Tumblr Follows Instagram - Reveals Plan For More Ads
cagraham writes "Following close on the heels of Instagram's advertising announcement last week, Tumblr has signed an agreement with analytics firm DataSift to provide info to advertisers on user behavior. According to Yahoo! CEO Marissa Mayer, who oversaw the recent $1.1 billion purchase of Tumblr, advertising on the site will become increasingly prevalent throughout 2014. DataSift will provide advertisers with info on the 5.5 billion interactions that occur on the site each day. This makes Tumblr the latest in a slew of recent tech companies to turn towards targeted ads in an attempt to generate revenue."
Twitter is another customer of DataSift.
I'm too old to care about tumblr or Instagram... Or what people share on them.
And I don't get why people find it interesting?
Now get of my lawn. :D
my feels! i can't...
Does this mean we'll start seeing something semi-worthwhile on Radar rather than what American Apparel mistakenly thinks kids should buy or the latest flash-in-the-pan Fox TV drama?
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
I've really been missing out on targeted ads for <insert bizarre sub-culture> porn.
The plan is to use it less. So let's call it a wash.
Yahoo getting targetted ads on Tumblr to find out what its users want... then ignoring when users on Flickr try to tell Yahoo what they want.
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
Sounds like it will be going away sooner rather than later.
The moment we heard Marissa was buying Tumblr, we all knew death was imminent. Flickr's the test case to prove it.
Laughter is the Spackle of the Soul.
I really, really dislike that model for targeted advertising, and I'm surprised Mayer would sign up for it, rather than using the Google model of keeping the data in house and doing the targeting themselves, so that advertisers never see it. At least that way you only have to keep your eye on one possible misuser of your data (well, plus government agencies who decide to target you for their user data requests).
I suppose making effective use of the data yourself is a lot harder than selling it. But, as I understand it, Google's ability to use the data more effectively than advertisers themselves would is a big part of Google's success. I guess Mayer doesn't think Yahoo! has the know-how to do it as well.
(Disclaimer: I work for Google, which may bias me here. I don't think it does, because I felt the same way before I started working for Google, but it's possible.)
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
the more I block them. Ads continue to represent a danget to users through tracking and malware-infected ad servers. No thanks. I truly miss the simpler, largely ad-free Internet of the 90s.
It still makes me wonder: how come Google ads just don't irritate me*, and even actually interest me enough to click though on regular basis, but Facebook, Flickr, and everyone else seem to handle advertising in ways that just plain irritate me?
Or that apparently waste advertisers' money because they're flinging ads at people who have utterly no interest in them.
Kind of the same way that I can drop back into Amazon.com after a year or so, and it just feels good and somehow makes it really easy to buy stuff, yet 95% of e-commerce sites suck terribly.
I guess it's that geeky drive to invent something brand new every time instead of just copying (or licencing) what already works well.
*OK, YouTube ads are the exception
Three Squirrels
Here's a little experiment. Y'all do have NoScript running right? rIght? Reset it to defaults. Prepare for an onslaught.
Yahoo home page:
go.com, fwmrm.net, facebook.net,media.net,sitescout.com, yieldmanager.com, interclick.com, yldmgirng.net .
Now I thought Yahoo was bad - but wait, there's more
Did a web search on "New York Times" on yahoo went to their site their site....
adsafeprotected.com, googlesyndication.com, nyt.com, moatads.com, serving-sys.com, nytimes.com
Now on the same page, I'll temporarily allow all those. Now we have more friends running scripts on the same page:
Facebook.net, chartbeat.com, revsci.net, krxd.net, scorecardresearch.com, brightcove.com
So Let's allow all those once again. Huh... another script:
facebook.com
So for just the NYT home page, there are 13 scripts hard at work.
Going through some other pages on the same site, we get typekit.com, stats.com, ticketnetwork.com, insightexpressai.com, buzzfeed.com, doubleclick.net, google-analytics.com, pointroll.com, dl-rms.com, questionmarket.com
Typekit.com, brightcove.com, and ticketnetwork.com are the only ones not specifically looking you over and tracking and or generating what you see by what you clickk on.
But just on one website, we have at least 22 scripts designed to follow you around.
I know a lot of people here use noscript, and this might be old news to them. But newcomers might benefit from what is happening.
The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
Erm, my bad! I forgot that I've not saw an ad since 1998.
However for sites I surf a lot I allow them but customize the page layout so the view counts and I see nothing. I admit it's a dick move, but I hate ads and if I can rip them off out of a view I do it with a giant troll grin on my face.
How young would the average hu-man have to be for this to be news to them? Rule of Acquisition 168: Whisper your way to success.
I wonder occasionally if advertising is the next overinflated bubble fit to burst.
Companies or investors are buying into these vast userbases (which is essentially what is being sold) on the broad assumption that somehow advertising revenue will return the investment. Yet in almost every case this has proved spurious as the trends are so volatile.
Tumblr has never made a profit and yet is worth over $1 billion simply because people believe that advertising is worth that much. It seems to be an act of faith in much the same way as people believed that housing was an investment that always grew, or you couldn't lose buying technology stock in the late 90's.
The foundations of this advertising collossus seem no more secure than those of the financial one, and we all know how well that ended up.
