Scientific Alert: Advertisers Are Invading Our Dreams

Scientists are warning about a hidden threat to our dreams as advertisers employ advanced techniques to subtly and insidiously infiltrate our subconscious, influencing our desires and behaviors.
The World of Dreams: Marketing’s New Battleground
In an era where advertising is everywhere, a new frontier is emerging: our dreams. Over 30 leading scientists have revealed that companies are attempting to manipulate our subconscious through what is known as Targeted Dream Incubation (TDI).
When Dreams Turn Into Advertisements
A striking example is Coors, a beer brand that tried to infiltrate sleepers’ subconscious by embedding images of their product. By playing an 8-hour audio track about Coors beer, the company hoped consumers would wake up with an overwhelming desire to buy their beer.
The Dangers of Such Practices
This raises significant ethical questions and could impact our well-being. Our dreams play a crucial role in our health, predicting how we adapt to challenges and concerns, including trauma and depression. Scientists are urging us to take this type of marketing very seriously.
Major companies, including Coors, Burger King, and Xbox, have already experimented with this, and without clear boundaries and regulations, our dreams could be manipulated further without our consent to influence our buying behavior.
Protecting Our Subconscious
The open letter was penned by top scientists in dream science and technology, including Robert Stickgold and Antonio Zadra, authors of When Brains Dream, and Adam Haar, co-developer of TDI tools. They advocate for strict regulation and warn against the potential dangers of this technology.
It’s easy to envision a world where the 40 million smart speakers in American bedrooms become tools for passive, unconscious, and nocturnal advertising, with or without our permission. The role of science should be to enlighten and protect, not manipulate and exploit. Therefore, it’s crucial to protect our subconscious and establish clear regulations to control this new form of marketing.