this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2025
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That's still an ad, you want money for a product you're offering. The only difference is in your case there's an extra step between impression and conversion.
Okay let me rephrase. I'm offering 100% of my work on PeerTube for free. They're high quality, long-form video essays, and people clearly enjoy watching them. I link my Patreon in case people wish to support, but no other product exists on a subscription basis.
Even if PeerTube were substantially more popular, the lack of recommendation algorithms would keep my content from proliferating nearly as well as YouTube. This translates to fewer Patreon subscribers which means less opportunity and funding to create high quality videos. No self-promotion, just content that can't perform as well because it doesn't get recommended.
If there's an algorithm to game, and money to be made, I don't see how that's any different to self promotion. Boil it down and all that's happening is you are performing an action, so that more people see you, in the hopes that some of them will give you money.
The lack of an algorithm is a feature, I don't want content I havent explicitly asked for to be shown.
I'm so sorry but you really need to reevaluate this because it categorizes like 80% of authentic internet content as ads. Is a graphic artist who works commission posting their art on social media an ad, if they're doing it to hunt for commission? A streamer who posts their funniest clips on social media to get more paid subscribers? A game dev promo-ing features in their next game patch?
Self promotion is a form of advertising, doubly so if it's done for the purpose of attracting revenue via some means. People can opt into it if they want via subscribing/following but it's still advertising.
So yes most "authentic" content is just people advertising themselves. I would prefer not to see that unless I have opted into it.