Non-Human Traffic Archives - AdMonsters https://admonsters.com/category/nht/ Ad operations news, conferences, events, community Fri, 11 Aug 2023 18:16:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 What Are Made for Advertising (MFA) Sites and Why Are They a Scourge on Ad Tech and Sustainability? https://www.admonsters.com/what-are-made-for-advertising-mfa-sites-and-why-are-they-a-scourge-on-ad-tech-and-sustainability/ Fri, 11 Aug 2023 18:16:48 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=647242 Made For Advertising (MFA) sites are becoming more of a problem for the ad tech industry as they increase in prevalence. Currently, MFA sites account for at least one in five online impressions, consuming 15% of global programmatic ad spend and generating 26% more carbon waste than legitimate publisher sites.

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Made For Advertising (MFA) sites are becoming more of a problem for the ad tech industry as they increase in prevalence.

Currently, MFA sites account for at least one in five online impressions, consuming 15% of global programmatic ad spend and generating 26% more carbon waste than legitimate publisher sites.

Major brands are paying for advertising on these low-quality sites, almost certainly without their knowledge. The number of these sites is likely to increase as AI-generated content continues to be more commonplace and as the industry phases out the use of third-party cookies. This is because MFA sites rely in part on outdated contextual targeting tactics to bring in clicks. 

What are MFA Sites? 

There is no standard definition of what makes an MFA site at this time, but there are several key identifiers. MFA websites will be full of “filler content,” such as AI-generated nonsense, clickbait, unnecessary slideshows, and interlinked websites. This content provides a negative user experience and is unlikely to result in anything more than a negative brand impression of advertisers that appear on such sites.  

A major reason these sites are increasing in popularity is that they deliver the near impossible: lots of eyeballs at dirt-cheap prices. While they masquerade as legitimate sites, those eyeballs don’t translate to quantifiable business outcomes for buyers. It feels as if they should be labeled as fraudulent, but unfortunately, most of these sites do not meet current industry standards for invalid traffic (IVT)

MFA sites also have higher carbon emissions than their legitimate site counterparts — approximately 26% more. This is because they are generating a substantially higher number of requests per impression to SSPs and resellers than other sites, which increases waste.  

How do MFA Sites Negatively Impact Publishers? 

MFA publishers are able to game the system to acquire the clicks they need to continue generating advertising revenue. The sites may be full of scammy content, but they aren’t considered fraudulent as of now because they operate within the existing rules set in place to ensure media quality. 

Low-quality media has been in existence since digital media was created, but the MFA problem is increasing the volume of low-quality media exponentially. Unfortunately for publishers, in the supply chain, MFA site content appears to be brand safe and is cheap, making it difficult for buyers to avoid.

There are solutions currently in place to seek out higher quality media, such as buying via private marketplaces (PMPs), but it is tricky to avoid this content entirely. The result? MFA publishers are taking a large share of the advertising revenue pie away from legitimate sites with trusted users. 

Why Should Advertisers Steer Clear of MFA Websites?

The biggest problems for advertisers whose content appears on an MFA site are the quality of the clicks they receive and the negative effect on their brand reputation — both of which can hurt an advertiser’s bottom line. 

Click quality is undermined by MFAs because they pack many different advertisements onto one page, which can lead to a buyer’s ad getting lost in the shuffle. MFA sites sometimes also place ads in positions where they aren’t visible, but can generate accidental clicks. In this case, a brand’s click rate will increase but the consumer is unlikely to actually spend time on their site. 

Brand reputation can also take a hit when consumers see an ad on a website that feels like a scam site. MFA content is often unnecessarily sensational, leaning into tabloid-style stories that many advertisers would rather not be associated with. 

How Can We Put a Stop to MFA Sites? 

Advertisers can avoid MFA sites by purchasing ads via PMPs, using supply path optimization (SPO) strategies, and up-to-date contextual and quality controls. It is also crucial for the entire advertising ecosystem that advertisers fund legitimate publishers rather than MFA sites.

