Home Ad Exchange News No Delay For CCPA; Criteo’s Fortunes

No Delay For CCPA; Criteo’s Fortunes

SHARE:

Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here.

Sorry, Not Sorry

Apologies, ad industry, it looks like enforcement of the California Consumer Privacy Act will kick off as planned on July 1. Trade orgs, including the Association of National Advertisers, requested that the attorney general hold off on enforcing the law until January, considering COVID-19 and the fact that the AG still hasn’t finalized the implementation regs businesses need to comply with the law. But California Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s office remains committed to the original timeline, and the train keeps chugging with enforcement now just three months away. Comments on the regs’ third draft were due on Friday. If there are no major changes, a final version should be ready in the coming weeks. Last week, Google also politely acknowledged and declined a request to postpone its phase-out of third-party cookies.

Catch A Falling Knife

Criteo’s stock market plummet may or may not have bottomed out, but investors are interested now that its valuation has almost fallen below its cash on hand. BMO Capital Markets analyst Dan Salmon upgraded the stock to “Outperform” on Monday, not over any optimism for the company, other than its cash relative to its stock price. Criteo’s market cap closed Monday at about $478 million, compared to its $419 million cash position at the end of 2019, up $54 million in the year. Criteo is still profitable and a cash generator, so its valuation is tough to square with that of The Trade Desk, which has a similar annual revenue but a market cap of almost $9 billion. It also wouldn’t be the first time an ad tech stock dipped below the value of its cash holdings, a feat achieved by Rubicon Project in early 2018, before a bounce back.

Commingled 

VideoAmp released a commingled data set for TV advertisers with set-top box and ACR data. The device graph includes data from two of the largest smart TV OEMs, 38 MVPDs and satellite provider Dish, said VideoAmp CRO Michael Parkes. TVs are tied to a household, not an individual, so commingling and deduplicating two different sets gives clients a more accurate view of consumer behavior. “A lot of people talk about using set-top box and smart TV data, but very few are combining those into a unified data set,” Parkes told AdExchanger. Buyers can access the data through any DSP, and use it to target audiences and measure for cross-screen reach and frequency. VideoAmp is working on an integration with Google’s ADH and other walled garden clean rooms. Read the release.

But Wait, There’s More

Must Read

Comic: Alphabet Soup

Buried DOJ Evidence Reveals How Google Dealt With The Trade Desk

In the process of the investigation into Google, the Department of Justice unearthed a vast trove of separate evidence. Some of these findings paint a whole new picture of how Google interacts and competes with its main DSP rival, The Trade Desk.

Comic: The Unified Auction

DOJ vs. Google, Day Four: Behind The Scenes On The Fraught Rollout Of Unified Pricing Rules

On Thursday, the US district court in Alexandria, Virginia boarded a time machine back to April 18, 2019 – the day of a tense meeting between Google and publishers.

Google Ads Will Now Use A Trusted Execution Environment By Default

Confidential matching – which uses a TEE built on Google Cloud infrastructure – will now be the default setting for all uses of advertiser first-party data in Customer Match.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
In 2019, Google moved to a first-price auction and also ceded its last look advantage in AdX, in part because it had to. Most exchanges had already moved to first price.

Unraveling The Mystery Of PubMatic’s $5 Million Loss From A “First-Price Auction Switch”

PubMatic’s $5 million loss from DV360’s bidding algorithm fix earlier this year suggests second-price auctions aren’t completely a thing of the past.

A comic version of former News Corp executive Stephanie Layser in the courtroom for the DOJ's ad tech-focused trial against Google in Virginia.

The DOJ vs. Google, Day Two: Tales From The Underbelly Of Ad Tech

Day Two of the Google antitrust trial in Alexandria, Virginia on Tuesday was just as intensely focused on the intricacies of ad tech as on Day One.

A comic depicting Judge Leonie Brinkema's view of the her courtroom where the DOJ vs. Google ad tech antitrust trial is about to begin. (Comic: Court Is In Session)

Your Day One Recap: DOJ vs. Google Goes Deep Into The Ad Tech Weeds

It’s not often one gets to hear sworn witnesses in federal court explain the intricacies of header bidding under oath. But that’s what happened during the first day of the Google ad tech-focused antitrust case in Virginia on Monday.