Friday 30 November 2018

IAB Tech Lab issues revised ads.txt for apps

In May 2017, the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) Tech Lab launched ads.txt, a text file that indicates the verified sellers of web site ad inventory.

On Friday, the Tech Lab released a beta of its Authorized Sellers for Apps (app-ads.txt) specification, based on feedback to the mobile spec unveiled last summer. The newest spec will be available for public comment through February 4.

What does it do? This updated ads.text lets app developers — of mobile apps as well as Over-the-Top (OTT) video apps — verify their properties’ ad inventory, just as web site publishers can.

The idea of the ads.txt effort is to thwart fraudsters who attempt to sell ad space, such as on The New York Times’ web site, that they aren’t authorized to do.

In addition, to block the impersonation of app developers, this new apps spec details a protocol to obtain the website URL for that developer from the page in an app store that lists the app.

As with website publishers, the app-ads.txt file lists the names and identification codes for all of the authorized sellers of that app’s available ad inventory. The idea is that advertisers will only bid on ad slots from authorized sellers listed in the app-ads.txt file.

The June version offered different possible approaches for ads.txt for apps, the Tech Lab said, and the new release is proposing a specific approach that relies on app stores.

Also supports ads.cert. “While it took longer than expected to define a reliable, scalable approach to specifying file locations for mobile apps,” Tech Lab SVP/GM Dennis Buchheim said in a statement, “the solution will not only support ads.txt but will also support other supply chain safety initiatives, such as ads.cert.”

Ads.cert is a digital signature that allows advertisers to verify a specific site’s inventory. The Tech Lab has compared ads.txt and ads.cert to buying a Rolex watch. First, you want to confirm you’re buying through an authorized reseller, and then certify that what you’re buying is actually a Rolex.

Why you should care. While there are many kinds of ad fraud, the sale of fraudulent inventory is one that the IAB Tech Lab and its members hope to eliminate through the relatively simple ads.txt project.

The project’s newest incarnation, extended to apps, could help make inventory fraud extinct.

This story first appeared on MarTech Today. For more on marketing technology, click here.


About The Author

Barry Levine covers marketing technology for Third Door Media. Previously, he covered this space as a Senior Writer for VentureBeat, and he has written about these and other tech subjects for such publications as CMSWire and NewsFactor. He founded and led the web site/unit at PBS station Thirteen/WNET; worked as an online Senior Producer/writer for Viacom; created a successful interactive game, PLAY IT BY EAR: The First CD Game; founded and led an independent film showcase, CENTER SCREEN, based at Harvard and M.I.T.; and served over five years as a consultant to the M.I.T. Media Lab. You can find him at LinkedIn, and on Twitter at xBarryLevine.

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Daily Search Forum Recap: November 30, 2018

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

Other Great Search Forum Threads:

Search Engine Land Stories:

Other Great Search Stories:

Analytics

Industry & Business

Links & Promotion Building

Local & Maps

Mobile & Voice

SEO

PPC

Search Features

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Facebook confirms searches performed off the platform do not influence Facebook search results

Facebook confirmed this week that searches off of the platform do not influence Facebook search results. Aiming to be more transparent about how Facebook’s search graph works, product manager Yee Lee explained all the things that do — and don’t — impact Facebook searches in a blog post Friday.

Factors that influence Facebook search results. According to Lee, Facebook search results are guided by a user’s behavior on the platform: from posts shared by Friends, Pages they follow, Facebook Groups they belong to, events they’ve liked or followed and any other content they’ve interacted with within the News Feed. Search is also influenced by information a user shares with Facebook, including profile details, places they’ve tagged and previous searches they’ve performed on the app.

“Facebook search results are also based on general Facebook community activity, including the popularity of whatever you’re searching for and how recently it was posted,” writes Lee.

Facebook says it ranks search results based on a user’s activity and their community.

If it didn’t happen on Facebook, it doesn’t matter. While every action a user may take on platform can influence a Facebook search, the company reports that any searches performed off the platform will not impact Facebook search results.

“We want to be more transparent about what happens when you search for content on Facebook. So to help set the stage, we created a video to help the people who use Facebook understand the fundamentals of how it works — most importantly, that while search results are influenced by people’s activity on Facebook, they’re not influenced by searches done off of Facebook,” writes Lee.

Facebook’s “Privacy” boilerplate. “Privacy is taken very seriously at Facebook,” says Lee in the video. The the company has spent the last eight months apologizing for failing to safeguard user data and keep it out of the hands of bad actors during the previous two years.

Lee reports a user’s posts will only surface in search results for people they’re connected to: “Things that you share with your friends will only end up in the search results for those friends.”

Why you should care. Unlike traditional search engines like Google and Bing, there are not specific actions a company can take to improve visibility in Facebook search. Not surprising, Facebook says it’s in a business’ best interest to stay engaged and active on the platform for a better chance of showing up in Facebook search results.

This story first appeared on Search Engine Land. For more on search marketing and SEO, click here.


