radioz said:Non-generic typos and spyware are another thing though. I doubt that many legitimate companies want ads delivered by methods that the customer never intentionally initiated and whose delivery is likely to be highly irritating. I suspect that I'd remember you well and make sure that I shopped the competition instead! I know that a lot of people here likely have TM misspellings but if nothing else, I sure wouldn't want my ad there if I was selling a legitimate product.
Well, i think you not understood how modern day direct marketing companies operate, even fortune 500 ones.
Every week, i receive spam fax advertisements from Dell - i'm lucky to use Winfax instead of a real fax machine, otherwise, i will be wasting 5 cents on thermal paper each time Dell sends me a spam.
Their strategy: saturate the market with their ads.
Consumers are funny creatures, a spam is only a spam when you have no wish to buy, but if you happen to be looking for a notebook, that Dell spam with the promotion code becomes a god sent gift, and you will forget all previous grievances.
The only way that PPC ads will be endangered, is by legislation.