Absurdly overvalued internet hype of the moment that doesn't make enough money to justify its' valuation announces plan to make money through advertising......
Knock me over with a feather, it's just amazing that literally nobody has had this idea before, give the "CIO" a few million for his insight.
Wow! The ball of that Van de Graf generator is charged at 40,000 Volts. We can hook a motor up to it and power our fans. (hooks up fan, which rotates ever so slightly, then stops). Hey, what happened to that 40,000 Volts?
Hosts do more w/ less (1 file) @ a faster level (ring 0) vs redundant browser addons (that slow up already slower ring 3 browsers) as a filter for the IP stack (coded in C & load w/ OS + 1st net request resolver queried w\ 45++ yrs.of optimization):
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APK Hosts File Engine 9.0++ 32/64-bit:
http://start64.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5851:apk-hosts-file-engine-64bit-version&catid=26:64bit-security-software&Itemid=74
(Benefits hosts files provide on numerous levels for speed, security, reliability, & anonymity = in link above)
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* Cutting out ads saves me up to 40% per website page on average via the above!
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A.) Hosts do more than AdBlock ("souled-out" 2 GOOGLE & crippled by default) + Ghostery (Advertiser owned) - "Foxes guarding the henhouse", or Request Policy -> http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4127345&cid=44701775
B.) Hosts add reliability vs. downed DNS & protect vs redirected DNS + secure vs. known malicious domains also -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3985079&cid=44310431 w/ less added "moving parts" complexity + room for breakdown,
C.) Hosts files yield more speed (blocks ads & hardcodes fav sites - faster than remote DNS), security (vs. malicious domains serving mal-content + block spam/phish links), reliability (vs. downed DNS or vs. Kaminsky vulnerable DNS, 99% = unpatched vs. it & worst @ ISP level + weak vs FastFlux + DynDNS botnets), & anonymity (vs. dns request logs + DNSBL's).
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("Less is more" = GOOD engineering - va, slowing down already SLOWER usermode browsers layering on MORE in addons which are known to slow them down more? I work w/ what you already have in kernelmode, via hosts: A tightly integrated PART of the IP stack itself)
APK
P.S.=> "The premise is, quite simple: Take something designed by nature & reprogram it to make it work FOR the body, rather than against it..." - Dr. Alice Krippen "I AM LEGEND"
...apk
Figure out what tax you're willing to pay for "free" stuff. The human brain is good at ignoring ads.
Hulu makes me watch 6 30-second commercials several times an hour like normal TV. Haven't done Hulu in a year and a half.
If tumblr does anything besides the occasional in-line ad as part of the tumbling scroll wall, forcing me to stop and watch, bye bye.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
I'd expect more like human^Wpony-centipede fursuits, Lego SM and vintage typography porn.
Now that'd be fitting for Tumblr. And it certainly exists, and I'm not going to look for it because I value what's still left of my sanity.
Well the superficial changes she's made so far makes Yahoo more and more like Google that I'm beginning to think Mayer is Google's equivalent of Stephen Elop. She's not exactly running Yahoo to the ground the way Elop did but then again Google tend to have more finesse than Microsoft's embrace and extinguish approach to the competition. Google's fine with coop-tition so long as you don't threaten their bread-and-butter ad-nalytics business. So there you have Google happily funding Mozilla's yearly operations while pushing its own Chrome browser and making practically no moves to further eat into Safari's dominance of the Apple browser space.
1.) Blocking rogue DNS servers malware makers use
2.) Blocking known sites/servers that serve up malware... like known sites/servers/hosts-domains that serve up malicious scripts
3.) Speeding up your FAVORITE SITES that hosts can speed up via hardcoded line item entries properly resolved by a reverse DNS ping
4.) AdBlock works on Mozilla products (browser & email), hosts work on ANY webbound app AND are multiplatform.
5.) AdBlock can't protect external to FireFox email programs, hosts can (think OUTLOOK, Eudora, & others)
6.) AdBlock can't help you blow past DNSBL's (DNS block lists)
7.) AdBlock can't help you avoid DNS request logs (hosts can via hardcoded favorites)
8.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. TRACKERS (hosts can)
9.) AdBlock can't protect you vs. DOWNED or "DNS-poisoned" redirected DNS servers (hosts can by hardcodes)
10.) Protection vs. "FastFlux" botnets (where the IP address of a particular hostname/domainname & URL link correspond to changing IP addresses in a botnet)
11.) Hosts are EASIER to manage, they're just a text file (adblock means you had BEST know your javascript, perl, & python + regular expressions (iirc as to what languages are used to make it from source)).
Adblock Plus To Offer 'Acceptable Ads' Option
http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/12/12/2213233/adblock-plus-to-offer-acceptable-ads-option
Since hosts (via tcpip.sys, a driver in ring 0/rpl 0/kernelmode) load first, from a far, Far, FAR FASTER MODE OF OPERATION (vs. usermode plus layering in over the top of browsers, slowing them down more (firefox addons are KNOWN for doing that mind you)) & know what is blocked out already?
Hosts are referenced BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE IS for IP address resolution from host-domain names for ANY & ALL processes that are webbound -> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/172218 ??
Hosts Files make ADBLOCK REDUNDANT (& adblock doesn't block all ads anymore by default either)...
APK
Don't use it and show Marissa she is a failure of a CEO.