1. Apple Search Ads Now Account For 58% Of iOS App Installs (FinancialTimes)
Within six months after implementing privacy changes to iPhones, Apple’s ad business has more than tripled its market share, preventing rivals like Facebook from directing ads at consumers. Apple’s own company now accounts for 58% of all iPhone app downloads that result from clicking on an ad. It had a 17% market share a year ago.
2. Ransomware Attack Disrupts Sinclair TV Stations Across US (TheRecord)
TV broadcasts for Sinclair-owned channels were disrupted across the United States on Sunday due to what the stations characterized as technical difficulties, but which insiders said was a ransomware assault. The event brought down the Sinclair internal corporate network, email servers, phone services, and local TV station broadcasting systems.
3. YouTube In-House Talent Agencies To Offer Guidance To Creators (WSJ)
YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat have started developing in-house agencies to nurture talent like Hollywood. They discover and groom artists who have the potential to become the next digital superstars. YouTube employs more than 1,000 staff in 45 countries to provide assistance to its artists that bring in more revenue to the platform.
4. IAB Predicts 8% Growth In US Digital Ad Spending In 2022 (MediaPost)
According to research from the Interactive Advertising Bureau, digital advertising spending in the US will rise by 8% in 2022. According to the prediction, digital ad spending will reach $165.5 billion next year, based on a poll of almost 20 buy- and sell-side industry experts conducted by PriceWaterhouseCoopers and insights from other IAB research.
5. Facebook Clarifies Its Acts On Fighting Hate Speech (TheVerge)
In response to a WSJ report, Facebook vice president of integrity Guy Rosen wrote in a blog post on Sunday that hate speech on the platform had decreased by 50% in three years and that “a narrative that the technology we use to fight hate speech is inadequate and that we deliberately misrepresent our progress” was false.
6. France’s Sybel Launches Revenue-Sharing Model (Variety)
Sybel, France’s leading podcast platform, has agreed to a two-year revenue-sharing arrangement with the French audio producers guild (PIA). The service is growing with the introduction of a freemium model supported by advertising and 500 new podcast titles. It is available in French, Spanish, and English, with a monthly membership costing €3.99.
7. Twitch Says Source Code Revealed In Last Week’s Data Breach (Reuters)
Amazon’s Twitch said that last week’s data breach at the live streaming e-sports site included documents from its source code. It claimed that the hack did not access or reveal user passwords, login credentials, complete credit card numbers, or bank data. Twitch blamed the intrusion on a mistake in the server configuration change.