Tag Archives: Ads

Exclusive: Brands blast Twitter for ads next to child pornography accounts

Sept 28 (Reuters) – Some major advertisers including Dyson, Mazda, Forbes and PBS Kids have suspended their marketing campaigns or removed their ads from parts of Twitter because their promotions appeared alongside tweets soliciting child pornography, the companies told Reuters.

DIRECTV and Thoughtworks also told Reuters late on Wednesday they have paused their advertising on Twitter.

Brands ranging from Walt Disney Co (DIS.N), NBCUniversal (CMCSA.O) and Coca-Cola Co (KO.N) to a children’s hospital were among more than 30 advertisers that appeared on the profile pages of Twitter accounts peddling links to the exploitative material, according to a Reuters review of accounts identified in new research about child sex abuse online from cybersecurity group Ghost Data.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Some of tweets include key words related to “rape” and “teens,” and appeared alongside promoted tweets from corporate advertisers, the Reuters review found. In one example, a promoted tweet for shoe and accessories brand Cole Haan appeared next to a tweet in which a user said they were “trading teen/child” content.

“We’re horrified,” David Maddocks, brand president at Cole Haan, told Reuters after being notified that the company’s ads appeared alongside such tweets. “Either Twitter is going to fix this, or we’ll fix it by any means we can, which includes not buying Twitter ads.”

In another example, a user tweeted searching for content of “Yung girls ONLY, NO Boys,” which was immediately followed by a promoted tweet for Texas-based Scottish Rite Children’s Hospital. Scottish Rite did not return multiple requests for comment.

In a statement, Twitter spokesperson Celeste Carswell said the company “has zero tolerance for child sexual exploitation” and is investing more resources dedicated to child safety, including hiring for new positions to write policy and implement solutions.

She added that Twitter is working closely with its advertising clients and partners to investigate and take steps to prevent the situation from happening again.

Twitter’s challenges in identifying child abuse content were first reported in an investigation by tech news site The Verge in late August. The emerging pushback from advertisers that are critical to Twitter’s revenue stream is reported here by Reuters for the first time.

Like all social media platforms, Twitter bans depictions of child sexual exploitation, which are illegal in most countries. But it permits adult content generally and is home to a thriving exchange of pornographic imagery, which comprises about 13% of all content on Twitter, according to an internal company document seen by Reuters.

Twitter declined to comment on the volume of adult content on the platform.

Ghost Data identified the more than 500 accounts that openly shared or requested child sexual abuse material over a 20-day period this month. Twitter failed to remove more than 70% of the accounts during the study period, according to the group, which shared the findings exclusively with Reuters.

Reuters could not independently confirm the accuracy of Ghost Data’s finding in full, but reviewed dozens of accounts that remained online and were soliciting materials for “13+” and “young looking nudes.”

After Reuters shared a sample of 20 accounts with Twitter last Thursday, the company removed about 300 additional accounts from the network, but more than 100 others still remained on the site the following day, according to Ghost Data and a Reuters review.

Reuters then on Monday shared the full list of more than 500 accounts after it was furnished by Ghost Data, which Twitter reviewed and permanently suspended for violating its rules, said Twitter’s Carswell on Tuesday.

In an email to advertisers on Wednesday morning, ahead of the publication of this story, Twitter said it “discovered that ads were running within Profiles that were involved with publicly selling or soliciting child sexual abuse material.”

Andrea Stroppa, the founder of Ghost Data, said the study was an attempt to assess Twitter’s ability to remove the material. He said he personally funded the research after receiving a tip about the topic.

Twitter’s transparency reports on its website show it suspended more than 1 million accounts last year for child sexual exploitation.

It made about 87,000 reports to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a government-funded non-profit that facilitates information sharing with law enforcement, according to that organization’s annual report.

“Twitter needs to fix this problem ASAP, and until they do, we are going to cease any further paid activity on Twitter,” said a spokesperson for Forbes.

“There is no place for this type of content online,” a spokesperson for carmaker Mazda USA said in a statement to Reuters, adding that in response, the company is now prohibiting its ads from appearing on Twitter profile pages.

A Disney spokesperson called the content “reprehensible” and said they are “doubling-down on our efforts to ensure that the digital platforms on which we advertise, and the media buyers we use, strengthen their efforts to prevent such errors from recurring.”