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

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Feds take down international hacker ring that cost advertisers millions

This week, a federal court indicted eight individuals for their roles in widespread digital advertising fraud, with charges ranging from wire fraud and computer intrusion to aggravated identity theft and money laundering.

The news is the latest chapter in a multi-year investigation of ad fraud botnets initiated by ad fraud security firm WhiteOps in 2016. Botnets are complex networks of computers, IP addresses and automation that mimic human behavior on websites to siphon ad dollars from unsuspecting advertisers led to believe their ads are getting served to real people.

3ve and Methbot botnets. WhiteOps worked with Google and an alliance of nearly 20 companies representing the interests of ad tech, security, and internet infrastructure to investigate the fraudulent activity. According to WhiteOps, the botnet 3ve (pronounced “eve”) infected a minimum of 1.7 million computers at any given time, counterfeited more than 10,000 websites and generated between 3 to 12 billion requests per day to sell fake online advertising.

The indictment is against three so-called ‘bot kingpins’ of the infamous botnets known as Methbot and 3ve, as well as other parties that were involved. Per Bjorke, product manager of ad traffic quality at Google, said in a blog post that the FBI coordinated a takedown of the 3ve’s infrastructure, making it hard to rebuild.

Image: Google

Richard P. Donoghue, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement: “This case sends a powerful message that this Office, together with our law enforcement partners, will use all our available resources to target and dismantle these costly schemes and bring their perpetrators to justice, wherever they are.”

“Remarkably sophisticated.” Because of the breadth and complexity of botnet systems, they are incredibly difficult to take down. Google says that “at its peak, [3ve] controlled over 1 million IPs from both residential malware infections and corporate IP spaces primarily in North America and Europe.”

It gets even more complicated. In the course of the investigation of 3ve, the group found a sophisticated operation that generated billions of fraudulent ad bid requests and it created thousands of spoofed fraudulent domains.

“3ve was remarkably sophisticated,” said Tamer Hassan, CTO of WhiteOps. “It showed every indication of a well-organized engineering operation with best practices in software development. It exhibited reliability, resilience and scale, rivaling many state-of-the-art software architectures.”

Why you should care. These massive fraud operations hurt advertisers and undermine the digital advertising ecosystem as a whole. Google said the detected growth in ad bid requests didn’t necessarily mean there was a growth in transactions that resulted in charges to advertisers and that the “bid request volume was only a small percentage of overall bid request volume across the industry,” but the FBI said it cost advertisers millions of dollars and undermined confidence in the process.

FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge William Sweeney said, “[T]hese individuals built complex, fraudulent digital advertising infrastructure for the express purpose of misleading and defrauding companies who believed they were acting in good faith, costing them millions of dollars. This kind of exploitation undermines confidence in the system, on the part of both companies and their customers.”

Google’s Bjorke said, “3ve’s focus, like many ad fraud schemes, was not a single player or system, but rather the whole advertising ecosystem … While ad fraud traditionally has been seen as a faceless crime in which bad actors don’t face much risk of being identified or consequences for their actions, 3ve’s takedown demonstrates that there are risks and consequences to committing ad fraud.”

What can advertisers do? Mike Bittner, digital security and operations manager of non-profit media advocate The Media Trust touts collaboration and awareness as keys to fighting these types of attacks.

“3ve underscores the importance of knowing who you do business with along the digital ad supply chain and of collaborating with them on identifying the underlying malicious code, which wreaks havoc on unknowing users and undermines the supply chain,” Bittner said.

Combating ad fraud has become a priority for the industry. Several solutions and initiatives have emerged including seller certification and authentication efforts such as ads.txt and the Trustworthy Accountability Group (TAG). Buying via programmatic direct channels versus open exchanges is also growing rapidly because it gives sellers a clearer connection to sellers.


About The Author

Robin Kurzer started her career as a daily newspaper reporter in Milford, Connecticut. She then made her mark on the advertising and marketing world in Chicago at agencies such as Tribal DDB and Razorfish, creating award-winning work for many major brands. For the past seven years, she’s worked as a freelance writer and communications professional across a variety of business sectors.

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Wanted: Nominations for this year’s ‘Naughty & Nice’ list

Perhaps you’ve felt like cheering or booing someone in marketing, ads or search over the last 12 months.

If so, now’s your chance to amplify those feelings!

We’re looking for nominations for our fourth annual “Naughty & Nice” list, either in the Naughty or the Nice categories — or both.

How to nominate. Submit your entries to tips@marketingland.com, and be sure to include “Marketing Land’s Naughty & Nice List” in the subject field.

Please don’t nominate yourself or your clients, unless you or they have done something that a fair-minded observer would objectively consider “naughty” or “nice.” No limit on the number of nominations you can make in either category. Please also link to relevant press releases or stories relating to the company or event you cite.

And, to get those nomination juices flowing, check out our “Naughty and Nice” lists from 2015, 2016 and last year.

The deadline. Get your nominations in by December 14, 2018. We will make the final decisions about which nominations make the list. Anyone submitting a selected nomination will receive a credit in the credits section.

This story first appeared on MarTech Today. For more on marketing technology, click here.


