Verve Group Capitalizes On The PET Trend With On-Device Cohort-Based Targeting
The purpose of ATOM 3.0 is to preserve addressability, but to do it in a way that passes the privacy sniff test.
The purpose of ATOM 3.0 is to preserve addressability, but to do it in a way that passes the privacy sniff test.
From clear-eyed looks at the industry’s shortcomings and conflicts of interest to prognostications that presage the next batch of conference panel talking points, you can count on these astute industry voices to drive the conversation.
Privacy and personalization often feel mutually exclusive in ad tech. But it doesn’t have to be that way, says Abhishek Sen, CEO and co-founder of NumberEight, a mobile data platform that takes a novel approach to dealing with identity data deprecation.
Google, and every other ad tech company, is trying to figure out how to deliver personalized marketing without being creepy or violating a privacy policy. “First-party data is imperative,” said Michael Burke, managing director of Google’s branded luxury apparels business, at the IAB Tech Lab’s Brand Disruption Summit in New York City on Wednesday. “But the fallacy is the idea that [first-party data] needs to be used for one-to-one marketing.”