A spokesperson for Coca-Cola, which had a promoted tweet appear on an account tracked by the researchers, said it did not condone the material being associated with its brand and said “any breach of these standards is unacceptable and taken very seriously.”

NBCUniversal said it has asked Twitter to remove the ads associated with the inappropriate content.

CODE WORDS

Twitter is hardly alone in grappling with moderation failures related to child safety online. Child welfare advocates say the number of known child sexual abuse images has soared from thousands to tens of millions in recent years, as predators have used social networks including Meta’s Facebook and Instagram to groom victims and exchange explicit images.

For the accounts identified by Ghost Data, nearly all the traders of child sexual abuse material marketed the materials on Twitter, then instructed buyers to reach them on messaging services such as Discord and Telegram in order to complete payment and receive the files, which were stored on cloud storage services like New Zealand-based Mega and U.S.-based Dropbox, according to the group’s report.

A Discord spokesperson said the company had banned one server and one user for violating its rules against sharing links or content that sexualize children.

Mega said a link referenced in the Ghost Data report was created in early August and soon after deleted by the user, which it declined to identify. Mega said it permanently closed the user’s account two days later.

Dropbox and Telegram said they use a variety of tools to moderate content but did not provide additional detail on how they would respond to the report.

Still the reaction from advertisers poses a risk to Twitter’s business, which earns more than 90% of its revenue by selling digital advertising placements to brands seeking to market products to the service’s 237 million daily active users.

Twitter is also battling in court Tesla CEO and billionaire Elon Musk, who is attempting to back out of a $44 billion deal to buy the social media company over complaints about the prevalence of spam accounts and its impact on the business.

A team of Twitter employees concluded in a report dated February 2021 that the company needed more investment to identify and remove child exploitation material at scale, noting the company had a backlog of cases to review for possible reporting to law enforcement.

“While the amount of (child sexual exploitation content) has grown exponentially, Twitter’s investment in technologies to detect and manage the growth has not,” according to the report, which was prepared by an internal team to provide an overview about the state of child exploitation material on Twitter and receive legal advice on the proposed strategies.

“Recent reports about Twitter provide an outdated, moment in time glance at just one aspect of our work in this space, and is not an accurate reflection of where we are today,” Carswell said.

The traffickers often use code words such as “cp” for child pornography and are “intentionally as vague as possible,” to avoid detection, according to the internal documents. The more that Twitter cracks down on certain keywords, the more that users are nudged to use obfuscated text, which “tend to be harder for (Twitter) to automate against,” the documents said.

Ghost Data’s Stroppa said that such tricks would complicate efforts to hunt down the materials, but noted that his small team of five researchers and no access to Twitter’s internal resources was able to find hundreds of accounts within 20 days.

Twitter did not respond to a request for further comment.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Reporting by Sheila Dang in New York and Katie Paul in Palo Alto; Additional reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles; Editing by Kenneth Li and Edward Tobin

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Snap’s chief business officer Jeremi Gorman to run ads at Netflix

Netflix has found an executive to lead its plan for an ad-supported tier: Snap’s chief business officer and top ad exec, Jeremi Gorman.

Gorman on Tuesday told colleagues at Snap that she was leaving to join Netflix along with Peter Naylor, Snap’s vice president of ad sales for the Americas, according to two people familiar with the matter. Russ Caditz-Peck, a Snap spokesperson, confirmed the departures.

Both Gorman and Naylor are leaving Snap amid a restructuring of its ads team and layoffs hitting the social media firm this week. Snap plans to cut roughly 20 percent of its workforce starting Wednesday, The Verge earlier reported.

Netflix has had its own rounds of layoffs this year, cutting hundreds of employees and paring back programming after reporting its first subscriber loss in a decade. Now the company is preparing to launch a cheaper tier supported by advertising that could cost between $7–$9 per month and exclude extras, like the ability to download videos.

Kumiko Hidaka, a Netflix spokesperson, confirmed that Gorman will be the company’s President of Worldwide Advertising and that she’ll report to COO Greg Peters. Naylor will lead Netflix’s ad sales organization and report to Gorman. AdAge first reported on the hires.

“Jeremi’s deep experience in running ad businesses and Peter’s background in leading ad sales teams together will be key as we expand membership options for consumers through a new ad-supported offering,” Peters said in a statement.

Read original article here

Tesla threatens to sue critic over ads showing cars hitting mannequins

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MAY 02: Elon Musk attends The 2022 Met Gala Celebrating “In America: An Anthology of Fashion” at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 02, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo/WireImage)

Theo Wargo | Wireimage | Getty Images

Tesla has threatened to sue Dan O’ Dowd, the CEO of Green Hills Software and The Dawn Project, after he created and paid for a national TV ad campaign showing a Tesla vehicle mowing down a kid-sized mannequin on a closed test track. The ad says that the vehicle had engaged Tesla’s advanced driver assistance system, branded “Full Self-Driving.”

In a cease and desist letter, Tesla said this provocative ad amounted to “misinformation about Tesla,” that the “purported tests” in the ad “misuse and misrepresent the capabilities of Tesla’s technology,” and that O’Dowd’s “testing is seriously deceptive and likely fraudulent.”

The Dawn Project campaign went live on August 9th, according to a tweet from O’Dowd.

O’Dowd narrates the ad himself, and says in it: “A hundred thousand Tesla drivers are already using Full Self-Driving on public roads. I’m Dan O’Dowd. I’m a safety engineer. And Tesla Full Self-Driving is the worst commercial software I’ve ever seen — tell Congress to shut it down.”

A spokesperson for O’Dowd told CNBC he spent “seven figures” and the commercial was “airing on hundreds of TV stations reaching over 60% of households in America.” O’Dowd told CNBC The Dawn Project is a privately held tech safety and security education business.

In its cease and desist notice, Tesla said, “It has come to our attention that you, personally, and The Dawn Project have been disparaging Tesla’s commercial interests and disseminating defamatory information to the public regarding the capabilities of Tesla’s Full Self Driving (FSD) (Beta) technology.”

Tesla then demanded that The Dawn Project remove the “Test Track” videos, issue a public retraction, disclose funding for the tests and commercial created by the Dawn Project, and to say whether any regulatory agencies endorsed The Dawn Project’s methodology or results for its tests.

The Washington Post first reported on the cease and desist letter, which was also obtained by CNBC.

The Dawn Project’s ads were widely criticized. Tesla critics said the videos failed to identify serious safety issues with Tesla’s driver assistance systems, while Tesla fans said the test driver appeared to misuse the system to ensure it would collide with the kid-sized mannequin.

After the TV ad went out, some Tesla fans and shareholders devised their own FSD Beta safety tests to prove the cars would avoid hitting children. They enlisted their own kids for these demonstrations and posted videos to YouTube, which later determined the videos went against their “harmful content” policies, and removed them.

On Wednesday, Musk said in a tweet, “Early beta has many known issues. The reason we release it to a limited number of cars is to discover unknown issues.”

On Thursday, Tesla CEO Elon Musk tweeted that O’Dowd is “batsh– crazy,” using emoji to convey the insult.

O’Dowd said in a call with CNBC on Thursday, “I don’t care what he calls me. When is he going to acknowledge and fix the bugs that are in their system? These problems have been demonstrated. What he should do now is to disable FSD.”

Tesla markets its driver assistance systems in the U.S. in tiers.

Autopilot is the standard offering shipped in all new Tesla vehicles. Tesla sells a premium option called Full Self-Driving (or FSD) for $12,000 up front or $199 per month. The price for FSD is set to increase to $15,000 in September. 

The automaker allows some drivers access to a program called Full Self-Driving Beta if they attain a high score on the company’s in-vehicle test. None of these systems make Tesla cars autonomous, or safe to use without a driver behind the steering wheel, ready to brake and attentive to the road at all times. Tesla owner’s manuals caution drivers that the systems do not make their cars self-driving.

The California DMV has alleged that Tesla engages in false advertising where its driver assistance systems are concerned.

The federal vehicle safety regulatory agency, NHTSA, has multiple investigations underway evaluating the safety of Tesla’s driver assistance systems from Autopilot to FSD and FSD Beta.



Read original article here

Gurman: Apple Planning to Show Ads in Maps App Starting Next Year

Apple plans to begin showing search ads in its Maps app on the iPhone starting next year, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman.

“I believe the engineering work is already underway to launch search ads in the Apple Maps app, and we should begin to see it be implemented sometime next year,” wrote Gurman, in the subscriber-only version of his “Power On” newsletter today.

