Topic

Identity

  • The Big Story Podcast

    The Big Story: Cleaning Up Fingerprinting

    Fingerprinting, an alternative to third-party cookies, uses a constellation of browser signals to identify a person. The browsers don’t like it, but can they actually stamp it out? Plus: Advertising will grow, albeit slowly, in 2023, according to recent ad agency forecasts.

  • The Big Story Podcast

    The Big Story: Playing In Android’s Sandbox

    Android has a Privacy Sandbox, too, and it’s going into open beta next year. Learn why this initiative isn’t generating the same ruckus as its close Chrome cousin, which is being hashed out at the W3C. Plus: a rundown on transparency (or the lack thereof) and the related data land grab in CTV.

  • The Big Story Podcast

    The Big Story: Political Advertising Through The Midterm Elections

    Political advertising is in full swing for the US midterm elections. We go deep into where candidates are spending their digital ad dollars and how they’re using data, with special guest Grace Briscoe, who oversees some 850 ad campaigns as head of political business for Basis.

  • Dan Taylor, VP of global ads at Google, speaks with AdExchanger executive editor Sarah Sluis at Programmatic I/O 2022 in New York City.

    Google Swears It’s Not Bluffing About Quitting Cookies

    Google isn’t bluffing about quitting its third-party cookie habit. That’s because consumer concerns about data privacy and pressure from regulators around the globe have left Google with no choice but to discontinue third-party cookie usage in Chrome, said Dan Taylor, VP of global ads at Google, at AdExchanger Programmatic I/O conference in New York City on Monday.

  • Tara DeZao, director of product marketing, MarTech and AdTech, at Pega.

    MADTech Time Machine: What The Future Looks Like Without Third-Party Cookies

    Google Topics is Google’s proposed replacement, which takes us back in time to broad, interest-based segmented targeting. This means brands are about to return to the “bad old days” of marketing, when many audiences all saw the same message. And this one-message-fits-most approach doesn’t fix what’s fundamentally broken in MADTech: the consumer experience, writes Tara DeZao, director of product marketing, MarTech and AdTech, at Pega.

  • Drew Stein, CEO, Audigent

    Clean Rooms May Not Be As “Clean” As Advertisers Think

    Clean rooms are riding a wave of momentum as the ad industry looks for ways to use aggregated, anonymized data sets to predict audience identity. Yet, despite a catchy name, clean rooms aren’t necessarily as “clean” as they promise to be, writes Drew Stein, CEO of Audigent.

  • The Google Buy-In SDA Needs?; No Shortage Of TikTok Rivals

    Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here. Defining Moments The IAB Tech Lab introduced Seller-Defined Audiences (SDA) in February as a post-cookie, post-ATT option for publishers to create targetable impressions without sending retargetable cookies or device IDs to DSPs. But standardizing contextual data taxonomies can be difficult, and the buy […]

  • Dynamic Yield’s new parent company, Mastercard, is no stranger to ad tech acquisitions.

    The Ad Tech Company That Keeps Getting Acquired By Brands

    Personalization platform Dynamic Yield has the distinction of having been acquired by not one but two large brands. McDonald’s bought the company in 2019 and then sold it to Mastercard late last year. “I guess this is just our destiny,” said Ori Bauer, Dynamic Yield’s CEO.

  • Ian Trider, VP of RTB platform operations at Basis Technologies.

    Targeting Means More Than Just User IDs

    Ad tech must quit its addiction to user IDs and instead start focusing on how we can innovate in other areas: audience targeting, managing frequency and improving measurement (especially conversion attribution). Meanwhile, contextual and geo-based targeting are a great way to reach an audience and get better than expected ROI on campaigns, writes Ian Trider, VP of RTB platform operations at Basis Technologies.

  • lawsuit

    The FTC Sues Kochava For ‘Selling’ Sensitive Location Data

    The FTC sued Kochava on Monday for allegedly selling visitation data tied to abortion clinics, mental health facilities, places of worship, domestic abuse shelters and other sensitive locations.

