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10 votes
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Analysis of UK charity websites finds that tracking is prevalent, with almost all of the most popular charities including trackers for advertising or data brokers and failing to comply with GDPR/PECR
8 votes -
Auto industry TV ads claim right-to-repair laws would benefit "sexual predators"
18 votes -
Apple delays "asking permission to track" privacy feature in iOS 14, releases more information about upcoming privacy updates
12 votes -
The small effects of political advertising are small regardless of context, message, sender, or receiver
6 votes -
Joe Biden campaign launches official Animal Crossing: New Horizons yard signs
8 votes -
How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism - A new, short book by Cory Doctorow that looks at big tech as a monopoly problem
18 votes -
How a strange face in a random 19th-century newspaper ad became a portal to a forgotten moment in ASCII art history
6 votes -
Ad agency Ogilvy abused Twitch donation messages to cause multiple streamers to advertise Burger King for only a few dollars
9 votes -
Reddit CEO defends their intention to run Trump ads ahead of election, outlines their plans to move comments on ads into subreddits
51 votes -
Can killing cookies save journalism? A Dutch public broadcaster got rid of targeted digital ads and its revenues went up 62-79%.
31 votes -
What is MasterClass actually selling?
8 votes -
The Trump campaign is currently spending $5.4 million per week on Facebook ads, almost assuredly making it the platform's largest advertiser
@Judd Legum: The Trump campaign is currently spending $5.4 MILLION PER WEEK on Facebook That's a $280 million annual rate.The Trump campaign is almost certainly Facebook's largest advertiser In 2019, Home Depot was the largest advertiser, spending $178.5 million pic.twitter.com/4BjWknL73H
13 votes -
Facebook showed this ad to 95% women. Is that a problem?
15 votes -
I have cancer and now my Facebook feed is full of "alternative care" ads
36 votes -
An app lets you de-stress by screaming at the Icelandic wilderness from afar
9 votes -
eBay is reportedly getting close to a deal to sell its classified-ads business to Adevinta, a Norwegian company that runs online marketplaces
6 votes -
You've been through a lot this year and it looks like you need the perfect place to let your frustrations out – record your scream and we'll release it in Iceland
7 votes -
Only 9% of visitors give GDPR consent to be tracked
8 votes -
Over 400 advertisers hit pause on Facebook, threatening $70 billion juggernaut
8 votes -
Pressure mounts as Starbucks, Coca-Cola join Facebook ad boycott; Facebook updates policy
9 votes -
Coca-Cola pauses advertising on all social media platforms globally
9 votes -
Anti-Defamation League sends open letter to advertisers, urging them to boycott Facebook due to ads being placed adjacent to hateful content
16 votes -
How Cooper Black became pop culture’s favorite font
5 votes -
Google has banned ZeroHedge from its ad platform for content policy violations related to misinformation about the Black Lives Matter protests
19 votes -
CNBC reporter makes fake news website with plagiarized content, gets approved by ad tech companies
10 votes -
New York Times phasing out all third-party advertising data
21 votes -
Here’s what an antitrust case against Google might look like: Two DOJ veterans lay out a roadmap for cracking down on the company’s digital advertising juggernaut
4 votes -
Chrome to start throttling resource-heavy ads in August
10 votes -
Welcome to the age of privacy nihilism
13 votes -
The pathetic state of Youtube advertising
15 votes -
Google to require all advertisers to pass identity verification process
12 votes -
Facebook approved ads with coronavirus misinformation, in an experiment which raises questions about how the social media giant screens ads on its platform
8 votes -
Australia to make Google and Facebook pay for news content
6 votes -
Twitter removes privacy option, and shows why we need strong privacy laws
17 votes -
Documentaries as advertising: Corporate interests turn to indie docs for influence; audiences in the dark
7 votes -
Why don't we just ban targeted advertising?
27 votes -
As the coronavirus slowdown hits newspapers, the Monterey County Weekly lays off seven employees
3 votes -
Vintage ads: Selling health and hygiene during the 1918 pandemic
10 votes -
Brands can now purchase an ad in the #2 slot of Reddit's "Trending" sections in the Popular page and Search dropdown
26 votes -
Apple now allows push notification advertising, updates dating app review guidelines and more
11 votes -
Security researchers partner with Chrome to take down over 500 browser extensions in a fraud network affecting 1.7 million users
12 votes -
Scandinavian Airlines clarifies an advert intended to highlight the role of travel, immigration and cultural diversity after it was pilloried online by far-right and nationalist groups
9 votes -
Joe Biden's campaign has released an ad attacking Pete Buttigieg's record and experience
14 votes -
Add-on support was just merged into Firefox Preview
@aissn: Add-on support was just merged into Firefox Preview. Thanks @gabrielluong https://t.co/cXOCB00tKk
23 votes -
What's the deal with meta advertising?
I don't watch T.V very often, but do - when I'm up (which is infrequent given I'm outside the U.S) - watch the NBA. Recently I've had a little time so have watched a few games live. Doing so, I...
I don't watch T.V very often, but do - when I'm up (which is infrequent given I'm outside the U.S) - watch the NBA. Recently I've had a little time so have watched a few games live. Doing so, I was quite taken aback at how commonplace humour and meta advertising are nowadays. Is this just a U.S thing?
Is there any research out there on when and why advertisers started doing this? Seems like every other ad shoots for either humour or "we know you know this is an ad, you're clearly smart enough to realise that, so smart in fact you might want to buy into our brand". Whatever the case, as ever, grateful for resources/discussion from those more in the know than I.
EDIT: A good example that is equal parts humour/meta is LeBron James' Super Bowl Sprite Ad.
10 votes -
How -- and why -- advertisers are looking at gaming and esports
6 votes -
Google sends a unique Chrome browser identifier through Chrome when you visit their websites
14 votes -
How ads follow you around the internet
8 votes -
Utah wanted all the tourists. Then it got them
7 votes