In a lot of (most) circumstances, disclosures are inherently going to be pretty buried.
In a video, they're probably going to be somewhere in small print in the credit roll at the end. For example it's pretty standard practice to have a standard disclaimer related to product placement.
And even when journalists and others have a link to a detailed disclosure statement, how many people actually click through to read that.
I generally favor transparency but the reality is that most disclosures are always going to be effectively footnotes and 99% of the time people won't notice them or will just ignore them.
> In a video, they're probably going to be somewhere in small print in the credit roll at the end.
When you have small print in a video, I think that itself is a good indication of how commercial it is, so I don't really think that's a problem. If celebrities end up having to include small print in posted images, well, I think we'll understand pretty quickly how commercial and sponsered it is.
> And even when journalists and others have a link to a detailed disclosure statement, how many people actually click through to read that.
Generally I see them as a postscript on the article, not as links (unless the link is to give more detailed information).
> I generally favor transparency but the reality is that most disclosures are always going to be effectively footnotes and 99% of the time people won't notice them or will just ignore them.
That presumes that the only benefit of this is in that people immediately notice the sponsorship. There are other benefits though, which is that other people and notice the sponsorship and disseminate the information more prominently.
As I say, I strongly favor disclosure even when it's not front and center. My only caveat to people is to not assume that disclosure renders moot all conflicts of interest and other biases.
In a video, they're probably going to be somewhere in small print in the credit roll at the end. For example it's pretty standard practice to have a standard disclaimer related to product placement.
And even when journalists and others have a link to a detailed disclosure statement, how many people actually click through to read that.
I generally favor transparency but the reality is that most disclosures are always going to be effectively footnotes and 99% of the time people won't notice them or will just ignore them.