but any sort of PSA is propaganda. (please get your shots)
It's like the word "consequence", people always think consequences are always bad, when you could say "I got rich as a consequence of winning the lottery", or, re-worded, "I won the lottery, and consequently, I became rich".
Bref, if you are not immune to positive propaganda, you are also not immune to negative propaganda.
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Absolutely, and being repeatedly reminded to get your COVID or measles shots is "positive" propaganda. Herd immunity is objectively a good thing, but any sort of PSA is propaganda. (please get your shots)
It's like the word "consequence", people always think consequences are always bad, when you could say "I got rich as a consequence of winning the lottery", or, re-worded, "I won the lottery, and consequently, I became rich".
Bref, if you are not immune to positive propaganda, you are also not immune to negative propaganda.
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Honestly this would most likely work very well as advertising, and generate a lot of free publicity around the unconventionality of it all.
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How is that different than any other global online market place? Even Amazon tries to put additional things in my shopping cart without me ever asking for it
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Honestly this would most likely work very well as advertising, and generate a lot of free publicity around the unconventionality of it all.
A marketer's pride would never let them tell the truth.
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How is that different than any other global online market place? Even Amazon tries to put additional things in my shopping cart without me ever asking for it
I've never used SHEIN so I can't tell if they are using these practices or how bad they are, but from the article I see they allegedly use fake urgency messaging, which I know has been sanctioned before in the EU (the company I used to work with had to rush removing it from our eCommerce site).
A company can tell you that the item you're looking at happens to be the last one in stock, if it's true. But if they lie about it, so you rush into a decision to buy it before it's gone, then it's a deceptive practice.
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Trump could solve this but he’s a coward. I got downvoted last time I said this but I’ll repeat it, the tariffs were a good thing as they would absolutely destroy this consumerist culture we live in. The degrowth is a feature not a bug.
But Trump doesnt have the balls to do it and whatever neocon/neoliberal ends up in power next won’t do it either so I guess we’ll just drown in funko pops and cheap slave made clothing.
I don't think you're wrong de facto, and the intentions of the tariffs are certainly different from the results.
Not a Trump supporter btw, just skeptical of each and every neocon/neolib that sets foot near business regulations and PAC money.
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I've never used SHEIN so I can't tell if they are using these practices or how bad they are, but from the article I see they allegedly use fake urgency messaging, which I know has been sanctioned before in the EU (the company I used to work with had to rush removing it from our eCommerce site).
A company can tell you that the item you're looking at happens to be the last one in stock, if it's true. But if they lie about it, so you rush into a decision to buy it before it's gone, then it's a deceptive practice.
Everyone does that all the time though. I can't remember the last time I bought something online that wasn't supposedly either the last one in stock or one of like 5 left. It's obviously bullshit and everyone is doing it.
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Everyone does that all the time though. I can't remember the last time I bought something online that wasn't supposedly either the last one in stock or one of like 5 left. It's obviously bullshit and everyone is doing it.
It's one of those things where periodically someone gets sanctioned and a few others get scared and stop doing it (or tone it down) for a while.
I guess SHEIN are either overdoing it or they crossed the popularity threshold where companies become more scrutinized