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Ever since Google Chrome announced in January 2020 that it’ll be shutting off support for third-party cookies in the next few years, companies operating in the programmatic advertising industry have been scrambling to find reliable and effective alternatives to continue operating.
In the early days of programmatic advertising, adtargeting was limited to the context of the webpage and information about the user from the user-agent string (e.g., Then, in the mid- to late-2000s when real-time bidding (RTB) was introduced, companies started utilizing web cookies to identify individuals across different websites.
Ever since GDPR was rolled out in Europe back in 2016, the rules for how marketers can collect and use data have been getting stricter and stricter, but the real hammer blow will hit next year. Google is following the lead of Apple and Mozilla, which already block those kinds of cookies in their Safari and Firefox browsers.
Seventy-five percent of publisher respondents to Digiday’s survey said they use data-driven personalization for ad experiences. They placed classification tags on The Times’ content to further identify reader demographics and interests, allowing marketers to tailor ads accordingly. Reach , a U.K.-based
With e-commerce sales soaring in recent years, thanks in part to pandemic shutdowns, and the impending death of the third-party cookie driving a need for new data collection capabilities, more marketers are turning to natural language processing (NLP) and data-driven personalization to automate customer service and gather data for adtargeting.
The bill specifies that a platform or provider cannot provide an advertiser or third party with this data, and they may not target, optimize, or analyze advertising on the basis of it. The Banning Surveillance Advertising Act defines some examples of contextual information that it does not prohibit for adtargeting: .
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