Doubleclick Exits The Ad-Tracking Business 209
Masem writes: "Cnet is reporting that Doubleclick closed down its ad tracking program as of Dec 31 2001, and is shifting from a media company to research and development for online ventures. Doubleclick claims they had upwards of 100million unique tracking profiles at the height of their run, but with the dot-com bust and lower ad revenue rates, ad tracking ran into the red. Even after the worrisome aquition of Abacus Online (which was rumored to allow Doubleclick to connect online and offline consumer profiles), the company could not turn a buck on ad revenues. Time to remove that 'doubleclick.com 127.0.0.1' from /etc/hosts now?""
Finally! (Score:2, Interesting)
Sorry, no (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sorry, no (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, there are other overhead issues here when it comes to analysis or putting a front-end on the collected data, but the one and only time i used dc data in my modeling, i made them give it to me raw, which they did with a little arm-twisting.
Just seems a little baby-bathwateresque, with the hardware and the software already in place to chuck the whole thing. Are they really doing this? And does anyone know why?
PS -- i know they're evil. that makes this seem *more* strange, not less.
Re:Sorry, no (Score:3, Informative)
It isn't cheap, believe me. Last time I checked, the backend system was four clustered Sun 6500's, with Oracle running on one of them and the transform processes going on a couple of others. When I wrote software for their backend systems, we were wrestling with a state file that was over 1 Terabyte. That was with the volume you found in the year 2000. I am sure that the volume has gone up since then, so you have to figure that the cost of additional DASD alone is painful. Not to mention that they may need to scale up the hardware to an E10K or an additional 6500 by now. Then on top of that add additional per CPU licensing fees for some of the software.
If the targeted ad aspect of the system isn't paying for itself, then you can milk a lot more out of the existing hardware and software. Which in this economy makes it a no brainer.
Nah, good points, i hadn't actually done the math. (Score:2)
Your point about the licensing fees is well-taken, and of course there's all the service agreements, too.
I guess that I'm not having trouble believing that their data takes a huge setup and support, i'm having trouble believing that it's not worth it to a lot of people -- the value of this data is proportional to its evil, which was great indeed. for all the 'unique profile' laughter, when this worked, it was a data-collection technique with no competition, simply for its ubiquity of collection points.
Re:Sorry, no (Score:2)
WHACK! Bad UNIX programmer! You said the evil mainframe D-word!
Re:Sorry, no (Score:2)
Re:Sorry, no (Score:2)
Re:Sorry, no (Score:2, Insightful)
In a lot of cases I'd rather get a targeted ad than a non-targeted.
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
--pi
Re:Finally! (Score:2, Informative)
.. you could use junkbuster http://freshmeat.net/projects/internetjunkbuster/
.. use mozilla, you can kill off their cookies and images, there's an option to not download them
Re:Finally! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Finally! (Score:2, Informative)
Unfortunatelty, you can't add them to your HOSTS file because IE considers a failure to load an IFRAME document means the entire page must have failed to load
Not true, i've got the following entries on my HOSTS file:
127.0.0.1 ad.au.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ln.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 m.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.ca.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.de.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.fr.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.jp.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.nl.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.no.doubleclick.net
127.0.0.1 ad.uk.doubleclick.net
(among others)
When I visit a page that has the evil IFRAME , I see the page that informs me of a 404 error, ON THE IFRAME, the rest of the page is loaded as usual.
Re:Finally! (Score:3, Informative)
For the uninitiated (and for those who aren't forced to use Win at work), eDexter acts as a local-only HTTP server (not accessible through the Net)which replaces the empty boxes caused by 127.0.0.1 in Hosts and stops the resulting time-outs. eDexter has its own image for the space that an ad uses. The default image is a 43-byte GIF (thin pink bar).
Better yet, it doesn't interfere with a locally-running "server" <gag, cough, choke> like IIS or MS Personal Web Server, which some of us also have to run at work. Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.
woof.
