Programmatic alcohol advertising, social media and public health: Algorithms, automated challenges to regulation, and the failure of public oversight

被引:6
|
作者
Goodwin, Ian [1 ]
机构
[1] Massey Univ, Sch Humanities Media & Creat Commun, Wallace St, Wellington 6021, New Zealand
关键词
Alcohol; Programmatic advertising; Social media; Algorithms; Alcohol regulation; BRANDS; EXPOSURE;
D O I
10.1016/j.drugpo.2022.103826
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Ongoing partnerships between transnational alcohol corporations and global social media platforms have transformed alcohol advertising in ways that undermine existing marketing regulations and threaten all forms of public oversight. In this paper I analyse this historic shift, arguing that new forms of programmatic alcohol advertising have emerged out of increasingly intensive processes of datafication on social media. Programmatic advertising is distinguished by increasing automation, turning advertising into a process of continually experimenting on the public to optimise advertising's "outputs", which now include conversions (sales). This experimental process relies on the delegation of agency to profit maximising, algorithmic machines that make alcohol advertising decisions with public health consequences. I contend that public health must now grapple with "algorithmic sovereignty": how private, corporate machines make decisions that challenge regulation and public oversight. Drawing on a case study of Meta's programmatic systems, I argue programmatic alcohol advertising exacerbates existing problems for the regulatory control of alcohol advertising on social media, while introducing entirely novel concerns. Machines make decisions in ways that are efficacious yet obscure, even to those who design and own them and to those who use them for marketing purposes. They allow for the maximisation of profit while obfuscating public oversight of the health impacts of alcohol advertising, and they make decisions in ways that are both predictive and pre-emptive, continuously nudging social media users towards consumption through altering, in real-time, the personalised content they encounter. This leaves established means for public oversight of alcohol marketing operating retrospectively while commodification of social life through alcohol advertising acts in the present to reshape the future. The machinic vision of programmatic alcohol advertising assesses social media users for their commercial utility, not as citizens with health needs, and may be producing evolving negative health outcomes that will only ever be understood in retrospect once their deleterious impact has become evident. Steps towards more effective public health interventions must begin with clearer recognition of these fundamental changes in advertising.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Regulating alcohol advertising for public health and welfare in the age of digital marketing: challenges and options
    Norman, Thomas
    Anderson-Luxford, Dan
    O'Brien, Paula
    Room, Robin
    DRUGS-EDUCATION PREVENTION AND POLICY, 2024, 31 (01) : 70 - 81
  • [2] Commercial Advertising of Alcohol: Using Law to Challenge Public Health Regulation
    O'Brien, Paula
    Room, Robin
    Anderson-Luxford, Dan
    JOURNAL OF LAW MEDICINE & ETHICS, 2022, 50 (02) : 240 - 249
  • [3] Alcohol and Public Health: Failure and Opportunity
    Jernigan, David H.
    MILBANK QUARTERLY, 2023, 101 : 552 - 578
  • [4] Social media in public health
    Kass-Hout, Taha A.
    Alhinnawi, Hend
    BRITISH MEDICAL BULLETIN, 2013, 108 (01) : 5 - 24
  • [5] Social Media for Public Health: Framework for Social Media-Based Public Health Campaigns
    Hunt, Isabella de Vere
    Linos, Eleni
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2022, 24 (12)
  • [6] Exploring the potential of citizen science for public health through an alcohol advertising case study
    Thomas, Jessica A.
    Trigg, Joshua
    Morris, Julia
    Miller, Emma
    Ward, Paul R.
    HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL, 2022, 37 (02)
  • [7] Vaping: Public Health, Social Media, and Toxicity
    Sun, Yehao
    Prabhu, Prital
    Li, Dongmei
    Mcintosh, Scott
    Rahman, Irfan
    ONLINE JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH INFORMATICS, 2024, 16
  • [8] Making Public Television Social? Public Service Broadcasting and the Challenges of Social Media
    van Dijck, Jose
    Poell, Thomas
    TELEVISION & NEW MEDIA, 2015, 16 (02) : 148 - 164
  • [9] Public Health Discussions on Social Media: Evaluating Automated Sentiment Analysis Methods
    Gandy, Lisa M.
    Ivanitskaya, Lana, V
    Bacon, Leeza L.
    Bizri-Baryak, Rodina
    JMIR FORMATIVE RESEARCH, 2025, 9
  • [10] A total ban on alcohol advertising: Presenting the public health case
    Parry, Charles
    Burnhams, Nadine Harker
    London, Leslie
    SAMJ SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2012, 102 (07): : 602 - 604