  • Marshall Erwin, chief security officer, Mozilla

    Inside Mozilla’s Anti-Tracking Crusade

    While Chrome dallies on the third-party cookie question, Firefox keeps releasing new anti-tracking features. Marshall Erwin, Mozilla’s chief security officer, dishes on everything from cracking down on fingerprinting to its unlikely collaboration with Meta on privacy-preserving attribution technology.

  • Lauren Littlejohn, Director of Data Science and Research, 84.51

    DTC Data Isn’t Enough To Fully Inform Retail Advertising – That’s Where Loyalty Programs Come In

    Many brands, startups and well-known CPGs are missing the more effective retailer data sets at their disposal: loyalty programs, writes Lauren Littlejohn, director of data science and research at 84.51°.

  • Waze On Why Location-Based Ads Don’t Have To Be Creepy

    Waze, which was acquired by Google in 2013, now has 140 million monthly active users across the globe. Waze does serve ads based on real-time location, but the company refers to this as contextual because the ads are based on wherever a given device is in the moment, rather than any meaningful connections or patterns about a particular user.

  • Jeff White, CEO, Gravy Analytics

    Is Your Data Usable?

    Marketers today have many data sources available to them, giving them the option to tailor data sets based on their specific needs. Whether it’s for audience segmentation or business operations, it can be tempting to buy the biggest data set available. However, it’s important that marketers think twice before diving in, especially when it comes to location data, writes Jeff White, CEO of Gravy Analytics.

  • Is Netflix Losing On Games?; Nielsen Gets Territorial

    Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here. Games Or Gains? Gaming on Netflix isn’t taking off. That’s hardly surprising – you may very well not even have known Netflix has gaming. And that’s a problem for Netflix, which is looking to increase its subscriber base (or at least keep existing subscribers […]

  • Bacon: The Game

    The App Stores Think Bacon And Bank Heists Are The Same Thing

    What does a bloody third-person shooter game about robbing banks at gunpoint have in common with a hyper-casual game that involves flipping a strip of cartoon bacon from a skillet to try and make it land on random objects? The answer: Not much, but both are classified as “action” games, according to Apple and Google in their respective app stores.

  • AdExchanger’s Comic Caption Contest Winner: Paul Gubbins

    A weekly comic strip from AdExchanger.com that highlights the digital advertising ecosystem… Well, the votes are in for AdExchanger’s 2022 comic caption contest – and we’ve got a winner. Congratulations to Paul Gubbins for making us chuckle, and thanks to everyone for submitting and voting. And Paul, we love dad jokes around here, so, well done. […]

  • AdExchanger's Caption Contest: It's Time To Vote!

    We hosted a comic caption contest this past week – and AdExchanger readers, you really delivered. Thanks to everyone who submitted a caption. Now it’s time to crown the winner. But although you’ve got until 2024 before Google phases out third-party cookies in Chrome, we need you to vote on your favorite caption by 4 […]

  • data leakage

    Concerns About Advertising Using Health Data Are Rising. Where Does HIPAA Apply?

    The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) is the most mature and comprehensive health data protection law in the US. (It passed in 1996.) But does this patient data protection law apply to data-driven advertising and online data collection? The answer is yes and no.

  • Industry Reaction To Google’s Third-Party Cookie Delay: ‘Depends How You Feel About Purgatory’

    Google’s decision to kick the can on cookie deprecation even further down the road to 2024 did not come as a shock to many in the digital advertising industry. The longer runway will give advertisers and publishers more time to test post-third-party-cookie solutions. But despite the temptation to procrastinate, publishers and tech vendors told AdExchanger they don’t anticipate straying too far from the road maps they’d already established to meet the previous 2023 deadline.

  • Comic: Two More Years

    A weekly comic strip from AdExchanger.com that highlights the digital advertising ecosystem…

  • The Big Story Podcast

    The Big Story: The Lingering Third-Party Cookie

    The expiration date for third-party cookies has been extended for another year. We talk through what the delay will mean for ad tech. Plus, an entire corner of the LUMAscape now exists within the Tremor-Amobee deal, the ultimate example in ad tech consolidation.

  • Google is postponing its deadline for the phaseout of third-party cookies in Chrome by a year, until the second half of 2024.