Of COURSE I'd rather run SuSE (even if it would get me sued [slashdot.org]), but my company wouldn't exist without closed source. And our security is almost as good as Microsoft's! Like Krusty said, don't blame me; they shove all of this money in my hand!
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
Nope, just use this hosts file (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nope, just use this hosts file (Score:3, Interesting)
For this reason, I switched to IE and IE does not do this - I get to see the content sooner. Sucks, because, otherwise, I would continue to use Netscape.
However, Netscape (Macintosh) does not seem to have this problem.
There's a fix for this (Score:2)
http://accs-net.com/hosts/eDexter.html
Re:Nope, just use this hosts file (Score:2)
That problem only happens with tables. NS 1-4 (and Mosaic before it too, at least versions of Mosaic with table support) wants all tabled content to be a known size before any of the table is rendered (which means that if only the HTML designers would consistently put in HEIGHT and WIDTH values for their IMG tags, NS4 people would not be bothered). NS6 and Mozilla do not suffer from this defect. They are capable of moving the images around, like IE5 does. (And possibly IE4. I know IE3 suffers from the old Mosaic defect just the same way though.)
Incidentally, I'm typing this in NS6.2 on a Mac. You're wrong about NS4.77 on the Mac; it has exactly the same old problem.
Re:Nope, just use this hosts file (Score:2)
Honestly, I can't tell if the problem happens on the Mac, because I haven't been able to successfully implement HOSTS file. No matter what I do to the damn file, it always errors out being imported. I know it's probably a formating problem, but I can't seem to figure out how to fix it.
poo (Score:1)
Re:poo (Score:1)
-Q
I'd be suspicious... (Score:1)
Sniffle... (Score:3, Funny)
Okay, I'm over it now - when's the fire sale auction?
Re:Sniffle... (Score:5, Funny)
> Okay, I'm over it now - when's the fire sale auction?
Yeah. I wanna buy a server from Doubelick, just so I can open it up, remove one platter from one drive for a headstone, and bury the rest of the server six feet underground.
Then I'll grab my trusty Dremel and engrave the following:
"Posterity will ne'er survey,
A nobler grave than this;
Here lie the bones of a Doubleclick server,
Stop, traveler, and piss."
(With apologies to Lord Byron)
And yet(!) (Score:2)
"You heard me right! I want a cut of whatever you get from the people who you sell my information, and of the profits realized on sales to myself as a result of targeted advertising to same."
Is this a troll or something (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a bad joke. I will keep ad.doubleclick.net to 127.0.0.1 untill I find it on f***edcompany.com
Good riddance (Score:3, Interesting)
Ad banners have become an overlookable feature in most web pages. I would like to see further studies in targeted advertising. I mean, I hate the outdoors, pop music and fast food. Why show me ads for places to camp, discounts on CD-NOW, and contests with McDonalds?
Re:Good riddance (Score:1, Insightful)
You can't wait for doubleclick to go away but you want more targeted advertising? The announcement was that doubleclick is stopping all targeted advertising and just dealing out untracked spots.
Re:Good riddance (Score:2)
This post brought to you by a Maxtor hard drive sold by a Slashdot advertiser to a Slashdot reader because of Slashdot ads.
Re:Bad Idea (Score:2)
Me, I can ignore banner ads, popups, popunders, and whatever is needed. I just want free content, and I don't want my name/ip address in some tracking database.
Is there any other reaction? (Score:1)
<mumble>Intruding fascist scumbags.</mumble>
Data Collected (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Data Collected (Score:2)
Bit Rot happens - Doubleclick on Free Email (Score:2)
The availability of free email accounts has mixed effects on advertising - you may know that disposable1234@free-lamer-mail.com also reads sports sites, but next month that mail system will have bit the dust and the same person will be disposable4567@dotgone.to, while simultaneously using gamez-freak-31337@yahoo.com to read the gamer egroups and no-canned-meat@yahoo.com to comment on political egroups. On the other hand, Hotmail pretty much invented the advertising-funded free email business model, so the Doubleclicks and Linkexchanges and similar businesses certainly have the incentive and ability to correlate between many of the user IDs, so they can sell that information to advertisers.
