This week's review of ad fraud and quality in the digital advertising space.
"IAB Tech Lab has announced it is shutting down DigiTrust, one of the forerunners to the various contemporary industry initiatives where ad-tech vendors collaborate to reduce the need for hundreds of software, or cookie, syncs any time an ad-supported webpage loads," reported Adweek.
"Nearly a third of all online ad traffic in China last year was fake or invalid and cost the marketing industry an estimated 28 billion RMB, a study by advertising technology company Miaozhen Systems has found," reported WARC.
Agencies must now prepare for the end of the cookie, wrote AdExchanger in a case study examining how Digitas is doing just that. Per the article, Digitas is encouraging clients to think about ways to organize and use their own first-party data.
"[Digitas' SVP & Head of Precision Media Liane] Nadeau feels strongly that brands need to be the stewards of their own data," wrote AdExchanger. "Agencies like ours are absolutely able to support them, but at the end of the day, brands need to own their data," Nadeau said to AdExchanger.
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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.”