One option would be to enforce a price floor that would be set to whatever the server operator could prove is the cost of serving a single request. (per byte, also fixed costs when there’s no traffic mess this up). This would absolve website owners of the need to find any other funraising methods if they want to break even, and thus remove the incentive for installing spying ads. It would still keep in tact the incentive to make servers as cost effective as possible.
I’m not sure if such a means-tested price floor mechanism has ever been used in the past, so idk how well this would work.
Looks like a self-enforcing tax rate (comparable to price floor) has at least been proposed:
[…] have proposed having owners self-assess the value of their property under penalty of having to sell at this self-assessed value.111 This has the simultaneous effect of forcing truthful valuations for taxation and of forcing turnover of underutilized or monopolized assets to broader publics.
One option would be to enforce a price floor that would be set to whatever the server operator could prove is the cost of serving a single request. (per byte, also fixed costs when there’s no traffic mess this up). This would absolve website owners of the need to find any other funraising methods if they want to break even, and thus remove the incentive for installing spying ads. It would still keep in tact the incentive to make servers as cost effective as possible.
I’m not sure if such a means-tested price floor mechanism has ever been used in the past, so idk how well this would work.
Looks like a self-enforcing tax rate (comparable to price floor) has at least been proposed:
From https://plurality.net/read/5-7/