AWWWW! (Score:3, Funny)
How the heck am I supposed to learn about products and services that I should be interested in now?
Stefan
one step closer (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong, I work at an Ad Agency, as their senior interactive developer, but the proliferation of advertising on the internet without supporting revenue streams has always seemed a little silly to me.
at least more common advertising mediums actually show positive ROI when executed well.
I don't care how innovative your flash banner, pop-under, or mouse trailer is, it's not going to make me more inclined to purchase your products.
True, it may build brand recognition, and increase word-of-mouth talk about a particular company or item, but where's the proof in the pudding?
Re:one step closer (Score:3, Interesting)
>
> True, it may build brand recognition, and increase word-of-mouth talk about a particular company or item, but where's the proof in the pudding?
Hey, you were in the ad biz. You know as well as I do that an ad agent is a con man whose job it is to con his customers into thinking he can con his customers' customers.
As a marketroid once told a friend of mine, "If the customer leaves your site, having bought exactly what he wanted to buy, you haven't sold anything".
As I wish I'd been there to tell the marketroid - "Get the fsck out of my office." ;-)
Re:one step closer (Score:2)
"don't buy their stuff, our product (ads) is much better than theirs"
Re:one step closer (Score:2)
Why can a news paper with a circulation of 100,000 can make money off advertising that is just a picture, but a web site with 100,000 visitor can not?
Re:one step closer (Score:2)
Why can a news paper with a circulation of 100,000 can make money off advertising that is just a picture, but a web site with 100,000 visitor can not?
I don't work in advertising (although a friend does... hack, spit).
My guess is that there are, maybe, two or three other newspapers in that city competing for ad money, while there are several hundred to several thousand other web sites competing for ad money within one niche (e.g. tech news, or fly fishing, or pet owners, whatever...)
You do the math.
Re:one step closer (Score:2)
The reality is that in most topics (e.g. tech news, or fly fishing, or pet owners, whatever...) there is only 3-8 'top' sites, with the remainder falling off exponentially below those. The real problem is that most (commercial) sites have more outgo than they can justify, not just the lack of revenue.
Re:one step closer (Score:2)
I was not speaking of marketing expenses, but rather of general overhead. $5k/person Christmas parties, free this, that expensive office perk.. Not to mention staffs much larger than seems to be needed.
are you kidding (Score:2)
temporary reprieve (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, that's going to change. By analogy (to drag that up again), in 1981, USENET posters generally thought it would be impractical for a long time to come to put all USENET postings on the Internet. By the mid-90's, it had happened. You can bet that in the not too distant future, it will be so cheap to record and correlate all you on-line activities that no company will think twice about doing it--unless the law prevents them from doing it.
Re:temporary reprieve (Score:2)
Their data (Score:2)
Cheers,
-- RLJ
Are they really just shutting down? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Are they really just shutting down? (Score:1)
.
Perhaps for now. They'll be back.... (Score:2)
Just think what a Peer-to-Peer Doubleclick Reimplementation could get away with - if they could include their evil warez into a popular home server application, like a game system or IM/ICQ client or music-piracy\\\\\\\distribution system or whatever, they might be able to cut the costs of distributing and summarizing their advertising information.
It's easy to make doubleclick appear to go away - on Unix systems, I alias it to "127.0.0.2", which is the machine next to mine, instead of 127.0.0.1, but that only works for things named doubleclick.com. If they start naming their domain names things like adserver.customer1.com and innocuous.customer2.com, it becomes much harder to block, and if they do a different software version that runs a CGI on the same server that their customer uses to serve images, then you wouldn't be able to block it without blocking the interesting site, unless you examine more detail than just the domain name.