About The Author

Barry Levine covers marketing technology for Third Door Media. Previously, he covered this space as a Senior Writer for VentureBeat, and he has written about these and other tech subjects for such publications as CMSWire and NewsFactor. He founded and led the web site/unit at PBS station Thirteen/WNET; worked as an online Senior Producer/writer for Viacom; created a successful interactive game, PLAY IT BY EAR: The First CD Game; founded and led an independent film showcase, CENTER SCREEN, based at Harvard and M.I.T.; and served over five years as a consultant to the M.I.T. Media Lab. You can find him at LinkedIn, and on Twitter at xBarryLevine.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Barry Levine

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Claritas buys Barometric, marrying user segmentation with attribution

Data segmentation provider Claritas announced on Thursday that it has purchased tracking and measurement firm Barometric.

Targeting and verification. Barometric’s identity graph technology was originally developed as an internal tool for its original parent company, ad network AdTheorent, from which it spun off in April of this year. It claims to be the only “solution capable of collecting mobile IDs across all environments — such as web, app, rich media, video and brand studies,” in addition to other kinds of devices.

Deal terms were not made public.

By combining the two companies — user segmentation and user measurement — Claritas CEO Mike Nazzaro said via email, “businesses can find and target their best customers at scale and verify that their messaging is reaching who they want it to reach.”

From segmentation to marketing services. The acquisition, he said, represents “another step in the transformation of [Claritas] from a segmentation company to a marketing services company,” which includes optimizing user targets as well as identifying and delivering them. For its part, Nazzaro said, Barometric gets more insights into the US consumer, as well as “a deeper client base” to sell to.

AdTheorent will continue to be a customer of Claritas’ Barometric services.  The Barometric brand will be retained “for now,” the Barometric leadership will join Claritas, and, over the next year, the Barometric platform will be integrated with Claritas’.

Why you should care. The newly combined company will now be positioned for both targeting and optimization, with the aim of enabling marketers to measure how effective their ad targeting by audience segment actually is.

The combo will also be able to track offline marketing, at least to some degree. In March, for instance, Barometric set up a way to track the engagement and sales impact of snail mail.

This story first appeared on MarTech Today. For more on marketing technology, click here.


About The Author

Barry Levine covers marketing technology for Third Door Media. Previously, he covered this space as a Senior Writer for VentureBeat, and he has written about these and other tech subjects for such publications as CMSWire and NewsFactor. He founded and led the web site/unit at PBS station Thirteen/WNET; worked as an online Senior Producer/writer for Viacom; created a successful interactive game, PLAY IT BY EAR: The First CD Game; founded and led an independent film showcase, CENTER SCREEN, based at Harvard and M.I.T.; and served over five years as a consultant to the M.I.T. Media Lab. You can find him at LinkedIn, and on Twitter at xBarryLevine.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Barry Levine

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Chevron storytelling uses purposeful immersive experiences to engage stakeholders

Frozen in place, alert and quietly breathing the eight-foot Perentie lizard sizes me up. The only discernible movement is an opaque eyelid gliding over a dark reptilian gaze. I don’t THINK it will eat me for breakfast. Suddenly it’s long, forked tongue darts out into the air just barely missing my nose, as the lizard loses interest and looks for his breakfast elsewhere. The Perentie is one of the largest lizards in the world and can only be found on a remote Island, off the Pilbara coast of Western Australia.

However, instead of requiring the 20-hour flight from the US, I was able to experience this beautiful creature in my own backyard with the help of augmented reality.

Chevron’s AR experience featured 3D, animated creatures native to Barrow Island, like the Perentie lizard.

The Perentie lizard along with two other rare and wondrous creatures, the Euro or Wallaroo and the Flatback Turtle, was part of Chevron’s latest immersive augmented reality experience that launched at the 27th World Gas Conference in Washington, D.C. The goal was to share details on Chevron’s Gorgon Project, a new and technologically-advanced liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant located on Barrow Island, a Class A Nature Reserve. According to Tina Robison, Senior Advisor for Policy, Government and Public Affairs at Chevron, the biggest reason they decided to use AR was to make the impossible possible. “There will never be an opportunity to bring people to Barrow Island and show them what we do there or the priority we place on protecting this nature reserve. So we brought Barrow Island to DC.”

Chevron not the typical brand for immersive storytelling

“Chevron is a conservative brand,” admits Robison. “Shareholder return is important, but we also want to leave a small footprint in the places we do business.” While a brand like Chevron may not seem like an obvious choice for immersive experiences, Chevron’s digital center of excellence has had success using AR and VR as a mechanism to tell partners, policymakers and industry insider’s key Chevron narratives by transporting these audiences to their remote operations. The latest AR experience documenting The Gorgon Project was a huge hit at the World Gas Conference with both Chevron CEO and Chairman of the Board, Mike Wirth and the US Secretary of Energy, Rick Perry, spending time on the exhibit hall floor engaging with the experience.

