Posts Tagged ‘google’

Google’s Anti-Malvertising.com Fights Off Bad Ads

Friday, June 19th, 2009

The site was created because Google has a significant interest in making sure that ad blocking doesn’t become a standard security practice.

Google (NSDQ: GOOG) on Thursday quietly launched a new search site called Anti-Malvertising.com to help its ad network partners identify potential providers of malicious advertisements. The Web site establishes a new home for a previously created custom search engine focused on malware, a home furnished with educational resources.

“Malvertising,” a combination of the terms “malware” and “advertising,” describes online ads that are viral in the wrong way: They attempt to infect the viewer’s computer. “Badvertising” is a variant term.

“Some cybercriminals attempt to use advertising to distribute malware,” the site explains. “Possible vectors of attack include malicious code hidden within an ad creative (such as a swf file), embedded on a Web page, or within software downloads.”

The site was created by Google’s Anti-Malvertising Team to mitigate the impact of bad ads on Google properties and on the Web sites operated by partners. The reason is simple: Google has a significant interest in making sure that ad blocking doesn’t become a standard security practice.

“It certainly seems that awareness of the industry-wide issue of malvertising is on the rise,” said Eric Davis, a member of Google Anti-Malvertising team, in an e-mail. “This site fits into our broader goal to help and encourage all members of the online advertising ecosystem to take an active role in malvertising prevention. It’s one part of Google’s commitment to educating our customers, improving the industry as a whole, and making the Internet a safer place for everyone.”

In early 2008, Niels Provos, a security engineer at Google, said in a blog post that about 2% of malicious Web sites were distributing malware through advertising, based on an analysis of about 2,000 known advertising networks. In 2007, the Q1 2007 Web Trends Security Report published by Finjan said that about 80% of malicious code online at the time came from online ads.

In February of this year, eWeek.com inadvertently displayed a fake Lacoste shirt ad that directed visitors to a site hosting malware. And there have been several similar incidents this year at high-profile sites like MLB.com and FoxNews.com.

The Google custom search engine on Anti-Malvertising.com is designed to provide publishers with background information about advertisers. Fed an advertiser’s name, company name, or ad URL, it returns information that may be useful in assessing whether the advertiser is trustworthy.

Anti-Malvertising.com also includes educational resources for those trying to defend against cyberthreats.

Google Unveils a Conversation Service

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Google Inc. previewed a new communications service that combines features of email, instant-messaging and document-sharing to facilitate multiperson conversations online.

The Google Wave service caps a years-long project to come up with a way to break down the barriers between different types of online communication services, said Lars Rasmussen, the Google engineer who led the development of the service along with his brother, Jens Rasmussen.

The service, which won’t be open to the public for several months, will allow users to start a conversation, called a “wave,” and to invite their contacts to join it. Any member of the wave can put photos, notes or other content into the group, which updates in near-real time.

People see an “in-box” with the most recent waves they have joined and whether others have added any new notes or content to them. They can click to scroll through the wave and see what content has been added to it. Dozens of Internet companies, including Facebook Inc. and Yahoo Inc., are racing to come up with new methods for sharing and organizing online information.

Google, which announced the new service at its developer conference in San Francisco on Thursday, envisions Wave as not only a way to share messages with friends and colleagues, but also to share and access a variety of information online. For instance, a user could create a wave that is an article he or she wrote and then invite people to read and comment on it.

Mr. Rasmussen said it is too early to tell how consumers will use Wave, but he expects that the various applications and services Google hopes developers will build on top of it will be a big draw. Videogame developers could build a game that began as a wave, for example, and Google will allow other Web sites to embed waves into their Web sites.

He added that Google hasn’t thought much about how the service could generate revenue. “One of the great luxuries of Google is that we get to not think about that yet,” he said.

Source: WSJ

News Corp hopes for broader ad deal with Google

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

News Corp hopes to sell Google Inc access to a greater swathe of its media properties, its executives said, as an advertising deal between the two companies comes up for renewal.