Ad services are already going beyond the banner model, with many major sites putting up bigger ads in the middle of their content (e.g. ZDnet) as well as developing annoying popups, popunders, using garish blinking, etc. As costs come down, building effective tracking tools will become easier, while developing better ways to make you interested in the advertiser's content will continue to be a hard problem. That suggests that better-tracked ads should have a growing value relative to less-tracked ads, though both may still decline in absolute value, cost, and price.
Great news if.... (Score:1, Insightful)
A Big Score (Score:1)
Ahem... (Score:2)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
>Time to remove that 'doubleclick.com 127.0.0.1' from
Is it too much to expect that slashdot, of all sites, could at least get the format of
dave
Well, it's something at least (Score:2, Redundant)
We haven't heard the last of the advertising profiles. There might be a light at the end of the tunnel, though. The decision will ultimately be decided by the Net surfers who choose to avoid intrusive advertising.
Re:Well, it's something at least (Score:3, Insightful)
Advertising doesn't offend me. What does offend me, however, are ads that manipulate, or take over my browser (pop ups, pop under/overs, interstitials, scrollers). Most offensive of all are tracker ads that track my movements OFF the site that has the ad.
And it offended enough people for whole browsers (Mozilla, Konqueror) to be written with features specifically designed to halt this, if the user so chose.
As I said, I don't mind ads as a way to pay for content on a site, any more than I mind ads on TV and radio. But TV and radio advertisers learn NOTHING personally about me just for my action of watching/listening to any given show. They get my info only if I choose to give it, by responding to their ad.
Really, the whole internet advertising business killed itself by doing this. By collecting such information and making it available to their advertisers, it created the illusion that internet ads are LESS effective than any other form.
What I think is that this let the cat of truth out of the marketer's bag, that really ALL forms of advertising are routinuely ignored by a public that is increasingly bombarded and increasingly resistant. It's just that on TV and radio, the advertiser has no DIRECT, perfect statistics to back this up as they do with internet ads.
I believe once internet ads return to the same philospohy of TV, print, and radio ads, to make impressions and build recognition, rather than as a "buy me NOW!" button, they will be much more effective.
Obvious to me... (Score:1)
We've had it since the end of november.
I'm guessing doubleclick hasn't been working on much since...
Banner Blind for Mozilla (Score:1)
On a (slightly) related note, here's a link to Banner Blind [mozdev.org] (for Mozilla only). It's a little XPI that merely hides images of particular sizes.
Good for blocking banners, as the name would imply. ;)
100million tracking profiles... (Score:5, Funny)
And it's rumored to represent over 10million people!
-
Largest Cookie Supplier (Score:5, Funny)
DIE (Score:1, Redundant)
Good timing with release of IE 6 (Score:1)
Well, not exactly, but good enough to make Doubleclick crap thier pants and get into another line of business.....fast!
Thereby proving (Score:1)
TV has much more subtle and less effective ways of tracking what people watch and what they subsequently buy. That's why they're able to make much more on ads that don't generate revenue.
this isn't the end of DC, it's only the end of.... (Score:3, Informative)
i'm willing to bet large sums of money that they will still be serving ads, just not directly at you anymore....not that you noticed the difference anyway.
I'm surprised no one mentioned this (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I'm surprised no one mentioned this (Score:3, Informative)
Keep the 127.0.0.1 in your /etc/hosts ... (Score:1)
Ugh (Score:2)
Spyware? (Score:1)
With all those doubleclick cookies on my system, it leaves me to wonder if the 100 million unique profiles are really all that unique.
What REALLY happened... (Score:5, Funny)
Having read the article... (Score:3, Informative)
First off because of the pain/cost of getting a decent level (read both accurate and large coverage) of data in the first place (e.g. i'd imagine if you were the sort who spends large amounts online frequently you would have opted out either through the regular channels or by simply ignoring all their attempts to track you)
Secondly because their clients couldn't justify the cost of buying a properly targetted ad with the return it generates (it cost approximately 400% more than the standard ad type but only gives an improved yield in the range of 200%-300% if you target it right).