Ads in the Apple Maps app would not be the traditional banner ads that you see on websites, but rather paid search results. For example, a fast food chain could pay Apple to appear near the top of the results when a user searches for “burgers” or “fries.” Many similar apps already offer search ads, including Google Maps, Waze, and Yelp.

Apple already displays search ads in the App Store, allowing developers to pay to promote their apps to users who search for relevant keywords. Apple is also planning to show ads in the App Store’s “Today” tab and in a new “You Might Also Like” section at the bottom of app listings, while banner ads are displayed in Apple’s News and Stocks apps.

Last week, Gurman said Apple is planning to significantly expand its advertising business over time. In his newsletter, he said that Apple’s advertising division is generating about $4 billion in revenue annually and that Apple’s advertising chief Todd Teresi wants to increase that figure to at least $10 billion per year over time.

Related Stories

Apple Has Internally Tested Injecting Ads Into Maps App Search Results [Updated]

Apple is aiming to triple its ad revenue from $4 billion per year to double-digit figures by expanding its advertising to more apps, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.
Currently, Apple ads appear in App Store app searches, where developers pay for promoted spots in results, as well as more standard ads that appear in the News and Stocks apps. Apple also generates revenue with commercials…

Apple Introducing New App Store Ads to Help Users Discover More Apps

Apple today announced it is expanding its offering of how developers can promote their apps on the App Store, helping developers expand their reach and making it easier to discover more of what the App Store has to offer.
Until now, Apple has offered developers two ad opportunities on the App Store: in the Search tab and within the Search results page. Both ad placements have been a…

Updated Apple Maps Design Expanding to Israel, Palestine and Saudi Arabia

Apple has been working to expand its updated Apple Maps app to additional countries, and has started testing the revamped design in Israel, Palestine, and Saudi Arabia, according to Maps expert Justin O’Beirne.
It will be the sixteenth expansion of the updated Apple Maps design since the update first rolled out in September 2018. Apple in 2020 completed its U.S. rollout, and has since…

Apple Expands Revamped Apple Maps Experience to New Countries

The revamped and improved Apple Maps experience is now live for users in France, New Zealand, and Monaco, according to Apple Maps enthusiast Justin O’Beirne. The new Apple Maps experience brings with it more accurate and faster navigation, improved imagery with three-dimensional landmarks and locations, and detailed views of roads, shopping malls, and more. On a related note, according to…

Apple Removes Scam App That Led to Hijacked Facebook Ad Accounts

Apple has removed an app that it was unknowingly hosting on the App Store that scammed Facebook advertisers and led hackers to use advertisers’ ad budgets to run possibly malicious ads on Facebook’s platforms, Business Insider reports.
The app previously ranked highly on the App Store when searching for “Facebook ads manager,” the app used by advertisers to control their presence and ads…

Apple Maps Now Offers Cycling Directions Across All 50 U.S. States

Apple Maps now offers cycling navigation across all 50 U.S. states, allowing users to receive turn-by-turn directions while riding a bike.
Apple Maps cycling directions fully covered 49 U.S. states as of July, according to Apple Maps enthusiast Justin O’Beirne, and cycling directions have since become available in Hawaii for complete nationwide coverage.
Apple Maps offers cycling…

Popular Stories

Camera Upgrades for All iPhone 14 Models: Everything We Know

The iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro models are rumored to feature several important camera upgrades. Unlike color option rumors, reports about upcoming iPhone camera technology tend to be fairly accurate, with camera component supply chains often revealing specific information well ahead of the device’s release date.
iPhone 14 concept render by Ian Zelbo based on purported leaked information In…

Top Stories: iPhone 14 Event Targeted for September 7, iOS 16 Beta 6, and More

It’s not quite official, but it looks like we finally have a date for the big iPhone 14 event, so mark your calendars and read up on some of what we might see at the event.
This week also saw the release of a sixth beta of iOS 16 with continued tweaks as Apple starts to lock things in ahead of the iPhone event and a public release of iOS 16 next month. iPadOS 16 and macOS Ventura likely…

Apple Criticized for ‘Fundamentally Misguided’ Approach to Stage Manager in iPadOS 16

Stage Manager in the iPadOS 16 beta is receiving heavy criticism for being “fundamentally misguided” in its approach to bringing a new level of multitasking to the iPad experience, with some even calling on Apple to delay the feature entirely due to its shortcomings.
Federico Viticci, the founder and editor in chief of MacStories and a prominent member of the Apple community, outlined his…