US Secretary of Energy, Rick Perry, explores Chevron’s AR experience at the World Gas Conference in Washington, DC. From the left:  Colin Parfitt, President of Supply & Trading for Chevron, Rick Perry and Mark Nelson, Chevron Vice President for Midstream, Strategy & Policy.

The Gorgon Project AR experience was delivered using Apple iPad Pros and a trigger placed in the center of circular tables within Chevron’s conference exhibit booth. Attendees could pick up the iPad and immediately begin to engage with the 3D content displayed digitally over the marker on each table. The experience included three areas of exploration or chapters. Chapter one explains Chevron’s unique quarantine management system that focuses on protecting the nature reserve and the environment. Chapter two teaches users about the unique wildlife found exclusively on the island and chapter three describes how the liquid natural gas is shipped from Barrow Island to global customers.

Chapter 3 of the AR experience allowed users to learn more about the facility on Barrow Island and the process of sourcing and shipping liquid natural gas around the globe.

When asked about success metrics, Robison listed off a few key measurements of success: How many people engaged with the experience? How long did they stay? How many questions did they ask? How easy was it to use and understand? By these standards the experience was a home run, engaging hundreds of conference attendees during the four-day conference. However, the Barrow Island story was chosen specifically so it could be leveraged in other areas of the business, not just for policymakers or even those attending the conference. According to Robison, “the Gorgon Project AR experience also gives employees a tool to have conversations with family and friends and the Australian business unit is able to show some pride in the great work they are doing.” Chevron also worked in partnership with The Washington Post to share the AR experience beyond the conference by distributing it through the publisher’s app. The execution was the first advertiser-led AR activation for the Post.

Immersive storytelling just the start for Chevron

While this is the first AR project for Chevron, they are not new to the power of immersive storytelling. Last year Chevron launched a 360 VR experience that documented life on one of their most remote oil rigs off the Gulf of Mexico.

The extreme conditions on the rig – upwards of 115 degrees and 100% humidity, the remote location–280 miles off the coast of New Orleans, deep in the heart of international water, and safety concerns around the film crew’s electrical equipment made the project a logistics nightmare according to Dave Snyder, SVP and executive creative Director at design and innovation agency Firstborn. Snyder’s creative team at Firstborn conceived and developed both The Gorgon Project AR experience and the 360 VR virtual rig experience in close partnership with Chevron. Snyder admits he was surprised and delighted by Chevron’s commitment to innovation, “Anytime we get to do a cool, bleeding-edge, innovation type project, I get really excited. Immersive is the last little realm of neat stuff in digital. Chevron was unbelievably supportive.”

Snyder’s VR production crew took a two-hour helicopter journey into the Gulf of Mexico to capture the rig in 360.

Chevron’s commitment to innovation starts at the top with a CEO that is dedicated to being a leader in the space. According to Robison, this was an essential ingredient for getting internal support for a new, immersive storytelling approach, “One of our key internal priorities is being on the cutting edge of innovation. Our new chairman and CEO, Michael Wirth, is focused on digital innovation and he wants us to lead the industry in this space, and I think that helped us be successful with this immersive experience.”

Snyder agrees that aligning company-wide goals and objectives is required for a company to be truly innovative. “How do you try and sell in innovation? Unless your company is really bought into it and changes the internal structures, and KPI’s and how people get their bonuses it’s going to be really hard for companies to innovate. Great immersive projects create innovation halos over a brand — that’s a positive. I think that’s very important.”

While Chevron is currently leveraging AR and VR for storytelling, Robison believes this could be the gateway to innovation across the entire business. “What’s really cool is seeing our executives engaging with AR content and thinking about how they can use this in operations environments. Can we look at piping differently? Can we look at how our projects flow together so that we can make better decisions and move product faster? So not only was it an opportunity to tell our story but a way to experiment to see how we can use this to be innovative across our business strategy.”

Chevron CEO and Chairman of the Board, Michael Wirth, took time to engage with the AR experience while walking the exhibit floor at the World Gas Conference.

Key elements for successful immersive experience

To create a truly memorable and valuable experience, Snyder believes the most important element is the purpose for both the brand and the audience. The audience needs to be able to sense that purpose when interacting with the experience. For both the AR and 360 VR experiences created for Chevron, the experience took the user to a place they would have otherwise never been allowed to go. Instead of having partners and policymakers sit through a six-minute video on The Gorgon Project, Chevron opted to create a memorable, interactive experience that would allow the user the freedom to explore in their own way. “The tech can’t be the story. It’s not that Chevron did VR. That’s not a story. It’s that Chevron took you to a place you could have never gone. The tech needs to elevate or enhance the story you are telling.”

Along with developing a purpose-driven experience, there are a few other recommendations to help ensure success. Robison suggests using small, internal teams and allowing them enough time to test and learn. For The Gorgon Project AR experience, she leveraged a team of five key players and the project took about one year from start to finish.

Chevron’s team built out a simulation of the conference exhibit floor in a warehouse to serve as a testing environment for the AR experience. This resulted in crucial adjustments that improved the user experience.

