Since 2004 Google has moved its ad revenue comes from placing ads on publishers' sites to higher margin ads its own websites and apps. It does this with the benefit of data taken from publishers.
Tracking enables this.
Thanks @jason_kint who highlighted this first.
/3
@jason_kint Tracking-based ads facilitate fraud “bots” (that behave like humans on publishers’ websites/apps to draw tracking-based ad spending back to fraudulent websites/apps).
Estimates of fraud are huge. € billions. But the industry has no authoritative view of the cost of adfraud. /4
The tracking-based ad industry is dominated by intermediary tech firms, not publishers. These “adtech” firms connect advertisers to publishers, and extract € billions large hidden fees, known as "adtech tax".
35-70% of every ad € goes to adtech, not the publisher. /5
Tracking-based advertising turns legitimate publishers’ audiences in to commodities that can be bought cheaply on low value & disinformation websites.
It also causes the largest data breach ever recorded. /6
This broadcasts what everyone on the Internet is reading and watching, and where they are, many hundreds of billions of times a day. And that lets us all be profiled based on where we go in the real world, and what we do online. /7
Tracking-based advertising allows legitimate publishers’ audiences to be profiled and micro-targeted cheaply on low value & disinformation websites.
The IAB Audience Taxonomy standardises how people are profiled, including politics & religion (see web.archive.org/web/2020110104…) /8
Practical evidence from publishers shows that revenue increases when tracking is removed.
Actual ad revenue increased by 149% when Dutch publisher NPO replaced tracking-based ads with contextual ads.
(Revenue even grew despite Covid-19’s severe impact on the ad market.) /9
Websites operated by a Norwegian news publishing group earned an average of 391% more for contextual ads than tracking based ads over 12 months. Bravo @BuggeErik
(H/T @ka_iwanska, who I think first told me about Kobler)
/10
Also... TV2, a major Norwegian news website, reports that ads sold through Kobler’s contextual targeting return a 210% higher average price than competing tracking-based ad targeting. @BuggeErik
TechCrunch has the story on the negotiations currently underway at the European Parliament on whether to ban or curtail tracking-based ads, and some of the data in our report. techcrunch.com/2021/10/21/ins…
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The UK Government now points to @IABEurope's (the tracking industry body) “consent” spam pop-ups as an example why it needs to abandon the GDPR. We remind @OliverDowden@DCMS that those pop-ups are illegal under the GDPR. bbc.co.uk/news/technolog…
Back in 2017, a year before starting to spam Europe with consent popups, @IABEurope admitted that its tracking and adtech would be “incompatible with consent under GDPR” in a private note to the European Commission. I obtained that note under FOI.
IAB "TCF" consent spam is compliance theatre.
(@mmatthiesen its primary designer says “the most seen — but least read — text on the Internet”)
The UK enforcer could have stepped in to stop this when the UK was in the EU.
It still can. I hope it will under @JCE_PC
We are going to court. Our lawsuit takes aim at Google, Facebook, Amazon, Twitter, Verizon, AT&T and the entire online advertising/tracking industry by challenging industry rules set by IAB TechLab. @ICCLtweet iccl.ie/rtb-june-2021/
The online advertising industry causes the world's biggest data breach. We are going to court to stop it. iccl.ie/rtb-june-2021/
Our evidence includes the “IAB Audience Taxonomy”, the data broker industry rulebook that specifies what can be in companies hidden dossiers about you: Your health problems, your debt... iccl.ie/rtb-june-2021/
Video: a peek inside the system building secret dossiers about you.
Google has announced a big change to its advertising system. That big change raises 4 big questions. iccl.ie/digital-data/4…
It relies on privacy safeguards such as “trusted servers”, isolating data on the person’s device, and targeting groups of people rather than individuals. However, these safeguards are vaguely described. iccl.ie/digital-data/4…
Google said that it would not use unique identifiers in its own ad products. Even so, competition and self-preferencing questions arise. Google will be exposed to competition complaints and litigation if it leaves any room for doubt on any of these three points.
A reminder, ahead of news today, that we alerted the European Commission in October that it could not grant the UK a free data flow "adequacy decision" because of failings of @ICOnews. @ICCLtweet iccl.ie/monitoring-hum…
Problems with the draft: 1. GDPR Article 46(2)a tells the Commission what to consider when granting an adequacy decision. One must be able to take the ICO to court for mistakes. Ask @OpenRightsGroup@jimkillock@RaviNa1k whether this is notional or real. ec.europa.eu/info/sites/inf…
2. GDPR Article 46(2)b tells the European Commission that there must be an "effective[ly] functioning" a supervisory.
Paras 85-98 of the draft decision give a positive review of @ICOnews' performance.
But in fact the ICO failed to act on RTB, the biggest data breach in history.
Data Protection Authority investigation of our complaints finds that the IAB Transparency and Consent Framework infringes the GDPR. iccl.ie/human-rights/i…
Today, we release new data on the consequences of the biggest data breach of all time: Real-Time Bidding. Two years after my complaint about the RTB privacy crisis, @DPCIreland has failed to end it. @ICCLtweet iccl.ie/human-rights/i…
Here is a list of the companies that Google sends RTB data to in Europe. It is 25 pages long!
(US list is longer, and has companies from many nations) iccl.ie/wp-content/upl…