TikTok’s In-App Browser Reportedly Capable of Monitoring Anything You Type

TikTok’s custom in-app browser on iOS reportedly injects JavaScript code into external websites that allows TikTok to monitor “all keyboard inputs and taps” while a user is interacting with a given website, according to security researcher Felix Krause, but TikTok has reportedly denied that the code is used for malicious reasons.
Krause said TikTok’s in-app browser “subscribes” to all…

Copycat iOS Launcher on Android Surpasses 50 Million Downloads

A popular launcher on the Google Play Store that looks to recreate the iOS experience on Android smartphones has surpassed 50 million downloads as it gets updated with design changes and features coming to the iPhone with iOS 16.
The app is not new to the Google Play Store and has been recreating the iOS experience on Android for the last three years. Starting with iOS 13 and for every…

PSA: Safari Security Flaw ‘Actively Exploited,’ Update Your Apple Devices Now

This week, Apple released critical software updates for Safari which fix a security flaw that exists in the browser across iPhone, iPad, and Mac platforms. Here’s what you need to know.
Specifically, the platform-wide fix is for a vulnerability in Safari’s WebKit engine that Apple believes may have been “actively exploited” in the wild by hackers. The flaw, according to Apple, could…

Apple Planning to Hold iPhone 14 Event on September 7

Apple is aiming to hold its first fall event on Wednesday, September 7, reports Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. The event will focus on the iPhone 14 models and the Apple Watch Series 8.
The standard iPhone 14 models are expected to get few changes, but the iPhone 14 Pro models will include updated camera technology, the removal of the notch in favor of a pill-shaped and hole-punch cutout, an A16…

Read original article here

Tencent looks to short video ads to boost revenue amid gaming slump

Tencent runs the ubiquitous Chinese messaging app WeChat. The company has a short form video feature with in the app and has began to monetize that through video ads in the feed. Tencent said such ads could become a “substantial” source of revenue in the future.

Budrul Chukrut | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Tencent said advertising in its nascent short video platform could become a “substantial” revenue source in the future, even as other areas of its business — such as gaming — face pressure.

The focus on this advertising product from one of China’s biggest technology giant puts it in direct competition with the country’s two leading short video players: ByteDance’s Douyin, the Chinese cousin of TikTok as well as Kuaishou.

On Wednesday, Tencent reported its first ever year-on-year quarterly revenue decline as its gaming business faced headwinds. Tighter tech regulation, Covid’s resurgence and the subsequent economic weakness in China weighed on the overall company.

Tencent runs China’s most popular messaging app called WeChat which has over one billion users. There is a short video platform built within WeChat. Users can scroll through different videos. In July, Tencent for the first time began serving ads to users in that service it calls video accounts.

The company said it will release more video ad inventory this month.

Video ads will eventually grow into a substantial revenue source for us over time.

Martin Lau

President, Tencent

On Wednesday, Tencent spent a large part of the opening of the earnings call explaining the potential of video ads, underscoring how important the revenue stream could be.

“Video accounts has become one of the most popular short video services in China with substantial user engagement,” Martin Lau, president of Tencent, told analysts.

“Strategically, they allow us to expand our ad market share. As advertisers have already been spending aggressively on multiple short-form video platforms, we should be able to capture more advertising budgets.”

Lau said it took five quarters for WeChat Moments, a social feature where users can post pictures, videos and status updates, to reach 1 billion yuan ($147.42 million) in quarterly advertising revenue. He said that Video accounts will reach that goal more quickly given the “current size of traffic and already strong advertiser demand for short form video ads.”

“Video ads will eventually grow into a substantial revenue source for us over time,” Lau said.

Tencent’s online ad revenue in the second quarter fell 18% year-on-year to 18.6 billion Chinese yuan as macroeconomic issues in China led to brands cutting budgets.

The Shenzhen-headquartered company is hoping video ads can help boost the division over the coming quarters.

Competition rises

Tencent’s foray into short video is relatively new and it it is now looking to step up the challenge to TikTok’s Chinese version Douyin as well as Kuaishou.

The market potential could be big.

Revenue from short form video accounts for around 39% of China’s total digital ad revenue, according to data from QuestMobile. It is the biggest single ad revenue category ahead of categories like social networking and news.