Robison also suggests keeping the story very simple, constantly putting yourself in the shoes of the user and editing out anything that isn’t absolutely necessary. When asked what she wanted the audience to feel, Robison sums it up this way, “That energy and the environment can co-exist. It’s not one or the other. Chevron is working very hard to make sure that happens. And we respect the places that we work and we’re committed to ensuring safe and reliable operations and protection of those places. I think the AR experience does that.”

MarTech readers can experience both The Gorgon AR project in The Washington Post app and the virtual rig 360 VR project within the New York Times’ T-Brand studio or learn more about these projects directly from Chevron’s website.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About The Author

Lisa Peyton is an immersive media strategist and media psychologist focusing on the user engagement and marketing applications of new technologies.

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Dragonfly: 500+ staff sign open letter for Google to drop new Chinese search engine

More than 500 engineers, designers, managers and other staff from across global Google offices have signed an open letter at Medium.com calling on the search engine to stop their Dragonfly project and for company leaders to “commit to transparency, clear communication, and real accountability.”

As we reported last month

Google’s project Dragonfly first came to light in August via The Intercept and their reports surrounding leaked documents containing details about the project. In a nutshell, the project looked to be a fresh attempt by Google to re-enter the Chinese search market since having been blocked by the state back in 2010.

Dragonfly was speculated to be taking the shape of a mobile search engine. This is unsurprising, as more than 97% of internet users in China go online via mobile devices (according to CNNIC) and it is in this vertical that the industry is seeing most disruption from companies such as Shenma, Sogou and Haosou.

What was surprising were the subsequent leaked details from The Intercept and other sources hinting that Dragonfly users would be forced to sign-in to make searches, with IP addresses and phone numbers being linked to their activities too. It is also expected that the service would be censored in order to adhere to the country’s ‘cyber sovereignty’ laws – and, an as yet unknown, domestic partner would also have access to this customer data.

Consequently, there was significant uproar among many Google employees. On August 20th, senior research scientist Jack Poulson left the company and published his lengthy resignation letter online. ‘I believe that Google is largely composed of altruistic employees,’ he wrote. ‘But, due to my conviction that dissent is fundamental to functioning democracies, I am forced to resign in order to avoid contributing to, or profiting from, the erosion of protections for dissidents.’

A dangerous precedent at a volatile political moment

The latest open letter published on November 27th echoes much of the sentiment expressed by Poulson in his resignation document. ‘We are Google employees and we join Amnesty International in calling on Google to cancel project Dragonfly, Google’s effort to create a censored search engine for the Chinese market that enables state surveillance,’ it says.

‘Our opposition to Dragonfly is not about China: we object to technologies that aid the powerful in oppressing the vulnerable, wherever they may be. The Chinese government certainly isn’t alone in its readiness to stifle freedom of expression, and to use surveillance to repress dissent. Dragonfly in China would establish a dangerous precedent at a volatile political moment, one that would make it harder for Google to deny other countries similar concessions.’

The post also describes 2018 as a year of disappointment for Google employees. It references Project Maven (where Google assisted with development of AI in US military drones) which saw protests and resignations, as well as the Rubingate scandal which saw Android developer Andy Rubin given ‘a hero’s farewell’ and a $90m exit package after claims of sexual misconduct were made against him – ultimately leading to a global synchronized walkout on November 1st.

Official responses from Google have not satisfied critics

Google are yet to address the direct requests as detailed in this latest open letter. At a Q & A session during the WIRED 25 Summit in October, Google CEO Sundar Pichai sung the praises of the technical achievements of Dragonfly during recent tests. He also justified Google’s position by saying: ‘We are compelled by our mission [to] provide information to everyone, and [China is] 20 percent of the world’s population.’

Pichai also made reference to Google’s stated position on China back in 2010, when it decided it would no longer censor its SERPs at google.cn essentially putting an end to its operations in the country (this is regarded as the preferable position among employees signing the latest open letter). He stated it was time to ‘re-evaluate that choice’ and when asked about employees who were critical of such changes in company policy remarked, ‘we don’t run the company by holding referendums.’

Wider responses

This letter arguably hasn’t yet captured as many headlines as the walk-out earlier this month. There are a number of likely reasons for this – the biggest being that Dragonfly isn’t at this point in time a tangible product which we can see. It is understandably hard to get the public and mainstream press behind a campaign criticising a product that doesn’t even have a launch date.

The ethical issues with Dragonfly are also less black and white than those raised with Project Maven and Rubingate earlier in the year. As one user asks in the comments under the letter: ‘If Google drops dragonfly, the Chinese netizens will end up using “Baidu”, is it better or worse for the netizens of China?’ Another user argues: ‘The debate here really is about sacrificing the western pride and values surrounding censorship in favour of enabling a billion people that are already censored to the freedoms of information the west has.’

These positions might be surprising to some of the Google employees who have signed the letter or left the company, but it is in-keeping with data published at The Drum showing that more than 72% of Weibo users (one of the country’s leading microblogging sites) would choose Google over Baidu et al. if it were to launch its new service. There is something to be said for the potential for Google to disrupt the monopoly Baidu has in the country, and to potentially deliver better quality results if not less censored ones.

