This week's review of ad fraud and quality in the digital advertising space.
"Ad spending on connected TV (CTV) has accelerated dramatically as people spend more time at home," wrote Ivan Markman, Chief Business Officer of Verizon Media in this AdExchanger op-ed. "CTV traffic is lucrative for publishers, but can also attract fraud."
The piece highlights several OTT/CTV ad fraud schemes uncovered this year — including DiCaprio and Monarch. "While fraudsters will always follow the money, the industry needs to combat a handful of issues in the rapidly expanding CTV category," the piece adds.
In this podcast, eMarketer speaks with Johnny Ryan, senior fellow at the Irish Council for Civil Liberties and the Open Markets Institute, about "why real-time bidding as it's currently executed has personal data protection problems."
In this piece, AdExchanger notes that more mobile app publishers are testing in-app bidding. "But the path to wider adoption of in-app programmatic auctions will be different than on the web, in part because of the long-established dynamics between app publishers and their partners, the emergence of different standards in apps vs. web and the fact that mobile technology is very different from web technology," wrote AdExchanger.
Digiday writes that the "free, ad-supported streaming TV wars" are heating up with Amazon and Pluto TV making recent updates. "That burgeoning battleground 'looks like what we saw in the early ’90s with the beginning of the cable ecosystem,'" an unnamed media executive said to Digiday.
"The erosion of U.S. ad spending continues to moderate, falling at its lowest rate of decline in July since the economic effects of the pandemic began manifesting earlier this year," wrote MediaPost. U.S. ad volume declined 13.9% vs. July 2019, per MediaPost, citing its U.S. Ad Market Tracker, "a collaboration of MediaPost and Standard Media Index."
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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.”