One of their problems was that paying ad viewers directly incentivizes fraud. There were many apps to make it 'look' like you were engaged, while you actually weren't.
Similarly, in Bill Gates' book "The Road Ahead", he proposed the idea of emails that come with money attached to them. (i.e. You are paid to open and read advertisement e-mails.) I don't know if this was realistically tried anywhere.
Fraud aside, I think it's hard to avoid falling into one of two boxes in paying people to watch ads:
1. They pay so little that it's not really worth anyone's time. 2. They pay enough to be interesting, but it means people will view ads for products just for the money and the effectiveness of the ads will be very low.
I think the industry has found that the ad "tax" (i.e. ads in the middle of content) is the model that actually works. And in this model the bulk of the ads' cost is paid to the content creator who is in theory providing a good enough audience for that particular advertiser, which is the actual value to the advertiser.
I’m not saying I like ad-tech. I use ad blockers, refuse to use any ad supported app that doesn’t have a method I can pay to remove ads, and I pay for ad free experiences for all of my streaming services and I pay to receive a number of ad free podcasts.
But let’s not pretend that users get nothing of value from Google or even Facebook.
On the other hand, I don’t hate myself enough to work for any ad tech company.
Then the user would get paid for getting interrupted.
That's what the CONTENT is for.The site is providing you content in exchange for eyes, then it's immediately trading those eyes for advertiser money.
Netflix keeps increasing the price of its ad free tier partially to offset the money it’s losing per user by not showing them ads.
Amazon would much rather you use their ad tier for Prime Video than their ad free tier. That’s why they opted people in to their ad tier and kept the price the same instead of raising the price of their current plan and offering the ad free tier at the original price.
Big platforms don't have an incentive to pay users. They collect the ad revenue themselves. Possibly because big platforms agreed among themselves to behave this way.
It only takes one big platform to start paying users to flip this around. Twitter started paying users for ad revenue derived from the user's feed. The next step would be for ad-tech to pay users directly.
How would a company like YouTube (or any ad-supported service) make money in this scenario? Does everything just become insta-paywalled?