SPO strategies help eliminate intermediaries so buyers have a closer connection to the publisher. This can help them see which investments are going to lead to tangible results. They can take this one step further by keeping their contextual and quality controls updated since MFAs rely on outdated systems to dupe advertisers into buying low-quality content. 

Advertisers can set up exclusion lists to prevent bids from reaching sites that are known MFAs. They should also actively seek out high-quality content sites, even if the cost of advertising is more expensive. 

Ad tech partners can help reduce traffic to MFAs by blocking these sites from premium programmatic deals. Unfortunately, the existence of MFAs is so pervasive that some in the industry worry that eliminating MFAs will do nothing more than send inventory to competitors. Ad tech partners must put pressure on MFAs to improve their user experience or remove this inventory completely. 

Ideally, the industry can come together to set standards that keep MFA sites at bay or these sites will continue to steal ad dollars from reputable publishers and damage buyers’ brand reputations.

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HUMAN Security Holiday Report Explains How Grinch Bots Steal the Holidays https://www.admonsters.com/human-security-holiday-report-explains-how-grinch-bots-steal-the-holidays/ Thu, 03 Aug 2023 13:37:19 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=646905 HUMAN Security released its 2023 Bad Bot Holiday Report, which details what cybercriminals were up to last holiday season. The report offers websites and online retailers a look at their ploys so that security teams can keep their sites and their customers safe in the upcoming holiday season.

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HUMAN Security released its 2023 Bad Bot Holiday Report, which details what cybercriminals were up to last holiday season.

The bad bots started early, planned carefully, and then unleashed a torrent of bad bots to bilk retailers and consumers alike. HUMAN’s report offers websites and online retailers a look at their ploys so that security teams can keep their sites and their customers safe in the upcoming holiday season.

Below are the things to watch out for, according to HUMAN.

Cybercriminals Start Early

Cybercriminals begin planning their crimes in the months leading up to Cyber Monday. Last September to November, HUMAN measured 99% more bad bot traffic to retail sites than the yearly average.

Human traffic, on the other hand, stayed relatively flat, reaching its peak during Cyber Week.

What Was All That Bot Traffic Up To?

While most consumers spent last summer and fall barbecuing and getting their kids ready for school, the cybercriminals were laying the groundwork for their crimes. According to HUMAN, they were busy: 

  • Harvesting sensitive data from breaches, leaky databases, phishing campaigns, and dark web lists  
  • Executing automated credential stuffing, carding, and brute force attacks to validate credentials, credit card numbers, and other PII 
  • Submitting fake leads and contaminating web engagement metrics.

“Cybercriminals use bad bots to prepare in the summer and fall, so they will be ready when the holiday season rolls around,” HUMAN warns. “These bad bots then launch large-scale attacks during major online traffic periods and sales events.”

Types of Attacks

HUMAN noted that three types of attacks dominated the holiday season:

Account Takeovers

These attacks get unauthorized use of a user’s credentials to make purchases, drain their bank accounts, and a host of other ills. Account takeover attacks were up 123% in the second half of last year. In fact, 48.2% of all log-ins were malicious.

Carding Attacks

Carding, or using bots to test stolen credit cards, bank cards, and gift card numbers is the biggest threat to e-commerce retailers during the holiday season. Once the fraudster validates the numbers they buy all sorts of things to resell online.

In early November 2022, the percentage of malicious checkout attempts out of total checkout attempts rose 350%. The percentage of carding attacks out of total checkouts increased 900% in the days following Cyber Monday. This was likely due to bots continuing their attacks on e-commerce sites even after human traffic subsided. 

For ecommerce alone, HUMAN measured a significant peak in the summer months, when almost 30% of checkout attempts were malicious. This was followed by another small peak in October and a jump during the holiday season.

Scraping

Scraping, which is when bots scrape a website’s data to capture competitive intel. Scraping also takes a toll on a website’s SEO ranking (most sites invest in SEO during the holiday season so this is especially frustrating).

“Brand and marketers are profiting from online advertising during the holiday season with holiday sales growing last year from 2021 by more than 5.3% to $936.3 billion according to the National Retail Federation and consumers are spending nearly $1,500 on gifts, travel, and entertainment according to PWC research,” said Liel Strauch, HUMAN’s Senior Director of Enterprise Research. “It’s no wonder cybercriminals and fraudsters are already planning and embarking on their schemes. Our research demonstrates why bots are one of the most prolific tools for cybercrime because their increased sophistication gives fraudsters an uncanny ability to mimic human behavior online. They’re utilizing carding attacks, account takeovers, and scraping attacks to target both consumers and e-commerce sites, which can impact a consumer’s bank account and an e-commerce site’s profits.”

Learn More

The report goes into more detail, which you can read here

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Cooking With Anarchy at Blockchain Xplore https://www.admonsters.com/cooking-with-anarchy-at-blockchain-xplore/ Tue, 10 Apr 2018 14:51:41 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=56594 Gavin Dunaway went to the recent Blockchain Xplore conference in New York a couple weeks ago, and here's what he saw and heard. For one thing, blockchain technology is being rolled out seemingly in a parallel way to how the internet was. For another, the need to clean house in their Ads.txt files could present publishers a way to get in on the blockchain action.

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I was greatly saddened by the recent passing of Ursula K Le Guin, whose Hainish Cycle of novels and stories established her as one of the greatest science fiction writers. My favorite entry in the series is “The Dispossessed,” in which Le Guin imagines a functional, prosperous anarchic society on a far away world.

That novel was heavy on my mind during the Blockchain Xplore conference in New York at the end of February because there’s something intrinsically anarchist about blockchain. That’s not meant to be derogatory—the concept of the World Wide Web is pretty anarchic to begin with. (I’m also not the only one to notice the anarchy link with blockchain.) Blockchain’s decentralized power structure controlled by groups of stakeholders is aweing… As well as baffling.

But it’s the potential of the technology itself that keeps me fascinated. If you haven’t heard it said 8 million times now, blockchain is the technology that enables Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but it can be mined (pun intended) for just about any industry. At its heart, blockchain is a radical way to store information—a ledger that is massively distributed and can be easily shared.

 

 

Media Applications

Blockchain Xplore kickoff speaker Yorke Rhodes from Microsoft noted many companies across a variety of verticals developed Internet-based systems for intra-organization processes and operations (Intranets, anyone?) before enabling technology on the open Internet. It looks like blockchains are being rolled out in a similar format.

 

 

In digital media, though, we’re talking less intra-company rather than inter-companies involved in digital advertising transactions. A blockchain could serve as a single source of truth accessible to many parties—which could be key in enabling the transparency we’ve long craved in digital advertising.

 


As panelist and 2018 Ops advisory board member Trace Rutland of Tyson Foods pointed out, this could take away a lot of the pain and hardship of reconciliation. In addition, blockchains could be a huge boon to audience targeting and data-sharing efforts.

 

 

Taking that a step further, blockchain could be the key in enabling consumers to take agency of their personal data and truly use it as a currency to trade for access to media and other digital services.

 

 

In the near term, what really excites me is how blockchains could completely disrupt the measurement space, particularly in regards to viewability, invalid traffic, and verification. Measurement companies in those fields are likely to lean to adopt or lean on blockchains in the next few years—blockchain is not about putting these companies out of business, but enhancing the services they offer.

 

 

Buy In?

However, we’re speculating a lot here, and many industry players will need to “buy in” for blockchains to truly shake up the measurement space. On top of that, many of the underlying mechanics of blockchain communities are confusing when it comes to transacting tokens and setting rules. I don’t know if “immature” is the correct way to describe blockchain in digital media, but for sure, it’s developing at a clip.

Which means publishers should figure out how to get involved—and surprisingly, there’s an easy entry point. As MetaX CRO Alanna Gombert put it, Ads.txt was the digital advertising industry’s gateway to the wider world of tokenization and blockchain. Many a publisher recognizes that their ads.txt file is horribly convoluted due to the simple nature of the solution.

Blockchain startups like MetaX have developed blockchain-based solutions for simplifying management of the files and ultimately demand sources. These are similar to the IAB’s Ads.txt update, yet more advanced and offering inroads to a blockchain-enabled future.