Many of China’s technology giants have turned toward short video and livestreaming to unlock new revenue streams.

James Mitchell, Tencent’s chief strategy officer said the revenue potential “per minute of time spent” on video accounts will be higher than Moments.

Companies like Alibaba have tried to use livestreaming and short-form video as a way of generating sales on its e-commerce platform. An influencer might advertise products via video and users can click items in the video to buy.

When asked by one analyst if Tencent will move in this direction, Lau said e-commerce livestreaming is an “opportunity” but it “will take some time.”

Lau said Tencent will need to build up awareness of the video product, then onboard merchants and advertisers.

“We will try to do it on a stage-by-stage basis,” Lau said, referring to the development of video accounts.

Read original article here

Apple ad exec wants to more than double ad revenue with new ads across iOS

Enlarge / Apple’s HQ, as seen in Apple Maps.

Samuel Axon

Apple is looking into significantly ramping up its ads business, according to Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, and has already internally explored adding ads to the iPhone’s Maps app, with other potential expansions also on the horizon.

The shift may be driven in part by a recent change within the company’s reporting structure: Gurman wrote in his email newsletter this week that Apple advertising VP Todd Teresi began reporting directly to Apple services head Eddie Cue a few months back. He also wrote that Teresi plans to increase Apple’s advertising revenue from $4 billion annually to billions in the double digits.

As Gurman notes, advertising is already a part of Apple’s strategy, but it’s limited in scope and to certain places. The most traditional advertisements you’ll see in an Apple-made app are the ones in the Stocks and News apps. There, you’ll see display ads just like those you see on news websites—both outside of stories and inside of them.

Apple also runs a robust ad business within its App Store, allowing developers to pay for prime positions in search results lists. And the company recently ventured into ads within its Apple TV service, but only within Friday Night Baseball.

But there will be new frontiers for Apple’s ads, according to Gurman. For example, in the App Store, ads will expand beyond search results to the curated Today homepage and to individual app listing pages.

And Apple may also bring advertisements to the Podcasts and Books apps, or even expand TV ads beyond sports content with new subscription tiers à la Hulu or Disney+.

Apple has been in the ads business for a long time, in one way or another, but not all of its initiatives in this area have been successful. Back in 2010, Apple introduced iAd, a network that third-party app developers could tap into to run ads within their own applications. Apple discontinued iAd in 2016, and other companies’ ad networks became the go-tos for iPhone and iPad app developers.

More recently, Apple threw a wrench in many of those ad networks’ plans with the introduction of the App Tracking Transparency policy, which required all third-party apps to ask for users’ permission before using certain tracking methods that collected and cross-referenced those users’ data across multiple apps.

Apple’s own apps do not use those specific tracking methods, and so they do not have to display the same permission prompts.

Neither Apple nor the Bloomberg newsletter said whether Apple plans to change course on that as it again expands its own offerings.

Read original article here

Apple reportedly plans to put ads in more apps on your iPhone

iPhone 13 Pro

Source: Apple Inc.

Apple may expand its advertising to more of its first-party apps on the iPhone in an effort to boost revenue, according to Bloomberg

The company currently generates about $4 billion in annual revenue from its ad business but wants to grow the segment into the “double digits,” according to the report.

Apple already shows ads in some apps, like Apple News and Stocks. It also recently announced plans to expand ads in the App Store. Bloomberg said the company is considering ways to add advertising to Apple Maps, for example, which so far has stood out from its competitor, Google Maps, by not showing ads. The report said it’s “likely” that Apple also inserts ads into the stores for Podcasts and Books, too.

An Apple spokesperson wasn’t immediately available to comment on the report.

Meanwhile, Apple has targeted other companies that push ads to iPhone users.

Last year, Apple released an update for iPhones with a new popup that asked users if they wanted to allow apps on their phones to target the user for ads. The privacy feature, called App Tracking Transparency, has upended the behind-the-scenes mechanics of many mobile ads, especially those that confirm whether a purchase or download was made.

It’s clear most iPhone users did opt out and the feature has presented major challenges to companies ranging from Snap to Facebook to Peloton.

The new ads could help Apple squeeze more value out of iPhone users.

Analysts from Needham wrote in an Aug. 3 note that they believe Apple’s next big revenue stream is in advertising.

