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Digiday+ Research: A guide to the top 10 ID alternatives for publishers

Digiday

Identity technologies are the backbone of programmatic advertising, which has been dependent on tracking user data and third-party cookies for decades. In fact, most non-premium publishers depend on ad targeting through third-party cookies for over 80% of their ad revenue. Deep dives into the IDs.

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The WIR: Netflix Buys Rights to NFL Games, Dentsu Launches a Specialised Retail Media Unit, and M6+ Goes Live in France

VideoWeek

The biggest of these came earlier this year, when Netflix acquired rights to wrestling brand WWE’s flagship show Raw in the US, and all of its content in international markets. But these factors haven’t been enough to counter falling social traffic and a relatively tough ad market for publishers.

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How Third-Party Cookies Elimination Will Affect Programmatic Ecosystem

Adtelligent

If the information lines up, the browser sends the relevant cookies together with the request. The first-party and third-party cookies are both data files that the web browser saves to the user’s computer. The website that user visits directly creates and stores first-party cookies.

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Weekly Roundup: Post-Cookie Insights for Publishers, GDPR Impact on Global Businesses, and More

Automatad Inc.

Their first insight revealed that companies that targeted EU markets saw a reduction in profits by 8%, whereas sales decreased by 2%. As small-to-medium businesses suffered, big tech took the opportunity to consolidate its market share, thereby offsetting the cost of developing GDPR compliant technology.

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Why we care about adtech: The complete guide

Martech

The boom for marketing technology has not left behind advertising technology, or adtech, but the digital acceleration wrought by the COVID pandemic has sped things up more. But, there is another reason marketers are taking a fresh look at these technologies. How is adtech changing the marketing landscape? What is adtech?

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3 future-proofing strategies for Google’s third-party cookie crackdown

Martech

Google’s decision to phase out third-party cookies follows a larger market trend — Safari and Firefox deprecated cookies years ago — driven by consumer privacy concerns and mounting regulations. Regulations such as the EU’s GDPR and California’s CCPA force marketers to be more transparent with our cookie-dropping process.

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Google Privacy Sandbox: What Does It Mean for the Future of Targeted Ads?

Single Grain

However, despite the collaborative approach taken by Google and the lengthy proposed timeline for finding a replacement for third-party cookies that suits individual users, digital advertising and publishers, the announcement has been met with some skepticism and trepidation. Chrome is the most popular browser on the market.

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