The Internet—and digital advertising in particular—has anarchy coursing through its veins. With its curious balance of chaos and progress, blockchain is another recipe in our digital anarchist’s cookbook. Publishers should throw on their aprons and pull out the mixing bowls—and possibly protective eyewear… just in case.

Obligatory Literary Nerd Epilogue

dispossessed coverIn “The Dispossessed,” protagonist Shevek rails, “Those who build walls are their own prisoners. I’m going to go fulfill my proper function in the social organism. I’m going to unbuild walls.”

I argue blockchain is a tool he’d approve of, particularly when it came to un-building walls around digital gardens.

 

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Will Cambridge Analytica Hurt Facebook Ad Business? Plus, Inside Newsweek’s Bot Problem https://www.admonsters.com/weekly-news-roundup-17/ Tue, 13 Mar 2018 17:57:33 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=56686 This week's news briefs: Cambridge Analytica overstepped user data boundaries, iHeartMedia's bankruptcy brings mixed feelings for radio fans, one of Newsweek's bot-traffic partners gets unpacked, and Amazon gains more and more digital ad market share.

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Cambridge Analytica Hauled Onto the Rug

For starters, an item you’ve already heard about: Remember the user data Cambridge Analytica eventually used to build models that were in turn used to target ads on behalf of the Trump campaign? It was collected without user consent, according to a whistleblower from inside the company. Cambridge Analytica’s use of “psychographic data” has always been controversial—for complicated reasons, but in short, this data goes beyond standard demo/geo/behavior-type data points, and tries to create models around psychological traits, through game-like personality tests spread by advertising on Facebook. But new revelations of its data harvesting methods go beyond all that. Reports say Cambridge Analytica pulled in data points from not only users who took the tests, but from their Facebook friends—allegedly up to 50 million Facebook users in total. Cambridge Analytica has since been suspended from Facebook. But according to reports in various outlets, as far back as 2015, Facebook was aware Cambridge Analytica was harvesting data it shouldn’t, and the platform simply told CA to knock it off.

Here’s Team AdMonsters’ take: Mark Zuckerberg’s newfound discovery of Facebook’s conscience, and his commitment to the platform being a force for good, is a little disingenuous, and it’s contradicted by basically Facebook’s entire history of raking in dollars first and atoning for its sins of omission (like bad partner-vetting) later. I’ve always thought Zuck speaking about social accountability sounded like a man out of his league, and that’s probably because he is one in this case.

Facebook/Google Set to Lose (A Little) Market Share?

So with Facebook getting beaten up in the public square first for allowing fake news outlets to run wild on its platform, then for keeping the door open to the likes of Cambridge Analytica—will its revenue take a hit as well? Seems unlikely, as the sheer numbers of Facebook’s audience are undeniable. But a new eMarketer report suggests Facebook’s ad business might have already peaked, regardless. According to eMarketer analysis, the price of News Feeds ads seems to have maxed out, and the bulk of the company’s revenue growth is coming from Instagram. Overall, Facebook and Google’s combined digital ad market share is projected to drop by 1.7% from last year. Snapchat’s revenue is growing rapidly, but you have to wonder how sustainable that growth is—at the PubForum two weeks ago, we just heard Frank Simonetti, CEO of the Gen Z-focused media outlet Sweety High, tell us Snapchat ad performance is hard to quantify. Amazon is also on the rise, and it to be in a great position to take the number three spot in ad market share: eMarketer suggests it’ll be in that position by 2020. That seems like a safe prediction.

Inside One of Newsweek’s Questionable Ad Partners

As you’ve also heard, Newsweek is in hot water for buying bot traffic. Now AdExchanger gives us the skinny on one dodgy company that gave Newsweek an assist in that effort: PopAds, which specializes in pop-unders, pushes bots from sites with nonsense URLs to legit sites in need of traffic, and has a founder who had previously overseen an ad network that was called out for spreading malware. The AdExchanger story is a fun, if harrowing, read—Allison Schiff summarizes a whole buffet of bad behavior on PopAds’ part. In addition to serving pop-unders, which obviously serve no good purpose to either advertisers nor users and have been banned by AdSense, PopAds is accused of reselling traffic and cryptomining. The crypromining bit is interesting: When bots are identified as bots, their computer processing power is drained and used to generate cryptocurrency. But PopAds has been accused of doing the same with legit human users, too, and not just bots. The AdExchanger article ends with a quote that sounds kind of defeatist—stuff like this happens because there’s no clear way to prosecute ad fraud—but you have to wonder: It’s 2018, so why the heck isn’t there a way? (Oh, that’s not a rhetorical question: We totally know why there isn’t.)