“AAPL has best-in-class user data,” they said. “If it builds a DSP (demand side platform), AAPL can control how and where its data gets used, and can prevent data leakage outside their Walled Garden.”

The analysts also said they believe Apple is in the early stages of building a new mobile advertising platform. They said they have observed a “notable uptick” in the company’s recruiting efforts for its Ad Platform, and that it was highly visible at the Cannes Lions advertising festival in June.

In Apple’s most recent earnings call, CEO Tim Cook and CFO Luca Maestri said the company’s ads business experienced some Covid-related difficulties, but Cook said it is a “great” discovery tool for app developers who want to promote their apps.

Analysts from Bernstein said Apple’s Services business, which is principally driven by advertising and the App Store, has seen a decelerated growth rate for four consecutive quarters as the App Store has endured a shift in consumer spending.

However, they said they expect Apple’s ad business to grow because of higher ad loads in the App Store.

“Overall, we believe that at least 20% growth for Apple’s overall Advertising segment is attainable over the next few years,” they said.

Read more on Bloomberg.

Read original article here

Apple may soon bring more ads to your iPhone

Apple could eventually bring ads to more of the apps that come pre-installed on your iPhone and other Apple devices, including Maps, Books, and Podcasts. According to a report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple has internally tested search ads in Maps, which could display recommendations when you search for restaurants, stores, or other nearby businesses.

Apple already implements a similar advertising model on the App Store, as developers can pay to have their app promoted on a search page for a particular query, like “puzzle games” or “photo editor.” As noted by Gurman, ads on Maps could work in the same way, with businesses paying to appear at the top of search results when users enter certain search terms.

Gurman believes that Apple could introduce ads to its native Podcasts and Books apps as well. This could potentially allow publishers to place ads in areas within each app, or pay to get their content placed higher in search results. Just like Maps, Podcasts and Books are currently ad-free.

And while the App Store already has ads on the Search tab, Gurman expects Apple to expand ads to the Today tab and app download pages, which tracks with previous reports from 9to5Mac, Apple Insider, and MacRumors. According to 9to5Google, ads on the Today tab will show up as larger cards with the word “Ad” placed beneath the app’s name, while ads on individual app pages will appear highlighted in blue in the “You Might Also Like” section.

Gurman mentions the potential for advertising on Apple TV Plus, too, and says the company could opt to create a lower-priced ad-supported tier, something both Netflix and Disney Plus plan on doing by the end of this year. Right now, Apple TV Plus offers only a $4.99 / month ad-free subscription plan (although it has started showing ads during its Friday Night Baseball livestreams).

Apple first introduced ads on the App Store in 2016, and also displays apps on its Stocks and News apps. Last September, the company started asking users whether they want to enable the Personalized Ads that appear on these apps, in compliance with its own App Tracking Transparency (ATT) policy that cost social platforms billions of dollars.

ATT gives users the option of disabling the tracking tools advertisers use to display targeted ads. It may have contributed to the overall growth of Apple’s advertising sector, as it has left businesses scrambling to reconsider their advertising strategies. According to data that Insider obtained from research firm Omdia, Apple’s advertising business grew 238 percent to $3.7 billion in 2021.

Apple’s move to open up more ad slots on its App Store — and potentially on Maps, Podcasts, and Books — could signal that Apple’s looking to expand its advertising business even more. In May, a report from Insider revealed that Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of services, is reportedly planning to restructure Apple’s services business to direct more attention to streaming and advertising. Apple’s services arm, which includes advertising and its various subscriptions, saw a 12 percent increase in revenue last quarter.

Read original article here

Apple is planning to put ads right in the App Store’s Today tab

Apple is planning to show ads in the App Store’s Today tab and on individual app pages, according to MacRumors, 9to5Mac, and AppleInsider. The two new ad placements will expand upon the ads you can already see in the App Store’s search tab and in search results.

Ads in the Today tab will appear in the larger card format used by other content in that tab, but you’ll see a small blue box with the word “Ad” inside it under the app’s name. Ads in individual app pages will appear under the “You Might Also Like” header that suggests apps related to the one you’re looking at. Like in App Store search, ads on app pages will be highlighted in blue to distinguish them from other recommendations. According to 9to5Mac, ad buyers won’t be able to target specific applications for these ads, but the ads will be relevant to the app they’re shown under.

