The end of the Ad World’s airbrush enhanced reality!

February 25th, 2010 by jlightstone

Well,  maybe the world is coming to some ‘real world’ reality that air brushing in ads has been destroying the world’s self image.

Recently a few politicians in France and Britain have been pushing around a plan to make advertisers label ads with a warning message stating that the pictures have been retouched.  This plan actually agrees with me!  Now as a visual person, an advertiser, and a painter, I am certainly the first one to love and study great design and the beauties of a nude women.  Certainly the ad and  art world have stylized the human form for many years, and we do need hyper reality sometimes. However media is now everywhere, and is being shown to young people constantly. Once upon a time, people would see these stylized pictures only sometimes (like in the Louvre) and there was limits on the technology.  As a person and a parent, I am concerned for what these images are doing to people. I won’t go over the effects and causes, this debate is large and for another time.  I am going to offer another limit and solution to airbrushing in ads. I think that ads, especially the fashion type ads, should state the age of the model (something like ‘Sarah, age 17′)!

Again I love beautiful women, but the ‘women’ that these superficial design people are portraying in ads are seldom women…..they are young girls (who are often anorexic)! I would go further and say that most of these girls look like young teen boys.  Now I won’t tell you why ‘i think’ these design people use these boyish girls, as I am seldom politically correct in a debate.  One only needs to look at the ‘environment’ of the design people to understand their design influences.

Now you might ask why I think the age of the model should be stated along with usage of airbrushing.  Well it again comes back to everyone’s attraction to beautiful people.  There is nothing wrong with adults (men or women) thinking a young person is beautiful, however, seeing the age would quantify and restrict the admiration.  Turning it from jealousy and lust, to a mere appreciation and applause.  For older women seeing these ads, they would begin to understand the impossibillity of trying to have the body of a teenager. For young teenage girls they would realize that these girls are likely younger than them, and that it is not some 25-35 year old women as portrayed uber-chic and succesful. Ultimately, these girls can grow up and age sensibly without unrealistic expectation on their body.  Now for men, adding the age would also have an effect.  Most men, especially young men, are known to be infatuated with girls and victims to their hormones.  However, any sane man would quickly place their hormone in check if they knew the ‘25 year old looking’ girl in the ad was actually younger than their little sister and might be legally known as ‘jail bait’.  Young men would quickly realize the nature of girls vs women in reality, and would quickly appreciate the ‘real’ full figured women.  As they say in the ad business ‘Sex sells’.  Once men began to truly appreciate the ‘real’ women, then true women could live a normal life without always second guessing their weight and trying to reach airbrushed goals. Now a world without superficial airbrushing would certainly achieve world peace, but Obama (or previously Bush) would need to find a bail out plan for the diet business  (maybe too for ad people making diet and fitness equipment infomercials)!

Here is some more  info on the French and British plans.
France May Put Warning Labels on Airbrushed Photos

Ban airbrushing of models in children’s ads, says MP


IASH bans 247 Realmedia from IASH org for showing ads on explicit web content

August 25th, 2009 by jlightstone

We have been working on some IASH related projects and have found many instances where media suppliers were not delivering ads on the web sites they had offered in their plan.  Sometimes the sites which the ads were delivered on where totally in violation of local morality laws or simply inappropriate for the intended audience of the ad.  It even seems like 247 Realmedia a massive network has had issue with IASH and ads they showed on onlyfights.com.

IASH standards in the UK and a similar IAB version to be soon released in the USA, set standards of the type of content that media sellers can place ads upon.  These standard specify the obvious like pornography, hate speech,  pirated content and similar, but also restricts on moderated versus unmoderated forums, or brokers who sub-broker their contracts without notifying the client.

ArtsandTV then implemented tools in our ad server to  stop this and monitor our suppliers in real time.  We then found very interesting issues that this was a problem not only for smaller media companies, but even on large publishers.

We will be writing more about IASH soon, and will have some interesting announcement soon to follow.

For the purpose of this blog, we wanted to include an article from mad.co.uk and British business web site.  Since the mad.co.uk article requires a login.  We are posting the link to google cached version of the full article ( Google Cache / IASH boots 247 Realmedia ) and in case a picture of the article.

247realmedia-booted-from-iash

247realmedia-booted-from-iash

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For easiest access we have also copied the full article text from Mad.co.uk, this article was originally sourced from nma.co.uk.

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WPP-owned 24/7 Real Media has become the first ad network to be suspended from *IASH* as it clamps down on ad misplacement.

The network has been thrown out of the trade body, which polices 27 ad networks, for failing to take part in July’s audit.

The expulsion follows an IASH investigation into the ad misplacement issue raised by NMA, which found ads for top brands like Orange and Virgin Media being served on explicit site Onlyfights.com .

This is the first time an ad network has been suspended from IASH and shows it’s determined to address the industry’s patchy reputation.

The decision was taken at an IASH committee meeting on 9 July, when 18 of 19 ad networks voted in favour of the action. It leaves 24/7 Real Media unable to rejoin IASH unless it passes the next ABCE audit in September.

IASH chairman James Aitken condemned the network. “24/7 Real Media breached our code of conduct, which we take very seriously.

