MySpace Treads Carefully With "HyperTargeting" 68
Ian Lamont writes "MySpace is preparing to boost its advertising systems, by launching a targeted ad platform called HyperTargeting and creating a Web-based system that lets vendors purchase ads without dealing with human sales teams. HyperTargeting will 'look at a person's interests listed on their public profile and then classify the user into particular interest-specific categories.' MySpace claims that early tests resulted in a 300 percent increase in the number of ad click-throughs. The company apparently learned a lot from Facebook's earlier experiences with Beacon — MySpace members will be able to opt out of HyperTargeting, according to the company."
They haven't learned (Score:3, Insightful)
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I don't know if this was a serious comment or not, but I have recently taken this tactic. Griping on /. is important so that your views get spread around amongst your peers, but after you have an informed decision - start griping to your elected officials.
Don't like net neutrality? Don't like IP/Copyright law? Don't like the fact that stevia [wikipedia.org] can't be sold as a food additive? Write your govenor/senator/congressman/whomever and let them know. The reason we get these BS systems in place is because the a*
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Write your govenor/senator/congressman/whomever and let them know. The reason we get these BS systems in place is because the a**hats are in the ears of our representatives. It takes five minutes to write an email - it doesn't have to be eloquent or anything. Just a quick "hey I'm a regular dude and I think that such and such is no good".
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Nerds have no perspective on whats really important in life.
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I generally agree. Though, I think this is part of a bigger problem (most things are). I would classify it as "keeping the rights of the consumer higher than the rights of corporations". By making something opt-out you are stomping on this, MySpace might be an innocuous example, but there are others who use opt-out for more deleterious purposes.
If the government can lower itself to make the very effective Do Not Call List, then why not do someth
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No, that's not the biggest Facebook problem. (Score:1)
The biggest problem with Facebook Beacon isn't the opt-out (though that is indeed a problem). The problems with it are:
1. It broadcasts users' purchases to Facebook, which then broadcasts them to other users.
2. Facebook gets paid to coopt their users' identities to promote their commercial partners' products. This is really the nastiest one, if you ask me.
3. According to the lawsuit recently filed against Blockbuster and Facebook [arstechnica.com], it continues to unlawfully share information about users who have opted
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It's a business (Score:2)
Contrary to your egocentric beliefs, nobody owes you anything.
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So, MySpace and Facebook have both now jumped the shark. What company is it time to move to?
Verizon, AT&T, Bell Systems, Quest, [your phone company here]. At least they won't try to push ads through your phone (if you still use your phone as a phone) and it won't take 5 minutes for blingtastic pages to load. Dispense with the pages and talk to people like you used to. It's far more natural. And, in most cases, less annoying. Welcome to social networking the way it was meant to be!
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Fixed that for you.
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OTOH, +++ATH0
Not so smartmodem now, are we? 1992 might not be far enough
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I'm so tired of these greedy companies. News Corp was already making plenty of money.
Uh, does it hurt anything for them to continue? Is it bad for them to improve their platform? By your logic, we should never have invented the automobile, because we were already making plenty of money selling bicycles and donkey-carts. Stupid greedy companies, not keeping us in the stone age.
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Rupert Murdoch, (Score:2)
An exodus from there could only be a positive thing.
Not all that bad, really (Score:2, Interesting)
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Ads (Score:2)
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Hell, its MySpace, you could make selling their identity to Nigerians opt-in for something silly and superfluous, and a significant portion of users would. I don't think the typical MySpace user is know for their forethought and impulse control.
members will be able to opt out of HyperTargeting (Score:1)
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Great Marketing... (Score:1)
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Myspace advertisers are mostly bottom-feeders (Score:5, Interesting)
Myspace has very low ad rates for contextual ads, and very low quality advertisers. The typical Google AdSense ad is something like "Free MySpace Backgrounds, Profile Layouts, Smileys all in one place. Download them all for Free!"
Their banner ads tend to be from major consumer brands, and are probably more valuable than the contextual ads.
Increased click-through rate is not necessarily a win. Remember, there's that 10-15% of Internet users who produce 50% of the click-throughs, but don't buy much. (That's probably Myspace's demographic.) The advertiser problem today is to make those users go away, instead of paying Google money for their clicks.
As the metrics get better, it's becoming clearer that what's good for the advertiser is quite different from what's good for the online ad delivery service. The advertiser wants a sale; the ad service wants a click. This is starting to be a problem for Google as advertisers realize that the "Google content network" often has negative value and opt out.
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I don't use it for "social networking" I use it to find new bands
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As for hyper-targetting, that is of course just a PR=B$ marketing term to camouflage reality and draw in the sellers.
Firefox + AdBlock (Score:3, Funny)
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I use NoScript and while you can "Allow" Slashdot.org, you can't "allow" all the other domains that serve ads to Slashdot. I wish they would make one like this so that I can "support" my favorite websites by showing the ads on my favorite websites (but not all of them), which I can then occasionally click out of interest and/or go
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Recently got worse than Facebook (Score:1)
This is NOTHING like the Facebook Beacon issue. (Score:3, Insightful)
Yahoo does the same sort of thing, and so would Google if they had more of a portal (and pretty sure they will build user models from your searches eventually - what do you think Google Toolbar's motivation is). Yahoo's is more subtle (and more insidious even) as they are tracking your page views on the Yahoo site, and building a model of you in terms of things like finance, football, blah.
MySpace's targeting is based on what YOU EXPLICITLY SAY about yourself in public. For sure, if you're profile is completely private, then perhaps they shouldn't mine your data for targeting, but frankly, its really hardly an invasion of privacy (unlike sharing your video rental/purchases would be cf Facebook). It will probably take into account groups and bands you link to.
It should result in better ads for users (assuming you are willing to assume ads for free hosting is a reasonable trade off).
Winton
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I would prefer no ads, If I have to have them then I would prefer ads the do not apply to me so I can ignore them, if they appear to apply to me then they look tempting (but turn out to be useless 99.9% of the time so annoy me even more!)
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I understand your reasoning, but to be honest, advertisers end up having to put out MORE ads in order to get their message across. Would you rather 1 targeted per 10 pages, or 1 random ad per page?
Not saying it wil
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Value-Add for the emo set! (Score:2)
"Razor blades and black hair dye, half-off!"
A better use for keywords. (Score:2, Insightful)
On another note, damn I hate context ads. Everywhere I go Google serves up "meet hot local shemales" ads, because I happen to be transgender and that's probably the most profitable keyword on my profile.... everywhere, the same damn ad. It's like Googl
FaceBook Ad Platform Does This (Score:1)
And when was the last time you clicked an ad? (Score:1)
fake that sucker (Score:2)
Could be improvement for users (Score:3, Insightful)
I haven't used MySpace in a long time, but when I did, I was annoyed at how UN-targeted their ads were. I had listed lots of Christian music and writers in my profile, but was always getting skanky ads that bordered on obscene. Adblock didn't stop all of them.
At the time, I emailed them to say that they were wasting an opportunity and hacking off their users by ignoring the very profile information they had collected when it came to displaying ads.
I don't think privacy is as big a deal here as in say, Google searches. After all, you've already knowingly posted your profile information; what's the harm in them using it to give you ads you won't hate (as much)?
Arrrrr me consumers, prepare to be hoarded (Score:2)
Ahh yes (Score:2)
thank you
Nothing is free (Score:1)
MySpace Thinks I'm Gay (Score:2)
More pr0n and virus ads I guess... (Score:1)