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Last year, Black Friday saw another big boom — cookie stuffing — marking a sharp increase in fraudulent ad impressions. Confiant found a cookie-stuffing campaign running across multiple programmatic ad platforms around Black Friday. What is Cookie Stuffing? What did that teach us?
After being buffeted by cookie deprecation, declining search traffic, programmatic devaluation, brand safety blocklists, and various other regulations and platform changes that have made business on the open web more precarious, it’s no wonder publishers are seeking stability. Consider the cautionary tale of adnetwork Rocket Fuel.
Index itself was born in 2015 out of Casale Media, an adnetwork that Casale founded as a teenager around the turn of the millennium with some help from his father, an electrical engineer. Thus did he sort of “fall into” ad tech. We [will] outlive the cookie.” “You know what’s funny?
Index itself was born in 2015 out of Casale Media, an adnetwork that Casale founded as a teenager around the turn of the millennium with some help from his father, an electrical engineer. Thus did he sort of “fall into” ad tech. We [will] outlive the cookie.” “You know what’s funny?
The term header bidding has been around for a few years now with Google Trends shows that the term sprung onto the scene in the summer of 2015, but only recently publishers have been using the technology as a serious piece of their ad management tech stack. It is also a form of dynamic allocation for third-party adnetworks.
Let’s take a quick peek into their previous and ongoing ad campaigns to understand how exactly they plan to stand out in the competitive landscape. Overall, the campaign was able to deliver engaging, likable, and most importantly, informative ads across several channels (including the NYC subway!)
At the time, as Brian tells Marty in this panoramic episode, 24/7 had three business lines: an ad server (Open Adstream), adnetwork and search ads business. Open Adstream was wired in as well, and the value to clients was an ability to see across adnetworks, and later real-time impressions.
At the time, as Brian tells Marty in this panoramic episode, 24/7 had three business lines: an ad server (Open Adstream), adnetwork and search ads business. Open Adstream was wired in as well, and the value to clients was an ability to see across adnetworks, and later real-time impressions.
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