The signees, of course are not alone either. They are joined by Amnesty International (and a number of other organisations) who are bolstering the argument that Dragonfly will endanger human rights defenders and journalists who might use it. The number of employees signing the letter is growing, and the number of organisations joining the opposition to Dragonfly looks to be growing too.

Many are now looking to a Congress hearing on December 5th where Pichai is set to defend Google against accusations of bias in its algorithm. It is likely that the subject of China and Dragonfly will rear its head there, too, and that Pichai will likely face his toughest round of questioning yet. As things stand, Google re-entering the Chinese search market is looking more and more likely to happen. We can reasonably expect that the closer we get to that time, the more people we will see join the voices of the signees of this latest letter and the more heated the debate will become.

Related reading

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Luke Richards

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Not Just Another AI and Machine Learning Discussion [Submit Your Questions to the Pros!]

We’re tired too. Tired of the same ol’ same ol’ conversations about AI and machine learning. Everyone’s talking about it, but they’re mostly predictions; speculations; theoretical discussions. Time to bring some actual substance to the topic, right?

On January 10th, 2019 at 1:00pm EST, we’ll be hanging out with the pros of the pros – Brad Geddes of AdAlysis, Marc Poirier of Acquisio, and Jeff Allen of Hanapin Marketing – to talk AI and machine learning. And while they have some amazing, cutting edge thoughts about how to discern good AI from bad AI, and how to know if AI is really necessary for a certain task, we want to hear from YOU!

We want to know all (and we mean ALL) the questions you have about AI and machine learning. Everything on your mind. The trio of greatness will walk through some thoughts they have about the topic, and then dive into the answers to YOUR questions. We’ll close the question portal on January 7th.

See you on the webinar!

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Bonnie Pogorelc

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LinkedIn’s new privacy setting prohibits marketers from exporting emails

LinkedIn has introduced a new privacy setting that lets users choose whether or not their email address can be exported by connections. The default for the setting is “No” — meaning connections will be unable to download a user’s email via a data export unless the user manually switches the setting to “Yes.”

This new privacy setting gives users a new level of added security around their email address, but at what cost to marketers?

Impact on advertisers. “This was certainly a blow to advertisers,” says AJ Wilcox, a LinkedIn ads expert and the founder of the LinkedIn ad agency B2Linked. Wilcox says this new privacy setting will definitely impact marketers who used email addresses they exported from LinkedIn connections to target ads both on and off the platform.

“One of the popular use cases of exporting these email addresses was CEOs who are well-known in a market who want to show ads to people who already know and respect them, which results in a warmer touch. Advertisers could take the bulk export of email addresses, and upload them into LinkedIn Ads, Facebook Ads, and other platforms,” says Wilcox.

Now, that the default setting for downloading email addresses is set to “No” — many LinkedIn user emails will no longer be available for data exports, severely limiting the amount of email addresses marketers can pull from the platform.

Why LinkedIn made the change. LinkedIn says this new setting aims to give members more control over their information on the platform.

“If you take a look at the setting titled ‘Who can download your email’ you’ll see we’ve added a more detailed setting that defaults to the strongest privacy option. Members can choose to change that setting based on their preference. This gives our members control over who can download their email address via a data export,” says a LinkedIn spokesperson.

Wilcox agrees LinkedIn’s new privacy setting will help curb the amount spam users receive, but says the trade-off comes at the cost of a worthwhile marketing resource.

“I can’t bring up this conversation without someone complaining about how they accepted connections on LinkedIn, and all of a sudden, they’re on a mailing list they didn’t sign up for,” says Wilcox, “This move for privacy certainly will put an end to the poor-taste practice, but the marketers using those emails for positive uses now are missing out on a valuable tool.”

Why you should care. Generally speaking, this will not have a significant impact on large-scale marketing efforts as major brands are not scraping email lists from LinkedIn connections. It’s the influencers, entrepreneurs, SMBs and one-person shops using LinkedIn connections to market services who will be impacted as they can no longer rely on LinkedIn connection lists to build targeted ad campaigns both on LinkedIn and off the platform (i.e. using bulk data export to build custom audience lists for other platforms).

With privacy and security top of mind for the industry at large, LinkedIn’s move to safeguard user emails is not a surprise. In fact, in today’s climate of user data protections, it’s arguably more surprising that bulk data export of connections’ email addresses is even an option at all.