iHeartMedia Filing for Bankruptcy

The company behind the biggest radio broadcaster in the U.S., iHeartMedia, announced it was filing for bankruptcy. The company is about $20 billion in debt. Some of us in media have mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, there’s something tragic about seeing a legacy media company fall from grace like this—especially when part of its woes come from circumstances seemingly out of control, like being bought out by a private equity firm funded by banks on the eve of the Great Recession a decade ago (which is exactly what happened to iHeartMedia). It’s also sad to consider the number two radio broadcast company in the country, Cumulus, just went bankrupt itself. On the other hand, iHeartMedia is the company once known as Clear Channel, which for years had bought up local radio stations, imposed restrictions on programming, replaced local hosts with syndicated shows, and generally contributed to the homogenization of broadcast radio. Maybe banking on a captive audience was a good strategy in the ’90s, but not for the broadband era.

Google: No Crypto-Soliciting Allowed

One more parting shot: Everyone in digital advertising has thoughts about blockchain right now, many of them positive. But we keep shouting that blockchain is not bitcoin, and it’s an important distinction: Not quite so many folks are gung ho about cryptocurrency right now. Google is making moves to ban ads related to cryptocurrency, an effort to curb “unregulated or speculative financial products.”

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Putting Blockchain to Good Use for Ops https://www.admonsters.com/putting-blockchain-good-use-ops/ Mon, 08 Jan 2018 18:12:01 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=53784 The opinions expressed by AdBeeler are not necessarily those of AdMonsters and Access Intelligence. They are only the opinions of Rob Beeler if you find them funny or insightful. This week I’m off to CES, and I actually mean CES. It’s not a well-kept secret that most people in our industry who do go to […]

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The opinions expressed by AdBeeler are not necessarily those of AdMonsters and Access Intelligence. They are only the opinions of Rob Beeler if you find them funny or insightful.

This week I’m off to CES, and I actually mean CES. It’s not a well-kept secret that most people in our industry who do go to the event actually race up and down the strip for meetings, drinks, dinners, and drinks all followed by drinks. To give you an idea, this is what my office will look like for this week:
Screen Shot 2018-01-08 at 1.03.17 PM

 

If my press credentials go through, however, I’m going to actually see cool stuff from the CES event itself, and hope to report back what I find. If you’re in Vegas, let me know!

Not sure if CES will cover bitcoin or blockchain, but if it does, I’ll check it out. Bitcoin is not blockchain. We all understand that, right? So why am I so concerned that if we in fact have a bitcoin bubble that bursts, then blockchain’s prospects might suffer? If blockchain is of course the cause of the bubble bursting, that would make sense–but otherwise I’d like to see more work done on blockchain.

That being said, not every ad tech discussion has to include the word blockchain. I’m not even sure you’re doing yourself a service by mentioning blockchain in a pitch. Right now blockchain sounds vaporware-ish. Show me a product. Convince me it helps me. Mention it’s on blockchain. I’ll respond, “Cool.”

This reminds me of a discussion at an event about the need to educate everyone in advertising on blockchain. I’m not sure educating everyone is necessary. We struggle enough with getting creative types off of Flash to add blockchain into the conversation. Not sure what a nonce is? I’m sure you’re going to be okay.

Instead, let’s talk applications. I like the idea about evolving ads.txt to the next level. Ads.cert looks like it isn’t necessarily being developed on blockchain, but it’s blockchain-esque in the use of cryptographically signed bid requests. Cool. Meanwhile, Ads.txt Plus from MetaX is built on blockchain and offers subscriptions vs. crawling, works on mobile app and web, and lets the publisher control what they disclose (versus the open kimono of a text file readable by everyone). Once again, cool.

