On the Senate floor in California is a bill to make the white pages opt-in only, reversing a 1995 bill that mandated distribution of these books as part of universal service. What’s ironic about this bill is that the process of getting it passed and then shared with the California population is that they’ll kill plenty of trees in the act of printing notifications. That almost as if spammers were to broadcast to their entire email list that they’ll not spam anymore.
Makes you wonder when the next shoe will drop for the yellow pages publishers— though they’re claiming that things are dandy. Notice that RH Donnelly has exited bankruptcy? The CEO of the new company, David Swanson, now called DEX One, said this:
“There’s a shift to these other media — Internet, search engine, mobile or voice, but it is a slow evolutionary process. It’s not nearly as radical a change as I think many people would like to believe,
And I would have to agree– this shift will take time, as technology is not the limiting factor. Yell echoes the same sentiments.
So spam is not dead by a long shot, whether it’s those unwanted book at your door, irrelevant email in your inbox, or misleading ads on your Facebook. These guys will continue to make money and perhaps evolve into more sophisticated players that begin to deliver personalized advertising with enough relevance that people actually want it. Stay tuned!
Hmm… as weird as it is to believe, maybe the yellow pages guy Mr. Swanson is right. Believe it or not, there are plenty of people who aren’t on the internet. I was actually asked for a phone book the other day – of course, I had no idea to get one, since the maintenance guy in my building just throws them out when they’re dropped off in the lobby. They’ll sit for a week, and maybe one or two out the stack of 20 will be gone.
The other day… oh wait, that was 3 years ago. Nevermind, Mr Swanson is totally boned. Optimistic, but boned.