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New York Times learns the possible risks of programmatic advertising

pando.com

17 points by techcofounder 12 years ago · 7 comments

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patio11 12 years ago

This is one of those cases where humans are so good at seeing patterns they'll intuit the presence of an intelligence (artificial or otherwise) where none exists. The only algorithm here is "Apple paid for a placement on this date", rather than anything content-aware.

(With regards to how actual content-aware ads treats this sort of case: My recollection is that waaaaay back in the day AdSense shipped with a "death and tragedy filter" such that if it detected the page was about them it would turn ads off. The Google which made that decision is no longer - these days it's an unchecked-by-default setting controlled by advertisers. Somewhat surprisingly for Google, the filter was really unsophisticated - on the order of a simple keyword blacklist. Some of my SEO buddies had CMSes which would flag words thought to be problematic for writers, so that an innocuous phrase like "Getting your taxes done doesn't have to be a Greek tragedy" didn't end up killing ad revenue from the page.)

kgermino 12 years ago

As a comment on the site says - this is almost certainly not programmatic advertising but a premium placement paid for by Apple at least a few days ago.

Also, I don't see how this is intellectually stimulating, of interest to a Hacker, or anything other than a mildly amusing picture. Amusing pictures have a place, but this doesn't seem to belong here.

xpose2000 12 years ago

This is not newsworthy. If you hit the refresh button enough times on upsetting news stories I am sure you will find a somewhat offensive ad every now and then.

ahemphill 12 years ago

I've worked with Apple on homepage advertising and believe the likelihood of that placement being programmatic is very low.

  • FireBeyond 12 years ago

    Agreed, I worked for MSN.com for a while, and any ad placement like that is not your random, average ‘served from doubleclick’ style ad. It’s premium, and planned, human controlled.

ars 12 years ago

> reproduced without further comment

Maybe you should add a comment? What's the problem?

Only thing I can think of is the jet in the ocean and a picture of the ocean, but that's a stretch.

  • dragonwriter 12 years ago

    Well, "iPad Air" text in an underwater scene has more unfortunate resonance with a story about an airliner crashing into the ocean than just the "ocean" connection.

    In a print newspaper, this is the kind of association of advertiser and story that would have been actively avoided by a human (and which, from what I've heard -- though I have no direct experience -- advertisers would be irate about and even cancel accounts over if it wasn't avoided.)

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