“Apple Search Ads provides opportunities for developers of all sizes to grow their business,” Apple said in a statement to MacRumors, 9to5Mac, and AppleInsider. “Like our other advertising offerings, these new ad placements are built upon the same foundation—they will only contain content from apps’ approved App Store product pages, and will adhere to the same rigorous privacy standards.” The company plans to begin testing the new ads soon. Apple didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

Apple first started showing ads in App Store search results in 2016 and began asking users for their permission to enable Personalized Ads in September. The new ad spots indicate that Apple is exploring new ways to make money from the App Store and that ads could become a more important pillar for the company as it continues to grow its services business. Unfortunately for us, though, the new ads mean we’re going to have to sift through more annoying blue boxes.

Read original article here

Hulu to accept political candidate and issue ads

Comment

The Disney-backed streaming service Hulu said Wednesday it will start accepting political ads with the same standards that the company uses for its cable networks, opening the door for issue advertising on controversial topics after Democratic groups attacked the company for rejecting ads on abortion and guns.

In a statement, Hulu said that “after a thorough review,” Disney had decided to align Hulu’s political advertising policies to be consistent with the company’s sports and entertainment cable networks and the streaming service ESPN Plus.

“Hulu will now accept candidate and issue advertisements covering a wide spectrum of policy positions, but reserves the right to request edits” or other changes, “in alignment with industry standards,” the statement said.

The statement did not specifically mention ads on guns or abortion, but such ads have previously run on other Disney-owned cable networks, such as ESPN.

Democrats, angered by the rejection of two ads this month, organized a public pressure campaign on social media this week, asking supporters to denounce the Hulu policy. The protests were a top trending topic Tuesday on Twitter, with multiple accounts publicly announcing that they planned to cancel their service unless Hulu changed its policy.

Mosaic Communications, a Democratic advertising firm, announced in a news release Tuesday that it would stop buying candidate ads with Hulu until the policy changed. Julie Norton, a partner at the firm, said the Wednesday announcement appeared to resolve her concerns.

“It looks like they are trying to do the right thing at this point,” she said. “We certainly applaud them for moving in the right direction.”

The Washington Post reported Monday that Hulu has a policy against running content deemed controversial. Like other digital providers, it is not bound by the Communications Act of 1934, a law that requires broadcast television networks to provide politicians equal access to the airwaves.

Hulu has been shifting its approach to candidate advertising in recent weeks, after similar backlash from Democratic contenders. Suraj Patel, a congressional candidate in New York City, publicly protested the rejection of one of his ads, which mentioned gun violence, abortion and climate change, and showed images of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Hulu, which had a more permissive ad policy for candidates than issues, first allowed him to run the ad after he replaced a reference to climate change and removed the images of violence outside the Capitol.

Then, on Monday, after The Post article published, Hulu told his campaign that the version of the ad the company initially rejected would be allowed to run. A person familiar with the decision at Hulu, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record, said that Hulu had decided to accept the once-rejected ad before Monday but had not communicated it to Patel.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and Democratic Governors Association tried to purchase joint ads on abortion and guns with Hulu on July 15, along with identical placements on a Disney-linked ABC affiliate in Philadelphia and the company’s cable sports channel ESPN. The Hulu ads never ran, while the others did.

“Hulu’s censorship of the truth is outrageous, offensive, and another step down a dangerous path for our country,” the executive directors of the three committees — Christie Roberts, Tim Persico and Noam Lee — said in a statement provided to The Post on Monday. “Voters have the right to know the facts about MAGA Republicans’ agenda on issues like abortion — and Hulu is doing a huge disservice to the American people by blocking voters from learning the truth about the GOP record or denying these issues from even being discussed.”

The tracking firm Kantar Media projects that $7.8 billion will be spent on political advertising for the 2022 midterm election season, with about $1.2 billion going to over-the-top and connected TV spending, a category that includes ads delivered through streaming services and set-top boxes such as Roku. The streaming spending, according to Kantar, is “the new darling of the political set.”

But streaming services have proved harder to negotiate with for political buyers. Disney has told advertisers that political and alcohol ads will not be accepted on Disney Plus, a separate streaming service, when it launches an ad-supported version later this year. Netflix announced this month that it is developing an ad-supported version with Microsoft, though the company has not specified its advertising policies.

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site