Do I care (as an ad operations person) that these are built on blockchain or not? Not as much as the features they offer. Ads.cert is months away, at least. Ads.txt Plus is open for beta test partners. For those of you who need/want/crave the next gen of ads.txt, get in there and help these people make it work – not for blockchain’s sake but for the industry’s.

Related: I thought I had the ads.txt pronunciation problem solved:

But hell if I’m going to say “ads dot cee e r tee” and “ads dot tee x tee plus” doesn’t flow as well as “ads dot text plus” in my mind. I guess I’ll have to evolve my thinking. Damn blockchain!

In Nashville, I wore some righteous duds:

However, at OpsX in December I got asked a few times why I wasn’t wearing the stars jacket. Let’s get one thing clear, people: Until I get a wardrobe budget that matches my vision, I’m going to have to wear regular clothes from time to time. Happy to start a Kickstarter to raise the funds needed, if y’all think it’s that important.

Related: To dispel a rumor, no, I will not be attempting to pull off the Baywatch look in Huntington Beach:

Screen Shot 2018-01-08 at 1.03.34 PM

(Not Justin Loresco and Rob Beeler)

Blade Runner 2049 ran out of the theaters before I got a chance to see it. I had this idea that perhaps the best way to test if someone is a replicant is to show them less than 50% of an ad for less than a second. If they click: replicant!  Sorry, folks. You can’t unread that.

Best book I got for the holidays: The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google, by Scott Galloway. If you don’t follow him on YouTube, you should–he’s funny and informative. Note I linked to Barnes & Noble and not Amazon or Google. Read the book and you’ll get my reasons. #RealCapitalism

Free tip: I used our recent article on AdMonsters, “Discrepancies on Display: Ad-Juster Talks Visualizing Campaign Numbers,” to make a point of not going to meetings if I thought they would result in another Excel document to manage. I suggest you take the same approach.

The first draft of this piece came to 666 words. I’ve added this paragraph just to be safe.

 

 

 

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Slides of Our Lives: Beat Ad Counterfeiting by Buying Your Own Inventory https://www.admonsters.com/slide-week-beat-ad-counterfeiting-buying-inventory/ Sun, 07 Jan 2018 17:34:37 +0000 https://www.admonsters.com/?p=53954 One of the main goals of Ads.txt is to combat domain spoofing. It’s angled to be both simple to understand and implement, and harder for bad actors to game than good old whitelisting and blacklisting. But there’s more to ads.txt than slapping together a list of partners who are authorized to sell your inventory. Before […]

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One of the main goals of Ads.txt is to combat domain spoofing. It’s angled to be both simple to understand and implement, and harder for bad actors to game than good old whitelisting and blacklisting. But there’s more to ads.txt than slapping together a list of partners who are authorized to sell your inventory. Before you put that list together, it’s important to do some testing and spot-checking.

Along the lines of testing prior to creating an ads.txt list, Ashley McGee, Director of Programmatic and Platforms at tronc, brought a really cool guide to AdMonsters’ Publisher Forum in Nashville this past November. Her presentation was called “The Spoof Is Up: Battling Counterfeiters With Ads.txt,” and one of top takeaways from her session was: If you want to understand the degree to which ad counterfeiting is a risk to your business, you should think like a buyer, and buy inventory that’s listed as belonging to your sites on the programmatic marketplace.

In short, Ashley explained that a publisher is at risk regardless of whether or not they run programmatic–regardless of whether or not you sell ads on your site, even. Counterfeiters are taking advantage of publishers’ good names–misrepresenting their inventory as yours, while theirs is on fake websites, on spoofed domains, and/or surrounded by garbage content. And whitelisting by site name or URL is not enough to stop these tricks.

