There aren’t creators you like and think they deserve some of the cut? If there isn’t an increase in price, then that just means less of the money is going to the business, and some of it is going to a creator you enjoy.
I’m not buying anything recommended by creators, unless from their own shops in which case they get the full revenue either way.
If there is a product they recommend that I might be interested in, I’ll research prices and guaranteed find a better deal elsewhere.
I don’t use subscription services at all save for two very specific use cases and don’t play games, so all the vpns, online academies, website business, mmorpgs and whatever they are pushing really doesn’t phase me. If (and that’s a big if) they even make it through sponsorblock in the first place.
Everything you listed are common sponsorships. I have never bought a YT sponsorship, so there’s no argument there. But affiliate links are more than just those sponsored posts. Amazon is a commonly used affiliate program. For example, someone might link to the tools they use and like. I watched a carpenter who linked to the tools he used, and it was also an affiliate program. He wasn’t paid by anyone to link them like a sponsorship, he was just sharing in his experience what tools he likes best. If I trust his judgement in tools, and want to buy the same ones, assuming camelcamelcamel shows it a good price and checking around doesn’t find it cheaper, why wouldn’t I want them to get a cut of that purchase?
I dislike affiliate links from a privacy perspective. I don’t want to be tracked via my purchase to some creator’s channel that would link my person to certain interest groups. I’m breaking those chains wherever there is a chance, usually by manually copying links and cutting off the tracking bit, or if it’s a URL shortener like bit.ly and the likes, I’ll open it in a private window and then copy the resolved URL minus tracking bit into my main browser window.
There aren’t creators you like and think they deserve some of the cut? If there isn’t an increase in price, then that just means less of the money is going to the business, and some of it is going to a creator you enjoy.
I’m not buying anything recommended by creators, unless from their own shops in which case they get the full revenue either way.
If there is a product they recommend that I might be interested in, I’ll research prices and guaranteed find a better deal elsewhere.
I don’t use subscription services at all save for two very specific use cases and don’t play games, so all the vpns, online academies, website business, mmorpgs and whatever they are pushing really doesn’t phase me. If (and that’s a big if) they even make it through sponsorblock in the first place.
Everything you listed are common sponsorships. I have never bought a YT sponsorship, so there’s no argument there. But affiliate links are more than just those sponsored posts. Amazon is a commonly used affiliate program. For example, someone might link to the tools they use and like. I watched a carpenter who linked to the tools he used, and it was also an affiliate program. He wasn’t paid by anyone to link them like a sponsorship, he was just sharing in his experience what tools he likes best. If I trust his judgement in tools, and want to buy the same ones, assuming camelcamelcamel shows it a good price and checking around doesn’t find it cheaper, why wouldn’t I want them to get a cut of that purchase?
I dislike affiliate links from a privacy perspective. I don’t want to be tracked via my purchase to some creator’s channel that would link my person to certain interest groups. I’m breaking those chains wherever there is a chance, usually by manually copying links and cutting off the tracking bit, or if it’s a URL shortener like bit.ly and the likes, I’ll open it in a private window and then copy the resolved URL minus tracking bit into my main browser window.