Google’s Privacy Sandbox Isn’t As Bad As Critics Claim
There’s a lot more good than bad in Google’s Privacy Sandbox. Here’s why some of the current criticisms around the cookie alternative don’t hold water.
There’s a lot more good than bad in Google’s Privacy Sandbox. Here’s why some of the current criticisms around the cookie alternative don’t hold water.
Although Optable participated in the W3C Privacy Sandbox working groups and has been testing Sandbox API integrations for the past eight months, its early access program represents its first foray into running real campaigns.
On Tuesday, data collaboration and clean room platform Optable announced $20 million in Series A funding, with participation from Hearst Ventures, Brightspark Ventures, Desjardins Capital, Deloitte Ventures and asterX.
Advertisers need to do their due diligence on potential clean room partners before working together, including (and especially) finding out how secure the platform is.
The question “How do you define a data clean room?” no longer has a subjective answer.
Optable is latest company to partner with The Trade Desk via UID2. The integration is in closed beta and set to go live for all Optable customers in Q4. Like InfoSum, Amazon Web Services, Snowflake and Acxiom and Kinesso (both owned by IPG), Optable will be what’s known as a closed or private UID2 operator.
The erosion of third-party cookies and the fragmentation of identity have compelled publishers to rebuild their first-party data strategies. And the IAB Tech Lab’s Self-Defined Audiences (SDA) might be one of the most significant standards building toward a set of post-cookie digital advertising solutions that aggregate and normalize audience data points across publishers’ domains, writes Vlad Stesin, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer of Optable.
Privacy tech is booming. As of December, there were 230 privacy and security companies listed on Crunchbase – up from 207 in April. Two such startups are Qonsent, a data privacy platform that raised its $5 million seed round on Wednesday and Optable, a clean room and data collaboration platform that released a differential privacy feature this week.
The founders of AdGear – a Canadian DSP and ad server acquired by Samsung Ads in 2016 – raised $3.6 million in seed funding to build a SaaS data connectivity platform called Optable. Optable uses specialized algorithms that ensure the secure transmission of encrypted audience data. The cryptographic technology allows for decentralized and secure data […]