Look, I'm not an enthusiast in tagging specificity but can we please start now to use (Brand) as a category?
EG: Bad_Dragon_(Brand), Lovense_(Brand), HoneyPlayBox_(Brand)?
Rationale for this is basically to clarify that they are commercial, company-funded advertisements. Paid-for Disclosures are part of the legal framework in the US, that needs to be up-front and center to begin with in Animations in particular, but it's noteworthy that comics don't have this standard either. I'm not expecting us as a community to suddenly grow a sense of consumer ethics here, but there are law requirements artists should be starting to learn.
If these brands are going to invade our spaces, then we need to start demanding clarity and chasing them into the rigid legal structures of advertising law, period dot. This is enough of a problem now that two outside sex toy companies (read as: not even started or owned by furry fandom community members) are now muscling in and purchasing advertisement directly from "content creators". This circumvents adblocking and other forms of customized web experience, and I think personally it doesn't belong. But, allowing for it means appropriate tag hygiene, and this is going to become more of a problem if we don't all get nuked off the internet.
To reflect this increasingly evident change in the fandom's content creation community, I'm asking E621's community to consider the idea of a Brand Category distinct in the meta and listed above other categories; such as how "Disney" and other copyright holder companies are often given such special privileges. I also think copyright/trademark/etc holding brands like Disney, Pixar, Nintendo, etc should be clarified in this manner. Separate the brand from the rest of fandom identity at this level for clarity and to help drive home the point that artists are being paid for a service by larger company entities and not private individuals.
That's the thought I have personally, I hope the discussion is respectful here. We are increasingly allowing advertisements to dictate the terms of actual artwork itself now, and I think that means we need to mature our thinking about that relationship.
Thanks for your consideration.
[Jan 4, 2025] Update 1: My husband pointed out that E621 has a conflict of interest policy about hosting advertisements for other sex toy companies. I think this conversation is important for Bad Dragon as well? It's interesting as a consideration. https://e621.net/help/advertising
Updated