Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

The perils of digital advertisin­g

Questions raised over difficulti­es in controllin­g content on social network sites

- HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA

WASHINGTON: Ads for knockoff Louis Vuitton bags pop up on the luxury retailer’s official Facebook page. A Toyota ad shows up on a news article about a car crash. An ad for Dove promoting women’s “real beauty” shows up on a page glorifying domestic violence.

Over and over again, the perils of digital advertisin­g have left tech giants such as Facebook, Yahoo and Google torn between the needs of advertiser­s and their obligation­s to their users.

Striking the right balance between advertiser­s and users is increasing­ly important for tech companies that depend on digital-advertisin­g revenue. After Facebook reported a 61 percent increase in digital ads during the past quarter, the company’s stock climbed 31 percent in one day. The digital-advertisin­g industry drew in $37 billion last year and is projected to reach nearly $60.5bn by 2017, according to eMarketer.

In May, a handful of advertiser­s, including the British division of Nissan, threatened to stop advertisin­g on Facebook after their ads appeared on pages promoting rape and violence against women. Facebook should have “stringent processes and guidelines in place to ensure that brands are able to protect themselves from appearing alongside inappropri­ate content”, Nationwide UK, a building society, said at the time.

After a temporary boycott by some advertiser­s, the social network said it would review its users’ pages to determine whether they are “ad safe” for advertiser­s. Those identified as not “ad safe” will no longer receive advertisin­g.

In 2011, Google settled with the Federal Trade Commission after hosting ads for fraudulent pharmacies. Now it is facing similar questions from several state attorneys-general about ads for illegal prescripti­on drugs on YouTube, which it owns. The company has said it reviews and removes questionab­le ads that appear on the video service.

When Yahoo bought the blogging site tumblr. for more than $1bn in May, Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer was inundated with questions about how she would bring advertisin­g to the site, which is known for hosting adult content. “In terms of how to address advertiser­s’ concerns around brand safety, we need to have good tools for targeting,” Mayer told analysts at the time.

These conflicts are an outgrowth of the evolving advertisin­g industry, said Catherine Tucker, a marketing professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management. As companies adapt to advertisin­g on the Web, they must grapple with losing some control, she said. A single ad might appear on dozens or hundreds of sites based on audience algorithms developed by an advertisin­g network, she said.

“In the past, it was a relationsh­ip between the firm and the advertiser,” she said. “Now it’s done by ad networks.”

It is a tricky process because content on many websites is difficult to predict, said Scott Knoll, chief executive of the ad consulting firm Integral Ad Science, which focuses on matching ads with brand-safe content. Anyone can make and update a Facebook page with contro- versial content, he said, so it is difficult to predict when red-flag topics, such as sex or drug use, might crop up on a page and make it unsuitable for a brand.

And as more companies turn to social networks for marketing, they might find that the ads that appear on their socialnetw­orking page are unsuitable.

In dozens of cases, ads for counterfei­t goods have appeared on a company’s Facebook page, said Eric Feinberg, a former marketer who founded the advocacy group Fans Against Kounterfei­t Enterprise. There has been a dramatic increase in such ads, often placed by “zombie sites” that might take consumers’ informatio­n and money without offering a product or service in return.

Many of those ads are tied to companies in China or Russia, according to a report by Feinberg and the cybersecur­ity firm Malloy Labs. Some have financial links to larger networks, such as the Russian Business Network, which has been tied to malware, child pornograph­y and other illegal activity, security researcher Ian Malloy said.

Facebook declined to comment specifical­ly on the paper’s findings but said it has policies to let users report ads for counterfei­t goods.

The company has said that it reviews the ads and, when necessary, removes them.

But Feinberg said that even when he has managed to get fake pages and ads removed from the network, the companies promote their products under a different name. To protect legitimate advertiser­s and consumers, authoriiti­es should compel social networks to set up a more stringent review processes for their ads, he said. – Washington Post

 ??  ?? DISCONTENT: Yahoo boss Marissa Mayer faced questions on the company’s acquisitio­n of tumblr., known to carry adult content.
DISCONTENT: Yahoo boss Marissa Mayer faced questions on the company’s acquisitio­n of tumblr., known to carry adult content.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa