CRGTNIJul 24, 2019

YourAdvalue: Measuring Advertising Price Dynamics without Bankrupting User Privacy

arXiv:1907.10331v31 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy concerns for users in online advertising by providing a tool to measure ad prices without compromising personal data, though it is incremental as it builds on prior RTB measurement work.

The paper tackled the problem of measuring advertising price dynamics in Real Time Bidding (RTB) while preserving user privacy, and found that desktop RTB prices have grown 4.6x since 2013 and 3.8x since 2015, with factors like cookie synchronization increasing ad values by 19% and demographic targeting leading to higher prices for women and younger users.

The Real Time Bidding (RTB) protocol is by now more than a decade old. During this time, a handful of measurement papers have looked at bidding strategies, personal information flow, and cost of display advertising through RTB. In this paper, we present YourAdvalue, a privacy-preserving tool for displaying to end-users in a simple and intuitive manner their advertising value as seen through RTB. Using YourAdvalue, we measure desktop RTB prices in the wild, and compare them with desktop and mobile RTB prices reported by past work. We present how it estimates ad prices that are encrypted, and how it preserves user privacy while reporting results back to a data-server for analysis. We deployed our system, disseminated its browser extension, and collected data from 200 users, including 12000 ad impressions over 11 months. By analyzing this dataset, we show that desktop RTB prices have grown 4.6X over desktop RTB prices measured in 2013, and 3.8X over mobile RTB prices measured in 2015. We also study how user demographics associate with the intensity of RTB ecosystem tracking, leading to higher ad prices. We find that exchanging data between advertisers and/or data brokers through cookie-synchronization increases the median value of displayed ads by 19%. We also find that female and younger users are more targeted, suffering more tracking (via cookie synchronization) than male or elder users. As a result of this targeting in our dataset, the advertising value (i) of women is 2.4X higher than that of men, (ii) of 25-34 year-olds is 2.5X higher than that of 35-44 year-olds, (iii) is most expensive on weekends and early mornings.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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