• Tim Sweeney sur Twitter :
    https://twitter.com/TimSweeneyEpic/status/1553142531533176837

    You worked hard to build a great app. You registered a trademark. You signed up to Apple demands for 30% of your revenue as the sole way to reach iOS users. How does Apple reward you?

    App Store ads expanding to Today tab and more
    https://9to5mac.com/2022/07/29/app-store-ads-expanding

    Apple is expanding its advertising business and adding two new ad slots to the App Store. Currently, the App Store has two ad slots: one on the main ‘Search’ tab and one in the Search results. The two new App Store ads announced today will bring advertisements to the App Store ‘Today’ homepage, as well as to individual app pages.

    […]

    Developers won’t be able to target a specific application when bidding for product page ad placement. For instance, Twitter wouldn’t be able to target Tweetbot specifically. The ads, however, will be relevant for each of the product pages. This means you could (and probably will) see ads for direct competitors on app pages.

    #jeux_vidéo #jeu_vidéo #business #apple #publicité #app_store #placement_publicitaire #apple_search_ads #publicité_contextuelle #publicité_ciblée #vie_privée #google_play

  • Subprime Attention crisis : la publicité ciblée ne fonctionne pas
    https://www.ladn.eu/adtech-et-martech/publicite-ciblee-moteur-economique-web-arnaque

    Dans son livre Subprime Attention Crisis, Tim Hwang explique que la publicité ciblée, la base financière d’une grande partie du web, est survalorisée et à l’origine d’une bulle financière qui pourrait mettre en péril l’économie. Interview.

    Lorsqu’il travaillait chez Google, une question taraudait le chercheur Tim Hwang. Pourquoi personne ne parle de la manière dont le géant du web gagne 80 % de ses revenus : la publicité ciblée ? Ces encarts publicitaires dont le contenu est censé être personnalisé pour chaque internaute selon son activité sur le web, son âge, son genre... En creusant le sujet, il se rend compte que ce moteur financier qui fait rouler le web (les GAFA, les médias et bien d’autres services en ligne), qui façonne nos usages (pensez au bouton like, un simple moyen de collecter des données et proposer des pubs personnalisées), et qui agite beaucoup de peurs autour de la surveillance de masse, est bien plus fragile qu’il en a l’air.

    Le fruit de ses recherches, le livre Subprime Attention Crisis, jette un pavé dans la marre. Il décrit le fonctionnement opaque de l’industrie de la publicité en ligne et explique que le ciblage issu de la collecte de données est largement survalorisé. À ses yeux, la pub en ligne est à l’origine d’une nouvelle bulle financière qui pourrait mettre en péril des pans entiers de l’économie. De la même manière que l’éclatement de la bulle des subprimes a provoqué la crise de 2008.

    #Publicité_ciblée #Economie_numérique

  • Réseaux sociaux : flux à lier - #DATAGUEULE 95 - DataGueule
    https://peertube.datagueule.tv/videos/watch/b69424ee-33c8-4f7e-a47c-5c33d9c30b71

    Ils sont attirants, attachants … et rapidement indispensables. Les #réseaux_sociaux nous appâtent à coup de likes et nous bercent dans leurs « infinite scroll ». Et rapidement leurs #interfaces nous poussent à la consommation jusqu’à l’overdose. Et ce n’est pas un hasard. Ils ont bâti leurs empires sur notre #addiction à la #dopamine.

    #twitter #facebook #tinder #whatsapp #youtube #captologie #psychologie #smartphone #publicité_ciblée #monétisation_des_liens_sociaux #design #framasoft #mastodon #diaspora #logiciel_libre #culture_libre #société_libre

  • What Killed The Newspapers ? Google Or Facebook ? Or...? (by baekdal) #blog
    https://www.baekdal.com/blog/what-killed-the-newspapers-google-or-facebook-or

    C’est plutôt Google que Facebook qui a rendu obsolète la publicité dans la presse aux yeux des annonceurs.

    If we look at advertising in newspapers, they are almost always based on creating random exposure for people with no specific intent. You flip through the newspaper, not really knowing what will be on the next page, and there you find an ad for some random brand.

    In the past, this was pretty much how all advertising was done. It was low-intent exposure.

    Google Search, which is how Google makes most of its money, is nothing like this. Google Search is instead based on advertising to people when they are specifically looking for something. This is what Google Search ads are all about. They are for when people are looking for a new blender, a bicycle rack or anything else you can image.

    This is an entirely different form of advertising. It’s based on a specific need that people search for. Meaning it’s based on high-intent exposure.

    This is an incredibly important distinction to understand. Google isn’t winning because it’s big or that it has so much more scale. It’s winning because it created a way for people to have high-intent moments, which brands can reach with their ads.

    We have shifted from having a single advertising market (all based on low-intent exposure), to having two different advertising markets... and the media only fits into one of them.

    Brands will always prefer to have a high-intent moment than low-intent moment (at least the brands who know what they are doing). And it’s because of this that newspapers are losing the market. You are not losing to Google. You are losing to people’s ’intent’.

    This is the reality today. It doesn’t really help to complain about Google, because you don’t offer an alternative. If the media industry wants to get some of this money back, you first need to design high-intent moments for your readers and advertisers. That’s the only way to compete with Google.

    Facebook, on the other hand, is doing exactly the same as newspapers. The way advertising works on Facebook is exactly the way it works in newspapers. Here you have a NewsFeed with random stories that people look through. And within this feed you happen to come across random advertising (vaguely targeted to you).

    This is (again) low-intent advertising exposure.

    Facebook is competing directly with newspapers within the same type of advertising market. But this is not the market Google is in (well, except for YouTube).

    The newspapers and Facebook are in the low-intent advertising market. It’s a market that Facebook is currently winning because of its scale, but also because of better targeting and generally a better ’mood’. It’s far more relevant for a brand to advertise when people are having a good time than it is when they are reading about someone being murdered.

    Google, Craigslist and others are (mostly) in the new high-intent advertising market. It’s an entirely different type of market based on an entirely different type of moment. The reason newspapers are losing here is because you aren’t even in this market to begin with.

    If the media industry wants to regain some of this marketshare, you either have to design a better editorial profile and advertising product for each of these markets... or create a third market where you can really shine.

    And doing that is a far more relevant discussion to have than ’what killed the newspapers’.

    #presse #publicité #publicité_ciblée #google #facebook

    http://zinc.mondediplo.net/messages/38105 via BoOz