So, here’s what publishers should do, as Ashley advised: Partner with a DSP. Look for inventory that’s marked as “yours.” Check to see whether the type of ad units available matches what you know you have on your sites, and that the number of available impressions also matches. Search your URLs and site names, and see if what you find matches what you know to be your URLs and publisher IDs. Then… buy your inventory! Or inventory that purports to be yours, at least. This slide breaks down how that buying process works:

Screen Shot 2018-01-11 at 12.26.35 PM

Ashley had a bit of guidance on what to do after the buy, too. When you add up the numbers, factor in the cuts intermediaries take (DSPs, SSPs, exchanges, etc.). Make sure the eCPM of your purchase matches the exchange’s eCPM. Look for any exchanges or ad units that sound fishy to you. And then… get cracking on that ads.txt file!

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Night of the Living Dead Traffic: VertaMedia on Programmatic Video and Fraud https://www.admonsters.com/night-living-dead-traffic-vertamedia-programmatic-video-and-fraud/ Wed, 15 Feb 2017 05:42:40 +0000 http://beta.admonsters.com/night-living-dead-traffic-vertamedia-programmatic-video-and-fraud/ Late last year, tales of Methbot illegitimately gobbling up $3 million to $5 million in ad spend daily horrified the industry. While advertisers are the obvious victims of fraud based on bot traffic, the spectre still haunts premium publishers—not only is that spend that should have been relegated to their inventory, scams like Methbot increase […]

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Late last year, tales of Methbot illegitimately gobbling up $3 million to $5 million in ad spend daily horrified the industry. While advertisers are the obvious victims of fraud based on bot traffic, the spectre still haunts premium publishers—not only is that spend that should have been relegated to their inventory, scams like Methbot increase advertiser pressure on legitimate sites.

The bot menace has caused particular pains in the programmatic video space, arguably halting the growth of what could be a lucrative channel for honest video content providers. In this interview, VertaMedia CEO Alex Bornyakov talks candidly about invalid traffic and fraud in both desktop and mobile video advertising, service providers’ responsibility in this space, and how publishers can push back against the bots.

GAVIN DUNAWAY: Why is fraud so prevalent in video right now? What has changed in the old presumption that there’s a high barrier to entry for fraudsters?

AB: Fraud ultimately follows ad spend so as investment in video advertising increases it becomes a more attractive target for fraudsters. Video was the fastest growing ad format last year—with spend increasing 67% in the first half of 2016—and fraud rates are rising in parallel.

Video is more expensive than other types of media so fraudulent activity provides greater returns and when this is combined with a scarcity of supply—meaning video inventory is in high demand—it provides valuable opportunities fraudsters have been quick to exploit.

WITH THE SUPPORT OF VERTAMEDIA LLC
VertaMedia is a Video Supply Side Platform with its own Ad Marketplace. It is designed to facilitate the balance between video ad buyers and sellers, by supplying them with extensive technology and dedicated services, where every publisher can meet his demand for efficient ad serving and effective yield optimization.

GD: It’s pretty obvious that advertisers are the victims of ads served to invalid traffic, but how do legitimate publishers suffer?

AB: The most obvious impact on legitimate publishers is a reduction in available advertising revenues as these are being wasted on fraudulent impressions, but fraud affects publishers indirectly in other ways too. Invalid traffic to a publisher site can skew metrics such as click-through and bounce rates, making them appear excessively high or low and reducing the perceived quality of the site. Publishers need to be able to demonstrate high-quality inventory to attract advertiser budgets.

GD: Do you think estimates on the amount of ad spend going to invalid traffic are high or low?

AB: Headline-grabbing figures on the cost of ad fraud and estimates on the average volume of impressions affected aren’t particularly helpful in understanding the real impact. Fraud rates vary widely between platforms, campaigns, and publishers—in general premium publishers experience far lower fraud rates than the averages would imply but of course that means for other low-quality inventory the figures could be far higher.

GD: Has invalid/non-human traffic ruined the open programmatic video marketplace? Are there ways content providers can flag their inventory as clean?

AB: Fraud has certainly impacted confidence in the video marketplace—with half of US advertisers and agencies concerned about how video ad fraud or bots negatively impact their digital video ad spending—but there are ways publishers can restore trust in their inventory.

