This blog series provides a weekly summary highlighting some of the key takeaways as the programmatic industry adopts ads.txt, the IAB-led anti-ad fraud initiative.
Pixalate has also made available for download the full list of publishers with ads.txt implemented, which also gets updated weekly.
Ads.txt adoption reached some new highs this week:
Here are the latest ads.txt adoption figures, as of March 26, 2018.
As of April 2, 2018, 342,305 publishers have implemented ads.txt.
This represents an increase of 43,312 compared to last week.
According to Pixalate’s research, the total number of publishers with ads.txt was 89,638 as of January 1, 2018.
Over 250,000 new publishers have implemented ads.txt since then — representing a rise of about 282% during Q1.
Of the top 1,000 sites based on programmatic advertising volume (the “Pixalate Top 1,000”), 725 sites have implemented ads.txt — or 72.50%.
This represents an increase of 23 new publishers since last week.
This number is up from 571 on January 1, representing a year-to-date rise of 26.97%.
Of the top 5,000 sites based on programmatic advertising volume (the “Pixalate Top 5,000”), 3,467 sites have implemented ads.txt — or 69.34%.
This indicates that an additional 119 sites within the Pixalate Top 5,000 implemented ads.txt in the past week.
This number is up from 2,355 on January 1, representing a year-to-date rise of 47.22%.
As of this writing, 350 Alexa Top 1,000 publishers have implemented ads.txt — or 35%.
This number is up from 220 on January 1, representing a year-to-date rise of 59.09%
Last week, Pixalate measured 344 Alexa Top 1,000 publishers as having implemented ads.txt. Publishers can move in and out of these top rankings.
As of this writing, 1,567 Alexa Top 5,000 publishers have implemented ads.txt — or 31.34%.
This number is up from 1,013 on January 1, representing a year-to-date rise of 54.69%.
Last week, Pixalate measured 1,527 Alexa Top 5,000 publishers as having implemented ads.txt. Publishers can move in and out of these top rankings.
You can download the full list of publishers with ads.txt here:
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Per the MRC, “'Fraud' is not intended to represent fraud as defined in various laws, statutes and ordinances or as conventionally used in U.S. Court or other legal proceedings, but rather a custom definition strictly for advertising measurement purposes. Also per the MRC, “‘Invalid Traffic’ is defined generally as traffic that does not meet certain ad serving quality or completeness criteria, or otherwise does not represent legitimate ad traffic that should be included in measurement counts. Among the reasons why ad traffic may be deemed invalid is it is a result of non-human traffic (spiders, bots, etc.), or activity designed to produce fraudulent traffic.”