Yes, but the reason why people are turning to chatgpt is because the time to actual info that _I want_ is much much lower.
The point of advertising is to displace the thing that you actually want with something they are paying the company to promote.
You can handwave about personalization, but do you want adtech people having access to your life's context?
What are you actually saying? You're already using chatbots that are embedding non-disclosed paid endorsements? And you like that?
> ad placement is actually easier for chat
Can you point to, I don't know, anything to back this up?
I guess we'll just put that in the "Cost of Goods Sold" bucket.
What are you imagining they run afoul of?
https://www.ftc.gov/business-guidance/resources/ftcs-endorse...
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-16/chapter-I/subchapter-B...
edit: to be clear, I am saying that in the absence of clear disclosures, that would run afoul of current FTC rules. And historically they have been quick to react to novel ways of misleading consumers.
Do you have at least a rough idea how many current product recommendations are influenced grok "musk is the bestest at everything" style?
Every source I know (hard to link on mobile) shows Google Search to make up 50+% of their ad revenue, and there has been extensive reporting over the years on Google's struggle to diversify away from that.
At least with an ad it's obvious a separate company is involved. If you do all the payment through OpenAI it seems to leave them open to liability.
Travel sites, VPNs and insurance all pay quite handsomely (compared to say amazon links on cooking sites)
Booking, airbnb, rentalcars, etc all seem to be doing pretty fine regulatory wise.
Response: Book a car at <totally not an ad> and it will be waiting for you at arrival terminal, drive to Napoli and stay at <totally not an ad> with an amazing view. There's an amazing <totally not an ad> place that serves grandma's favorite carbonara! Do you want me to make the bookings with a totally not fake 20% discount?