Needless to say, they don't like it.
They say they've tried to make it stop (I do not know how), but the ads keep coming back.
Is there anything they can do to stop it totally?
When I GISed a historical church in the town where I grew up, I started getting ambulance chaser ads "do you know these priests".
I don't think there's any way to make it stop. I've turned off a lot of things on FB and Google, and gotten uBlock Origin but it's like patching a sieve hole by hole, when you can't even tell if a whole new breach has opened up.
I don't have the link, but the funeral home that had 100+ bodies piling up in NYC a few weeks ago was theirs.
[1] - https://provequity.com
"Needless to say, they don't like it." Why's that? It wouldn't bother me any more than any other ad.
Either way it's pretty dark stuff.
I would be happiest when the ads I get are way off target and the people LinkedIn suggests are complete strangers.
The latter I've never really managed, but the former is not that difficult: at one point my ad stream consisted largely of luxury condos in St. Petersburg and bank accounts in Cyprus.
I took an online hearing test long ago and now ads are convinced I'm a fair bit older than I actually am. I'm not sure what would be most effective to get the trackers to assign a younger cohort, but in imagining generational browsing tells, I suppose cartoon nostalgia is probably one of the best proxies for birth year/location.
(In the pre-internet days, discount magazine subscriptions were one of the inputs to marketers' lists. Bernays describes the use of segmentation in WWI propaganda.)
See also https://www.tandfonline.com/na101/home/literatum/publisher/t... . Böll worked in a statistical office, so he's well aware of how little the narrator is Sticking It To The Man, but despite that depicts an example worthy of emulation.