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Amy Gesenhues

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Search Buzz Video Recap: Search Engine Land Dropped In Google, Zero Search Results, Thanksgiving Update & More

This week in search I covered how this morning Google’s removed Search Engine Land from their index this morning by accident. Google started showing zero search results again and it looks like it will stick. Google may have done a big algorithm update on Thanksgiving day. Google said if you build a good site that is so good where if Google doesn’t rank it, it looks bad on Google then that is a good thing. Google said they confirm core algorithm updates when the non SEOs are confused. I just wish Google would stop using the line that they do hundreds or thousands of updates per day. Google is testing dropping the knowledge panel form the search results. Google is testing expandable related queries. Google is testing a video filer in the featured snippets. Google is testing a new image search design for image previews. Google is also testing an image carousel in the featured snippets. Google is going to sunset some of the reports in the old Google Search Console. Google Search Console updated their index coverage report to use mobile-first indexing data. Google wants beta testers for the Search Performance report. Google posted an FAQs on AMP indexing issues. Google is not yet done moving sites to mobile-first indexing. Google My Business explained what branded searches are. Google released version 4.3 of the Google My Business API. Speakable markup is now supposed by the Google Home Hub. Google AdSense payments are very delayed for some publishers and creators. Bing’s search spam fighter got a reality check. Dixon Jones won the Lifetime Achievement award and Kevin Gibbons won the UK Search Personality of the Year award last night. That was this past week in search from the Search Engine Roundtable.

Make sure to subscribe to our video feed or subscribe directly on iTunes to be notified of these updates and download the video in the background. Here is the YouTube version of the feed:

For the original iTunes version, click here.

Search Topics of Discussion:

Please do subscribe via iTunes or on your favorite RSS reader. Don’t forget to comment below with the right answer and good luck!

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Google Posts Large AMP Indexing FAQs For SEOs & Webmasters

Google AMP

Dong-Hwi Lee, a Googler, posted in the Google Webmaster Help forums a large FAQs around indexing questions related to AMP. This is a very comprehensive FAQ around the topic and I thought it would be useful to bring more attention to this document to the community.

The questions include:

  • In general, how long does it take for AMP pages to be indexed and served from Search?
  • If I launch X number of AMP pages, how long can I expect indexing will take? What factors affect selection? (with and without the assumption that the canonical page is being crawled and indexed)
  • Is indexing different by page type – i.e. home page vs. product detail page?
  • If pages are likely to be changed or removed often, are they still good candidates for indexing?
  • Is there any way to accelerate the pace of indexing (for example, by creating Adwords campaigns)?
  • What is the impact of AMP on ranking?
  • Should I be concerned if only a small percentage of my AMP pages have been indexed and are surfacing in Search?
  • Why do two results appear (AMP and non-AMP) when I search?
  • Should I tag my AMP pages any differently in this scenario? Desktop site (www), mobile site (m.) and AMP pages (on m.) when AMP points to m. and m. to AMP.
  • Why is my AMP page not showing up in the top stories carousel?
  • Is AMP crawling coming off my crawl budget?

So check it out to find all the answers.

Forum discussion at Google Webmaster Help.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Local Search Ranking Factors 2018: Local Today, Key Takeaways, and the Future

Thursday 29 November 2018

Marketing Day: Amazon’s Cyber Monday, Facebook MRC viewability audit, YouTube Stories

Here’s our recap of what happened in online marketing today, as reported on Marketing Land and other places across the web.

From Marketing Land:

Recent Headlines From MarTech Today, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Marketing Technology:

Online Marketing News From Around The Web:


About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Amy Gesenhues

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Daily Search Forum Recap: November 29, 2018

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

  • Branded Searches In Google My Business Insights
    Last month, Google introduced a new group of analytics data in Google My Business Insights called “branded” searches. Google defined them as “Customers who find your listing searching for a brand related to your business.” Joy Hawkins met with Google and had a chance to clarify with examples what these types of searches are.
  • Google Beta Testers Wanted For The Search Console Performance Report
    Google is once again looking for beta testers to help improve the Google Search Console Performance report. John Mueller of Google posted on Twitter saying “we’re looking to make some changes and would love to get your feedback, especially if you use the report regularly & have a kinda complex site.”
  • Google Tests Dropping The Knowledge Panel From Search Results
    Google has confirmed in the Google Web Search Help forums that they are running a test where the search results page shows no knowledge panel. The knowledge panel on desktop typically shows up on the right of the page when there is a match for a name, brand, company, facts, etc. Andy from Google confirmed Google is testing not showing it to some searchers.
  • Google To Split Google News User & Publisher Forums
    Forever, Google had a single Google forum for both Google News consumers (i.e. searchers) and publishers (news publications) to share and post their complaints in. So you would have people complaining about the quality of the Google News results and at the same time publishers complaining that their site is not showing up.
  • Google Releases Google My Business API v4.3
    Google has released version 4.3 of the Google My Business API. Version 4.2 was released in August and this new release brings new functionality including the ability to read and respond to customer Q&A, read reviews in bulk, Identify unclaimed locations and more.
  • Meet The Captain Of SEO From Vietnam
    Did you ever meet the captain of SEO? If not, you can, he is from Há»™i An in Vietnam – he has a boat named Captain SEO. Eli Schwartz, an SEO I’ve known for a long time shared the photo on Facebook.

Other Great Search Forum Threads:

Search Engine Land Stories:

Other Great Search Stories:

Analytics

Industry & Business

Local & Maps

Mobile & Voice

SEO

PPC

Search Features

Other Search

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Move over, Prime Day. Amazon’s Cyber Monday takes the crown.

Amazon’s inventory of superlatives may be running low.

