Sunday, October 30, 2016

Google Map Project 2

Facebook’s Ad Targeting is Under Investigation


An article on AdWeek titled Facebook’s Ad Targeting Is Under Scrutiny About Whether It Allows Discrimination focus on Facebook’s ad targeting preferences and the options that brands can select when targeting ads to specific audiences. I find it extremely interesting because Facebook is used to target so many people based off location and even based off what you search. Facebook has an ad targeting option called “ethnic affinity” where the publication reports advertisers can choose to exclude users with specific races from seeing ads. ProPublica suggested that its illegal is discriminate ads based on ethnicity alone. It’s important to note when brands target ads toward specific audiences it’s not necessarily discriminating because they have a specific audience in mind. Christian Martinez, Facebook’s head of multicultural responded with, “That merchant also many want to exclude other ethnicities for whom their care products are not relevant- this is a process known in the ad industry as “exclusion targeting”. This prevents audiences for the community-specific ads from seeing a generic ad targeted to a large group and helps avoid offensive outcome that traditional advertising can often create for people in the minority (AdWeek Johnson).” For instance, I wouldn’t want to see hair products designed for black women on my news feed. I already get bombarded with ads consistently so if it’s irrelevant to me specifically I would rather the ad not be targeted toward me. This can go for any product of service. The reason I deem this article so important is because social media, specifically Facebook, has become a huge platform for advertising and I think we will be seeing more articles along the lines of this one.




Sunday, October 16, 2016

BuzzFeed Aims to Cover Election Night

As election night comes closer and closer I thought it would be appropriate to discuss how the election is changing tech for many companies. An article titled BuzzFeed to Live Stream Election Night Coverage on Twitter discusses Twitter and BuzzFeeds role during the election process and they are working together for ad revenue. Twitter will sell ad packages for the election coverage, offering mid-roll spots, as well as sponsorship opportunities for original news clips produced by BuzzFeed. Twitter and BuzzFeed will share ad revenue. BuzzFeed has recently been making changes to it’s technology by separating news content and entertainment completely and putting more emphasize on news clips. I think this is a great time to start making this transition because the election has high media coverage. “For its part, Twitter has been actively striking deals with media partners to beef up its live content. Its live streams of the presidential debates have surpassed those of its NFL games. Sunday's town-hall brawl between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump averaged 369,000 viewers per minute, up 7% from 344,000 viewers during the first debate, according to Twitter (Poggi).” This is the perfect opportunity for BuzzFeed to compete with traditional TV news and really put emphasize on news content. “This comes as BuzzFeed attempts to step up its game in news video, an area that traditionally hasn't been one of its strengths (Poggi).”



The video below is an example of BuzzFeeds attempt to put emphasize on news content.