The programmatic ecosystem is evolving, and quickly: from the rise of connected TV (CTV) and SSAI to in-game advertising and streaming audio, advertisers and their partners are managing new ways to reach their audiences and an increasingly divided budget.
CTV—itself not an especially old content vehicle, but still more established than some other emerging channels—is starting to find its footing from a digital advertising perspective. New over-the-top (OTT) advertising opportunities have arrived (we see you, Netflix), and content providers are locked in a permanent race for prestige properties.
It’s a perfect situation for advertisers: new and expanding inventory on high-profile channels, growing faith in the systems that underpin and protect those channels, and water-cooler properties to latch onto.
But what’s good for the goose is also good for the proverbial gander, and fraudsters will be eyeing these same developments in CTV/OTT advertising with eagerness. The ICEBUCKET and PARETO schemes of the last few years show the appeal CTV’s higher CPMs hold for cybercriminals, and those schemes’ sophistication shows just how far a fraudster will go to slice off a piece of the pie.
HUMAN recently conducted a survey with TripleLift to ask CTV advertising buyers what they thought about the ecosystem and its ability to protect them from fraud. The results shed some light on buyers’ concerns, identifying where there’s room for improvement.
Let's start with the good news, and there was plenty of it:
Taken together, these findings demonstrate that buyers care deeply about the performance of their CTV campaigns and are willing to ensure partners throughout the supply chain are similarly inclined. As newer channels like in-game advertising and streaming audio continue to grow, these sorts of commitments will be crucial to build safe environments for the advertisers that power the internet.
On the flip side, however, there were some findings that suggest some gaps that need to be closed:
As Rick Holtman, HUMAN’s VP of Sales put it,“The growth of CTV in our world in terms of becoming our primary screen and the primary place where advertising dollars flow will increase. As the money moves through this supply chain, that's where the opportunity for fraud really becomes prevalent.”
The final keyword in that quote is prevalent. Bad actors use ad fraud operations in places where they believe it will be both profitable and overlooked. If they believe the programmatic ecosystem can be that, they will use all their resources to make it exactly that; a prevalent space for ad fraud to flourish.
Here’s one number that wasn’t in the survey: only 1% of cybercrimes are pursued to the level of persecution. So how do we go about making sure buyers, sellers and audiences are all protected in the CTV ecosystem? By stopping these attacks at their core and increasing the cost of doing malicious business so that the profit is not worth the attack.
At the end of the day this is a numbers game, and the good guys winning on the scoreboard means fraudsters losing at the bank. CTV is evolving, so the ways we have fought ad fraud and those who commit it in the past are not enough. We must take a modern approach and that is what HUMAN does with its modern defense strategy. Using the three pillars of network effect, visibility, and disruptions/takedowns, we protect organizations in a collective manner throughout the programmatic ecosystem.
Bad actors won’t suddenly grow a conscience and stop their malicious operations. They will keep going to the well until it runs dry. The well in this instance is your business. That is why we must stay vigilant in our efforts to protect the programmatic ecosystem from end to end. By collectively working together we can make sure things stay good, never get ugly and make sure the “C” in CTV always stands for connected.