The online retail giant had its single biggest day of sales ever on Cyber Monday, according to Adobe Analytics, based on the number of products sold globally. This beats its Prime Day in July — which had previously been Amazon’s biggest sales day.

Why you should care

Amazon remained king of a record breaking weekend, garnering 28 percent of all web sales over the holiday weekend, not counting its Prime Now and Fresh divisions. That is seven times its nearest online competitor, Best Buy.

Overall, online stores sold $7.9 billion worth of goods on Cyber Monday, almost 20 percent higher than last year, Adobe reported. That tops Black Friday’s $6.2 billion. Saturday and Sunday set their own records as the biggest online shopping weekend, with $6.4 billion.

Amazon itself said that it sold more products during the “Turkey 5” — the five days from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday — than in any previous five days in its history. Amazon didn’t reveal a breakdown sales figures, but did say it shipped over 180 million items in those five days. It also saw a 20 percent boost in sales from small-to-medium sized businesses (SMBs) on Black Friday, compared to last year. This is an area the company has been particularly focused on with efforts such as “Storefronts” section featuring products from more than 20,000 SMBs.

Jeff Wilke, CEO for Amazon Worldwide Consumer, pointed to several factors for his company’s continued retail success including, “curated gift guides, convenient shopping experiences, incredible product selection, and free shipping with no minimum purchase amount.”

More on holiday commerce trends

  • Including both Black Friday and Cyber Monday, Amazon said it sold about 18 million toys and 13 million fashion items.
  • The top sellers: the Echo Dot Alexa, followed by AncestryDNA’s ethnicity testing kit and the Bose QuietComfort 25 Acoustic Noise Canceling Headphones for Apple devices.
  • Amazon wasn’t alone in its success. Other major retailers also saw banner holiday weekend boosts for their online sales: Best Buy was up 36 percent, Target increased 47 percent and Walmart jumped 76 percent, Rakuten Intelligence said.

About The Author

Barry Levine covers marketing technology for Third Door Media. Previously, he covered this space as a Senior Writer for VentureBeat, and he has written about these and other tech subjects for such publications as CMSWire and NewsFactor. He founded and led the web site/unit at PBS station Thirteen/WNET; worked as an online Senior Producer/writer for Viacom; created a successful interactive game, PLAY IT BY EAR: The First CD Game; founded and led an independent film showcase, CENTER SCREEN, based at Harvard and M.I.T.; and served over five years as a consultant to the M.I.T. Media Lab. You can find him at LinkedIn, and on Twitter at xBarryLevine.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Barry Levine

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YouTube launches Stories feature for creators with 10K subscribers

YouTube has launched its own version of Stories, giving creators with 10,000 or more subscribers access to the new content feature. First launched by Snapchat, Stories have become a popular form of content across Facebook, Instagram. YouTube’s version will keep Stories accessible in the mobile app for up a period of seven days — lengthening exposure for content from creators, influencers and brands that have sizable followers on the platform.

Why marketers should care

YouTube is the latest to rip off Snapchat’s innovative format. Instead of a one-time post that falls into the ether of timeline feeds, the packaging of multiple pieces into Stories resonate with users and offer more flexibility when it comes to content creation with the ability to add text or stickers across images and videos. YouTube is giving creators the ability to broadcast Stories on channels with 10,000 or more subscribers.

The feature is designed specifically for YouTube’s creator community, but it applies to brands and agencies managing a YouTube channel with sizeable follower numbers. Also, because YouTube creators often double as the platform’s more popular influencers, any brand that has a relationship with a creator would be benefit from a product promotion within a YouTube Stories video as the content has a longer shelf-life than a regular video.

YouTube says its Stories may appear for subscribers on the Subscriptions tab and to non-subscribers on the home page, as well as in the “Up Next” list displayed below a video being watched. It also reported that it has been testing Stories with a small group of creators over the past year and designed the format based on feedback from its beta group.

The Stories format continues to grow in popularity. Google debuted its own AMP Story format for search in February, now complete with ads support. In June, Instagram boasted more than 400 million users were taking advantage of Stories on the app. Facebook has placed its version of Stories atop its News Feed, to drive more engagement with users and began placing ads within Stories in September.

Marketing Land has asked YouTube whether or not it plans to insert ads into Stories, and will update this article when we receive a response.

More on YouTube Stories

  • To record a Story, select the “Create Story” option from the video camera icon in the YouTube mobile app. Creators can add text, music, filter-effects and stickers to their Stories.
  • Viewers will be able to comment on Stories same as videos, and rate them with the thumbs up or thumbs down icon.
  • YouTube says its Stories include the same comment moderation tools available for video uploads.

About The Author

Amy Gesenhues is Third Door Media’s General Assignment Reporter, covering the latest news and updates for Marketing Land and Search Engine Land. From 2009 to 2012, she was an award-winning syndicated columnist for a number of daily newspapers from New York to Texas. With more than ten years of marketing management experience, she has contributed to a variety of traditional and online publications, including MarketingProfs.com, SoftwareCEO.com, and Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Read more of Amy’s articles.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Amy Gesenhues

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