This event has concluded. Read the recap and watch the recording here.
Pixalate recently hosted a webinar featuring experts from RhythmOne, Centro, and InMobi to discuss best practices for reducing invalid traffic ("IVT") in mobile apps. You can download the webinar on demand here.
Featured speakers included:
See the full panel here:
"Invalid traffic is an active adversary, where fraudsters are looking to make a profit by stealing marketers' campaign dollars," said Centro's Naseer. "Criminal actors are highly incentivized to constantly find new ways to make bot traffic look legitimate. There are so many active steps that need to be taken to proactively discover every new way that suspicious inventory could possibly come to exist."
"The industry has moved in a good direction over the last year," said InMobi's Martensson. "[But] on the brand safety side, there's still a way to go for mobile in-app."
He noted that marketers need more visibility into the content inside of an app — not just the content displayed on the app stores.
"On mobile devices, we can assume one user per device, which you can't on a desktop," said RhythmOne's Tella. "Essentially, you can do user fingerprinting on mobile devices and generalize behaviors and trends, and when that trend is not followed, the risk of IVT goes up. "
Tella also noted that mobile in-app IVT tends to have a "longer lifespan" because it often is baked into the app itself.
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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.”