When compared to regular mail advertising, banners will lose out because mail;
a) can be far more targetted/available for most demographics
b) has better coverage
c) has a better chance of being read rather than ignored, skipped or stopped by other means
d) available for most demographics
So what have we learnt from all this?
Well that dblclick may have the technology but the customers will not buy despite the promises, or perhaps the fact that the cost increase was not proportionate to the performance increase. Instead their consumers preferred to go with a random assortment of less targetted ads.
Well that's marketeers for you!
What kind of research? (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, maybe they'll discover a way to make money on web content.
OK,
- B
Idea (Score:2)
Nevermind, I know that would fail, it would rely too heavily on ethics and honesty.
Re:Idea (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.ewanted.com
used to do just that, have not checked it out lately though...
ugh... some points (Score:5, Informative)
What DoubleClick is no longer doing is taking traffic data and putting into a big consortium to find interest segment associations and targeting. This is the exact same thing that offline marketers do - you apply for the credit card and buy a sweater at Gap, that goes into a db with your age and location and other info. That info is then contributed to a data pool which also has purchasing habits of Pottery Barn, Ikea, William Sonoma, etc. The various members in the consortium can then purchase lists of various demographics for targeted direct mailings and catalogs.
I don't think the info is sellable - what good is someone else's cookie data? It's not like you'll be able to serve ads to a doubleclick cookie unless you somehow take over the domain. And there's no personally identifiable info in that database either.
.bartacus
Not leaving the business (Score:2)
That's right, Doubleclick are still going to be serving up adverts. No, it is not time to remove the doubleclick entry from your hosts file.
You'll notice that on the linked page the following piece of code was included, loading an advert banner (that haven't blocked them already):
Re:Not leaving the business (Score:2)
Re:ugh... some points (Score:2, Informative)
The directors and shareholders of Doubleclick recently bought Abacus databases containing millions of personal user profiles collected from those credit card customers (etc.) that you mentioned. Real and hard data. My guess is that they did not buy that business simply to continue running it as is. They will want to turn a sizeable profit with that purchase.
>>>>>
Word. The Abacus purchase was intended for four things:
1. Offline/Online Identifiable profiles. Nixed after DCLK bought Abacus
2. The brand and clients. Abacus is a respected company in offline marketing with some major marquis clients that DCLK wanted to snag online too.
3. The people. Abacus has done some awesome statistical modeling and predictive work - DCLK wanted their gray matter and expertise for online.
4. A solid investment. Abacus was well into profitability and is a valuable investment in and of itself.
Number 1 got nixed, number 2 achieved, number 4 ongoing - that leaves Number 3. DoubleClick is focusing on technology and is coming out with buying/planning software of which data and modelling is integral. Look at their other recent purchases - @Plan and Comscore (planning and analysis products).
>>>>
What elso do they have? Well, the article states "In the last 16 months, DoubleClick has worked to deflect its dependence on the sickly advertising market. It has built up its research, data and technology divisions while slowly dismantling its media division."
>>>>
This qoute really really really needs to be clarified. The Media division at DoubleClick _sells_ inventory. Repping website inventory was DCLK's original and core competency. The dismantling of that division in no way or form changes DoubleClick's focus from adserving technology and the supporting research, planning, and market analysis tools.
>>>>>
So they have surfing habits, e-mail identities and hard real-world data.
>>>>>
Not much in the way of email identities actually. The data for the DARTmail products belong exclusively to the clients. Technically, the data resides on DoubleClick's servers but realistically they can't use that data without an uproar surpassing that of the Abacus/PII flap.
>>>>>
Think about it. The "not enough money for more servers/equipment" lame excuse is a red herring.