    Google Delays The End Of Third-Party Cookies (Again), From 2023 To The End Of 2024

    Procrastinators are being given a gift (of sorts): Google is postponing its deadline for the phaseout of third-party cookies in Chrome by a year, until the second half of 2024.

  • Moovit's location-based in-app ad platform

    Location Data Is The Main Driver For Transit App Moovit’s New Ad Platform

    Advertisers love a captive audience, and there are few audiences more captive than mass-transit riders. So it was perhaps inevitable that Intel-owned urban mobility app Moovit would launch an ad platform. Moovit’s advertising service is live for advertisers in Latin America, Italy and Israel, and the company plans to roll it out everywhere its app is used.

  • It’s Time For Another AdExchanger Comic Caption Contest!

    🏆 We’re hosting our next comic caption contest. 🏆 Submit your caption idea by 5 p.m. ET on Tuesday, July 25, for the chance to win a free ticket to Programmatic I/O New York in October.

  • Comic: Ignoring The Third-Party Cookie Deadline

    A weekly comic strip from AdExchanger.com that highlights the digital advertising ecosystem…  

  • How One Indie Agency Is Using Automation To Avoid The Pain Of Manual Reporting

    Ad agencies are understaffed and their clients – small businesses in particular – often don’t have the time or the technical background to sift through reams of campaign data. And so, increasingly, they’re turning to automation to cut down on the more tedious and time-consuming aspects of account management. Tag, an independent agency based in Iowa, uses a suite of automated reporting tools, including from Basis Technologies, to communicate cross-platform campaign metrics to its clients.

  • Comic: What's your pick?

    A weekly comic strip from AdExchanger that highlights the digital advertising ecosystem…

  • Pandora tested Dentsu's Contextual Intelligence tool during the 2022 Valentine's Day season.

    Dentsu Builds Proprietary Contextual Targeting Tool

    As clients look for alternatives to third-party cookies, ad agency Dentsu can steer them to its in-house Contextual Intelligence tool, which launched today. Although contextual targeting is often considered inferior to demographic or behavioral targeting, it can drive performance. Jewelry retailer Pandora piloted the tool during the 2022 Valentine’s Day season. Ads placed using the solution represented 2% of campaign spend, but drove 36% of revenue, a 24x return on investment.

  • Madan Sundararaju, vice president of the M&E sector at Capgemini Americas.

    Traditional Media Players Can Become Data-Driven. Here’s How

    Personalization – paired with effective measurement – has enabled marketers to see and understand results, ultimately driving them to spend more. Madan Sundararaju, vice president of the M&E sector at Capgemini Americas, writes on how traditional media platforms can adapt to these trends and increase their share of ad revenue.

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Must Read

AdExchanger Senior Editors Anthony Vargas and Alyssa Boyle.

POSSIBLE 2026: AdExchanger's Hot Takes

AdExchanger Senior Editors Alyssa Boyle and Anthony Vargas share their takeaways from three days chatting about agentic AI at POSSIBLE.

Reddit Reports A 75% Boost In Q1 Ad Revenue As It Reaches For 100 Million Daily US Users

Generative AI search has pushed traffic off a cliff across most of the internet, but not on social platforms. Reddit included.

POSSIBLE 2026: Can AI Help Agencies Finally Break Down Those Silos?

Domenic Venuto, indie agency Horizon Media’s chief product and data officer, sat down with AdExchanger during POSSIBLE at the Fontainebleau in Miami to unpack the role of AI in today’s media and advertising landscape.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Google Touts Its AI Ad Tech Adoption And New AI Max Features

Google announced new features and ad types for AI Max, its AI-based bidding product for search and shopping or sponsored product ads. The company also touted “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers using AI Max.

Hand pressing blue AI button on keyboard. Digital collage of artificial intelligence interface.

Meta’s Ad Machine Is Purring, So Why Did Its Stock Drop?

Meta’s Q1 call sounded like an AI and hardware pitch, but under the hood it was still about one thing: investing in AI to squeeze more money out of its ads business.

Alphabet Exceeds $100 Billion In Q1 And Its Profits Almost Doubled

Alphabet earned $109.9 billion in Q1 this year, up from $90.2 billion a year ago. And that’s not even the truly gobsmacking number.