1. Digital Supply Chain As Top Transparency Issue For Advertisers (MediaPost)
A study from ID Comms, a media and marketing consultancy and auditor, shows that the biggest issue for advertisers right now is a problematic digital supply chain. Based on responses from 56 global, regional, and local advertising executives, the study said 76% of them are unsatisfied with present levels of transparency in the digital supply chain.
2. Study Finds 38% Of Ad Execs Plan To Leave Job Within Two Years (MediaPost)
A study by Advertiser Perceptions for Basis Technologies said that more than a third of US ad executives (38%) plan to leave their current jobs within the next two years. Many attribute this to the increasing complexity and lack of training and support they receive from their current organization.
3. Consumers Want ‘Privacy Guaranteed’ Seals On Digital Ads (AdAge)
A report released by ad tech startup Perion revealed over three-quarters (74%) of customers would prefer visual labels assuring that businesses are not following them. Even more respondents (87%) claimed they had noticed when an advertisement tracks them. 46% believe the tracking is suspicious, 41% think it is disturbing, and 40% think it is annoying.
4. Meta To Pay Researchers For Reporting Data Scraping Bugs (TheRecord)
Facebook will compensate security researchers who discover flaws in its anti-scraping measures that allow a threat actor to obtain user data, even if that data is public and published on users’ profiles. Security researchers who find Facebook data on the internet that seems to have been gathered as a result of a scraping attack will also be rewarded.
5. TikTok Live Studio Launches As A Desktop Streaming Software (TechCrunch)
TikTok has been testing TikTok Live Studio, a Windows software. After downloading the software to the desktop, users may log in with their TikTok account and broadcast directly to TikTok Live. They may use the chat option to engage with other viewers, and can stream material from their computer, phone, or game console.
6. Reddit Confidentially Files With SEC To Go Public (Engadget)
Reddit confidentially submitted a draft to the US Securities and Exchange Commission on “the proposed initial public offering of its common stock.” As it prepares for an IPO, it will most likely release an initial value soon, but it is worth noting that it received $700 million in a fundraising round in August at a valuation of over $10 billion.
7. Amazon To Lower Its Cut Of Alexa Skill Developer Revenue In 2022 (Pymnts)
Amazon has stated that skill developers that generate less than $1 million in income through Skill purchases, in-skill purchases, and skill subscriptions would see their commission lowered from 30% to 20% on smart speakers and other Alexa-powered devices. The modification will take effect in the second quarter of 2022.
8. Meta Adds Messenger Support To Ray-Ban Stories (TheVerge)
The Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses will now be able to send and receive Facebook Messenger messages directly from the face. The features are created in collaboration with eyewear titan Luxottica. Users may now send messages, have texts read to them, and make audio calls using Facebook Messenger via the glasses’ built-in mics, speakers, and assistant.