>>>>>
Well, the reason they are shifting their focus is because the margins are to slim, part of which is infrastructure costs. Think about it - their dbs capture every single ad they serve to every single person and records at least 8 different datapoints with every event. Plus they track click, post-view, and post-click activity. That's an insane amount of data. It's mind-bogglingly huge. Now the issue isn't the storage of all that data - it's being able to use it. That is the major technology hurdle.
>>>>>
My guess is that in addition to keeping their online business _sans_ those pesky media attracting privacy issues (legal problem solved!), they will quietly be working in the investment community with their combined data and profiles to invest into and launch new online business ventures that target specific nich markets. And that is where they will get their return on investment.
>>>>
That's a good theory.
Breathe while you can (Score:2)
As soon as the economy is back, and the online ad business is back, you can bet that they'll be back in business again.
So breathe while you can.
why compete with eBAY? (Score:3, Interesting)
To sell something
What is the most efficient market for selling stuff
If you study the nobel prize winner of a few years ago, you'd discover that dutch auctions can be theoretically proven to be the most efficient price discovery process.
Guess who's implementing auctions in a massive way?
The same group that's expanding from collectibles to cars to sports gear to CDs
Already large-scale companies are dumping overstocked or out-dated goods on eBay
OK that's the long-term killer for ads. Now what about service organisations (ie offering something other than tangible goods). The service is about finding someone to do something that you can't do yourself
So
In summary, unless there are some fundamental problems with my observations, I would say that ads as we know them (banner, etc) will become ineffective due to going under the personal threshold of normal perception. Go to a rural place and you'd really notice the *ABSENCE* of billboards. Instead you will be mor eproduct placements
In summary, IMHO pure ad-driven renue models will fail. It might have worked for the radio-broadcasting industry which requires continuous listening but unless something radical happens to social perception of the internet, the ability to jump-click outside a walled domain, and the fundamental cost-structure (ads=bandwidth=costs) I don't see them being viable.
Of course the 64 million dollar question is what is a viable business model which all the VCs would give their souls (or unmortgaged remainder thereof) to discover.
LL
Re:why compete with eBAY? (Score:2)
If you study the nobel prize winner of a few years ago, you'd discover that dutch auctions can be theoretically proven to be the most efficient price discovery process.
And yet, in the real world, most commerce doesn't take place that way.
finished their job. (Score:2, Funny)
a company that has finished business on the internet after doing what they planned? somethings not quite right...
Confusing the facts (again)... (Score:4, Redundant)
Frankly, this is barely newsworthy. I guess it's worth mentioning because it's good news for privacy advocates, but other than that, it's just "ad product gets cancelled...big whoop".
On the other side (donning asbestos suit) (Score:4, Insightful)
There are a lot of benefits to the profiling and targeting, and the real potential for encroaching on my privacy is relatively limited. The company I work for would not exist without targeted marketing based on profiles built up on individuals.
We don't care what the person's sex/race/religion/politics are unless that data means the person is more likely to buy (and thus is intersted in our product). Even if we had that kind of information, we're a business.
Think about it from the other side: do I need to see ads for products I'll never buy? I'd much rather people give me offers and deals that match things I already buy. It's more useful to me.
You won't get there from here without targeting. This targeting gives us free (network) TV/sports/etc. It supports magazines we subscribe to at $1 an issue instead of $5. It supports websites we read, including this one. Slashdot is pretty obvious targeting, but CNN.com?
I do believe there's an important balance, but still -- we shouldn't be rejoicing about this.
Flame away.
Re:On the other side (donning asbestos suit) (Score:2)
I'm fully in support of the concept that I
should never see an ad for a product I'm not
interested in.
My method of achieving this is much simpler than
using profiling technology, though.
Re:On the other side (donning asbestos suit) (Score:2, Insightful)
You might not need it, but somebody will.
You may only be interested in whether or not someone will buy your product, but the market for personal data far exceeds your little advertising agenda.