Senior executives at News Corp and its MySpace online service said at the All Things Digital conference on Wednesday that the company was working with Google to try and make their existing advertising deal better for both parties.

“When it comes time to negotiate, one of the things that can be helpful is looking at it from the overall News Corp perspective,” News Corp Chief Digital Officer Jonathan Miller said.

The current deal allows Google to run its Internet search ads on MySpace’s widely trafficked social media Web site, but is set to expire in about a year and a half, said MySpace CEO Owen Van Natta, who appeared onstage alongside Miller.

According to recent media reports, Google is seeking to renegotiate the deal at a significant discount to the current terms, which popular IT blog Tech Crunch pegged at $300 million a year.

“That’s an important deal for us, but it certainly isn’t a majority of our revenue,” Van Natta said. News Corps owns a wide range of media properties in television, print and on the Internet. MySpace is the world’s No. 2 social network, behind Facebook.

Source: Reuters

Google invades upfront marketplace

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Deutsch, Saatchi among agencies using Google TV Ads

Google TV Ads has begun booking upfront deals with major agencies and advertisers for the first time.

Marketers are committing upwards of seven figures to buy ads through the TV spot buying system in the year ahead, with agencies like Deutsch and Saatchi & Saatchi and advertisers like Coldwell Banker coming to the table, said Mike Steib, director of Google TV Ads.

The company planned to host an event at its offices in New York on Thursday with more than 100 chief marketing officers of Fortune 500 companies and their agencies, who are in town for the network upfronts.

Many of the commitments run for a year starting in September. At first blush, that sort of long-term buy appears contradictory to the premise of Google TV Ads, which allows for automated, same-day buying. Steib explained that marketers can still buy or tweak their campaigns daily; they’re simply agreeing to use Google TV Ads throughout the year.

“What our customers told us if the planner can put us into the upfront plan, then the buyers are free to utilize the platform in the way they works best for them,” he said.

They can also buy ads on YouTube now using Google TV Ads.

Advertising agency Deutsch is spending more than seven figures with Google TV Ads for the year ahead, marking a significant jump over its previous spend, said Peter Gardiner, chief marketing officer with Deutsch.

However, the system is not a replacement for the traditional upfront, he added. It works best for straight spot buys, but integrated deals will still be done via traditional means, he said.

There are fundamental differences though between traditional TV buying and Google TV Ads. With Google TV ads, marketers only commit to use the technology to buy spots; they don’t agree to buy particular networks or shows. They also set the prices they want to pay. In addition, advertisers can back out at any time, an attractive proposition during a recession.

Earlier this year, Google TV Ads built new tools into the system to let advertisers pick spots based on demographics, such as household income, number of kids at home and consumer habits. That’s accomplished using information from data provider Equifax, paired with anonymous set-top boxes data from Google TV Ads’ customer Echostar.

In addition to buying across Echostar’s 14 million homes, marketers can buy national spots on Sci-Fi, MSNBC, Hallmark Channel and other networks using the system.

Source: HollywoodReporter

Google gives partners analytics on YouTube pages

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Google is giving brands and content publishers another way to track YouTube viewership metrics by letting them view it inside of Google Analytics.

Brands can now keep an eye on information that had not previously been available through YouTube’s built-in Insight analytics system, including bounce rates, page views, stay time, and whether certain users are coming back for more.

It also takes the same geographic information that’s been available in Insight, and lets you fine-tune it within the Google Analytics maps overlay, which includes additional filtering tools that can narrow down results by segment. Brand owners are also able to compare these numbers to existing goals from benchmarks or advertising campaigns.

Google is pitching this as an easy way for companies to use the popular video service as a big focus group, which is a fair statement. Commercials or other promotional content can be watched repeatedly and at any hour of the day. Users are also able to rate the video and leave feedback, either in the comments or by private message.

Compared to having advertising on a Web site, or more traditional media like TV and radio, this gives the ad more of a “long tail.” More importantly, by giving these brands a way to access more of the information than they could on YouTube alone, it’s a very casual approach to getting them to start using its analytics service; something that can be a gateway toward using Google’s AdWords program.

Source: CNet