” It was one of three ad networks that failed to gain full membership of the trade body in 2007 but passed an audit last March.

A 24/7 Real Media spokeswoman said, “We remain committed to the principles and practices of IASH.”

IASH has implemented a new system to ensure networks obtain a list of URLs wh
en purchasing inventory from other networks in a bid to increase transparency.



Extra! Extra! Read all about it…

April 4th, 2009 by James Wallace

A post earlier this week on the Yahoo Publisher Network blog got me thinking about newspapers.

Almost daily, large traditional print publishers are moving resources to their online operations. ..

Yahoo! is helping newspapers make this transition through our APT product serving the Newspaper Consortium…

The idea that Yahoo! is targetting newspaper companies as a revenue stream is what interests me here.  With articles around the web crying the death of the printed news, the time is perfect to be targetting these companies and it’s silly it took news of Yahoo! doing it to spur me on.

Large national paper sites like thestar.com are some of the most frequently visited sites on the net, and have extremely low Alexa rankings.  Combine this with a nice geotargeted selling strategy and it sounds like a win to me, and that is exactly how Yahoo! is playing it.

On a smaller level, you’ve got the countless smaller local papers who haven’t been bought up by a large corporation yet.  While the number of these operations dwindles, they still represent a significant chunk of paper readership.  Has Yahoo! targetted these guys yet?

The Point

I guess my point here is it doesn’t hurt to copy off the big guys once in awhile.  Yahoo! going after newspaper people?  Why don’t we try that too, and leverage these big news Yahoo deals to try and spur on the sale?  Can’t hurt!

The news also leads me to believe there will be a lot more targetted newspaper inventory up for grabs in the near future.  Always an easy sell to advertisers.

Newspapers are definitely a vertical to be watching in the coming months!


Google Sunsetting Video Units

March 29th, 2009 by James Wallace

tombstoneSometime in 2008, Google launched a new Adsense feature called Video Units.  The video units allowed publishers to embed video players of different sizes into their sites, to try and earn revenue from clicks on the video ads.

Today Google has announced that the feature is not performing as well as they had hoped, and they will be retiring it by the end of April.

This move doesn’t come as much of a surprise.  The videos in most categories were fairly poor, and I doubt became much of a draw on anyones site.  

As well, it was impossible to mix the Google video units with your own streaming video content; you had to embed a dedicated player for them.  Had the Google team worked on out this shortcoming, the adoption rates for the service would surely have been much better.


Interest-based Ads

March 25th, 2009 by James Wallace

Sometime in the last few weeks, the Google Adsense team announced a new feature they would be rolling out called Interest based ads.  What is this all about?

Google Adsense has tens of thousands of websites showing their advertisements, maybe more.  As a result, Google is in a position to be able to accurately identify a specific users interests.   I’m surprised they haven’t rolled something like this out before now!

How it will Work

Essentially, every publisher participating in the Adsense program will have their sites categorized.  Then, through a cookie, or maybe an IP, Google will track users and determine which category of site they visit the most.

Traditionally the ads shown on a publishers site are targetted to the page content.  After April 8th (the rollout date for this feature), surfers to your site could be seeing ads based on their interests.

The interest targeted ads won’t be replacing the traditional system, but will instead work in conjunction with it.  The Adsense system will attempt to choose an ad best fit to the surfer, that will make you the most money.

What does this mean for the typical Adsense publisher?  

Increased revenues, at least, in theory.  Show users advertisements about things they are interested in, and they will be more likely to click.  More clicks, more money.

In reality, I don’t think this change will do much for the average publisher.  People aren’t going to suddenly start clicking ads just because it’s about something they like.  The few clicks you do receive may earn you a bit more money, which is great, but don’t expect your earnings to double or triple overnight.

Reactions?

The reception to the news of this program has sparked some hot debate, as the anti big brother, tinfoil hat crowd reacts.  Check out this post over at Adbusters to see what I mean.  Google is monitoring our lives!  Collecting our data and tracking our movements!  Give me a break.  Compared to the tactics traditional advertisers have been using for years, this latest Google move is nothing to break a sweat over.  As a publisher, you have the option of opting your sites out of this new program too.

Personally, I’m keeping an open mind about the program until I see results.   What are your thoughts?


Welcome!

March 23rd, 2009 by James Wallace

With so much happening in the coming weeks in the world of online advertising, this seems like a perfect time to be launching our company blog!

This week marks the start of SES New York, and while more of a search related event than advertising, the two worlds are more closely related than ever.  Google has teased us about a new Adwords design, and some exciting talks… one in particular about ‘Pay Per Conversation’.  The idea that every click is a user trying to start a conversation with you, is rather interesting.  Hopefully we get some slides online in the coming days.

Not to be left out in the cold, Yahoo will also be in attendance, helping organize the SearchAppalooza event.  A search focused developer challenge, sure to breath some new life into the arena.

Once SES wraps up, we’ve got ad:tech happening in April.  Alongside ad:tech this year is a new contextual advertising focused event called ADSPACE.  With both going on at once, it’ll be a really hard to event to stay away from!

Anyway, welcome to the blog.  Hope to see you back soon!


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