A clever ploy? (Score:3, Interesting)
*lol*
Zarchon
Its all relative (Score:4, Insightful)
To be effective, you need a LOT of ecommerce sites. And you need a LOT of people conducting business through those sites. However, while 50% of Americans might be using the internet, you can bet that 50% of all retail purchases are not conducted through it. You have an excessive amount of consumers not actually spending money to support online businesses, but still "consuming" the free products that are being funded somewhat indirectly by those same businesses. Imagine if all the customers of a grocery store came in to take only the free samples and left.
Also, the average online consumer is less affected by online ads than their equivilant counterpart in meatspace is. The brainwashed masses who watch primetime TV every night are more influenced by the 33% of their TV watching experience, which is comprised of commercials. It also helps that generally speaking, most commercials are actually advertising products that people will use, instead of porn sites and pyramid schemes. Yes, I realize not all banner ads are about these things, but most of the spam we get is, and this spam reflects in the minds of the consumers in much the same way. Once they realize they're being suckered, all online advertising is seen in the same light.
What ends up happening, is we have a much smaller percentage of online consumers who are easily influenced by ads of any sort, yet those consumers are still consuming the free material supported by those very ads.
Targeting ads at consumers who are not influenced by ads won't have any greater effect. They're still just as likely to ignore them. The added overhead involved in accumulating this information is mostly wasted. Also, remember that the purpose of most advertising is not to inform a user of a product's existance, but to psycologically imprint that product's name so the next time the consumer is shopping and see's the product, they're more likely to grab it. This is why we still see coke commercials, even though everyone knows what coke is. It becomes an issue of name recognition.
Online, name recognition is less of a concern. If you're buying products online, you probably already know what you're looking for. The best an advertiser can hope for is to place a similar product next to one the consumer is looking for, hoping to catch his/her eye. Ultimately, every website will either have to fund their own content, which is fine until it becomes too popular to justify, charge subscriptions, which goes against the grain of what everyone is used to for content based websites, or sell products to generate revenue.
If more sites do this, then ads will have greater value. They will also advertise actual products instead of other content sites, which would create more cashflow. However, this could take some time.
-Restil
Only one thing to say (Score:2)
Heh-heh (Score:4, Funny)
Doubleclick can punch my monkey!!!
No, keep blocking them (Score:2, Interesting)
Time to remove that 'doubleclick.com 127.0.0.1' from /etc/hosts now?
No, for two reasons:
Research and Development... (Score:2, Funny)
Perhaps they can research some of the brain damages and annoyances of the x10 popunder ads [x10.com] and give out a cookie that gets rid of them [x10.com] for more than 30 days.
--
Patrick Cable II
"Unique" profiles? (Score:2, Insightful)
Crunch those numbers, boys!
DITTO!!! (Score:1)
Re:Thank God! (Score:1)
Re:Thank God! (Score:1)
Or, as my young daughter would put it, "Phhhbt! Na-na-na poo poo!" which seams strangely more appropriate.
Sorry, but I had to indulge that bit of glee.
Re:Hate advertising all you like... (Score:2, Interesting)
Not true with DCLK. "Advertising" such as what DoubleClick is doing/has done is an entirely different matter. Not only did DoubleClick seek to track individual Web users' surfing habits, they sought to match it to their offline identity and sell that information to the highest bidder. Imagine if, thanks to DCLK, your life insurance company finds out you've been visiting www.jrcigars.com and then, mysteriously, your rates go up. Yet this is EXACTLY what they were trying to do.
As for this being a "temporary" move, DoubleClick isn't coming back. Their exiting the ad-tracking business is like Ford exiting the car business. Online advertising is dead and has been for quite some time, make no mistake about it. I, for one, am happy to see them go.
Re:Make way!! (Score:2, Funny)
Try this Hosts file instead 11,000+ and counting (Score:2, Interesting)
MOD: Parent is NOT FLAMEBAIT! (Score:2, Funny)