Last year VertaMedia partnered with Forensiq, which uses machine learning and in-browser analysis to evaluate the legitimacy of clicks and impressions and identify bot activity. Publishers are then able to remove all non-legitimate video ad impressions ensuring only genuine impressions reach advertisers.

GD: Is mobile a less bot-populated space than desktop? Is there a bot invasion on OTT/connected TV too?

AB: It is difficult to know precisely how mobile compares to desktop as mobile fraud has existed for far less time than desktop fraud and has not been monitored for as long. As with video, fraud will always follow advertising dollars and with mobile display ad spend overtaking desktop, mobile fraud is also growing rapidly.

There is a feeling the TV space has so far escaped the fraudsters but when Pixalate launched its Video Seller Trust Index in December, it revealed relatively high rates of fraud across OTT and Connected TV. Again, as advertising on addressable TV is set to grow rapidly in 2017, this is likely to be an area of increased concern.

GD: If you’re a publisher and you want to clear non-human video traffic off your site, what steps do you need to take? What kind of help will you need from other entities along the ad supply chain?

AB: Increased transparency is key to getting rid of bot traffic, so publishers should make sure they know whom they are working with. As well as implementing anti-fraud practices, they need to have frank discussions with anyone else they work with along the supply chain to find out what measures those partners have in place.

Ideally publishers should look for more direct relationships with buyers, reducing the number of middlemen and therefore opportunities for fraud. They should also be wary of sourcing third-party traffic or using audience extension programs that could potentially impact traffic quality.

GD: Where does the industry stand right now on curtailing Methbot? How does the fight against its spread differ from other instances of fraud you’ve seen?

AB: Methbot is certainly a wake-up call for the industry. Although the latest reports suggest the impact of Methbot may not be as serious as initially thought—indeed despite the fact that the bot generated a reported $3 to $5 million each day we have seen minimal impact to our clients—it has forced the industry to work more collaboratively to combat this growing problem. It is refreshing to see companies being more open about their experiences of fraud and the steps they are taking to fight it, and this will hopefully encourage contribution to wider industry anti-fraud measures.

GD: Slowing the spread of Methbot and other fraud activities seems like it can be very manual. Are there ways to automate those efforts?

AB: To quickly limit the impact of Methbot, specific manual measures were recommended, such as blocking compromised IP addresses. However the majority of platforms who use automated techniques to detect and filter out invalid traffic have reported minimal impact from the botnet, indicating these technologies are already in place and are working effectively—although they will inevitably need to evolve as fraudulent activity becomes ever more sophisticated.

GD: What is the role of a company like VertaMedia in protecting advertisers from serving creative to bots?

AB: Supply-side platforms should take responsibility for ensuring only high-quality impressions—free from fraud—are made available to advertisers. At VertaMedia we take this responsibility very seriously and combine our own deep machine learning with state-of-the-art external fraud prevention technologies to eliminate invalid traffic. Alongside these technologies we also have a highly skilled and experienced brand safety team.

GD: Are there ways those companies/advocates can work together to combat fraudsters without help from governments? Is there any way to get ahead of the “next Methbot”?

AB: Collaborative initiatives such as the Trustworthy Accountability Group (TAG)—a joint marketing-media industry program created by the American Association of Advertising Agencies (4A’s), Association of National Advertisers (ANA), and Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB)—are vital in helping the industry work together to fight fraud. They offer anti-fraud guidelines as well as a Certified Against Fraud program, which is open to buyers, sellers, and intermediaries. Proctor & Gamble has just announced that anyone involved with the digital media it buys must be TAG accredited by the end of the year.

GD: Are there other security or quality concerns publishers in the programmatic video space should keep their eyes on?

AB: The issue of viewability is becoming more prominent in video advertising, and advertisers are calling for better viewability metrics as part of a wider demand for increased transparency in the video space. Last year VertaMedia partnered with Moat as part of its brand-safety toolkit, allowing both advertisers and publishers to analyse viewability and attention metrics with greater precision. To improve viewability publishers could look at the size and positioning of video players on their websites, or consider in-article video advertising, which is highly viewable.

The post Night of the Living Dead Traffic: VertaMedia on Programmatic Video and Fraud appeared first on AdMonsters.

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