Join us Dec. 1-3 in New Orleans for the Digiday Programmatic Marketing Summit
There were plenty in the digital media world eagerly sharing a brief blog post from The Wall Street Journal today. In it, Julia Angwin told the world the Wall Street Journal is changing its privacy policy. The shift will allow the Wall Street Journal Digital Network to collect personally identifiable information without user consent. This is, to be fair, an aggressive move on the Journal’s part. It’s also a bit hypocritical at first glance, considering the Journal’s hard-hitting (and sometimes overly dramatic) privacy series, “What They Know.” That series is a flashpoint in the online media and marketing world. All sorts of motives have been ascribed to it, with some actually believing News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch is using the series to squelch the threat online media poses to his mostly offline media empire. We even put on a panel about the subject at our Data Management Summit, “Is the WSJ to Blame for Our Infatuation with Privacy?” I got one email from an ad tech exec this morning saying he was “surprised the media pubs aren’t having a field day with this one.”
More in Media
Before AI can think for Immediate Media, it needs clean data to think with
All the will in the world won’t make an AI strategy work without clean, structured data to back it up.
People Inc. strikes Microsoft AI licensing deal as Google’s AI Overviews hit programmatic ad revenue
People Inc. has struck an AI licensing deal with Microsoft to be part of the tech giant’s pay-per-usage AI content marketplace.
How The Times is using AI to model synthetic focus groups from human audiences
The British news publisher has worked with Electric Twin to create a synthetic audience research panel based on The Times’ human reader panel.