The Check My Ads Institute is an organization founded by Nandini Jammi and Claire Atkin. The Check My Ads Institute is a non-profit advertising watchdog organization created in October 2021, which aims to do deeper investigative research into the advertising technology industry.[1] Jammi and Atkin also publish a newsletter called Branded.[1] The Check My Ads Agency was a brand safety and marketing consultancy that Atkin and Jammi founded in 2020.[2] As of February 2023, the Check My Ads Agency is no longer active.

Check My Ads Institute
FoundedOctober 2021; 3 years ago (2021-10)
FounderClaire Atkin and Nandini Jammi
Type501(c)(3)
FocusAdvertising technology industry
Websitecheckmyads.org

Atkin and Jammi focus on the issue of advertisements displaying on websites they describe as "bad faith publishers": websites containing fake news, far-right content, medical misinformation, and conspiracy theories, or websites engaged in advertising fraud.[2] Many companies are not aware specifically where their advertisements display due to the complexity and lack of transparency in online advertising; the Check My Ads Institute researches the online advertising industry and its enablement of these publishers, and pushes for increased transparency and change and the Check My Ads Agency aimed to help companies learn more about where their products or services are advertised and avoid advertising on bad faith publishers.[2][3][4]

History

edit

Prior to Check My Ads, Nandini Jammi had co-founded and run the social media watchdog organization Sleeping Giants, which focused on pressuring companies to remove their advertising from far-right websites.[3] Claire Atkin was a marketer who had become concerned about the role of online advertising in enabling disinformation, and its ultimate influence in elections.[5] In January 2020 they published their first issue of Branded, a newsletter where they describe their research into advertising technology (adtech) and problems they identify. In June 2020, Jammi and Atkin co-founded the Check My Ads consulting agency.[2] In October 2021, they co-founded the Check My Ads Institute, a non-profit group to focus on investigative research.[1]

Organizations and publications

edit

Check My Ads Institute

edit

In October 2021, Atkin and Jammi created the Check My Ads Institute, a non-profit watchdog organization focused on advertising technology, its role in promoting hate speech, and fraud within the industry. The Institute will focus more deeply on the investigative reporting Atkin and Jammi have done into advertising's enablement of bad faith publishers, and pushing for public accountability the advertising industry's role in enabling online misinformation and hate.[1] Atkin has said that she expects the non-profit work will become her and Jammi's primary focus, though they will continue to consult.[4]

Branded

edit

Jammi and Atkin write a newsletter called Branded, where they publish their research into how adtech funds what they call "bad faith publishers": sites that publish fake news, misinformation, or conspiracy theories, or sites engaged in ad fraud.[2] They published their first issue in January 2020.[5] As of October 2021, Branded had approximately 8,000 subscribers.[1]

Check My Ads Agency

edit
Check My Ads Agency
IndustryBrand safety
FoundedJune 2020; 4 years ago (2020-06)
FounderClaire Atkin and Nandini Jammi
Defunct2023 (2023)
Websitecheckmyads.co

The Check My Ads Agency was a for-profit brand safety and marketing consultancy. With the emergence of programmatic advertising, online advertisements are often bought per-impression in real time: ad space on a page is bought and filled as a user loads a webpage. Because of the automated and highly complex nature of these systems, companies often don't have much information about the websites on which their advertisements may eventually be displayed.[3] Companies hired Check My Ads to help them identify and vet where their advertisements are being displayed, and also to limit spending on fraudulent advertising schemes or ineffective campaigns. The agency has helped customers avoid inadvertently having their ads display on websites containing content they find objectionable, such as websites that publish medical misinformation or conspiracy theories.[3] Check My Ads also ran brand safety workshops, and created guidelines for marketers.[1]

Research and activism

edit

Through Check My Ads, on Twitter, and in Branded, Jammi and Atkin research which companies are advertising on "bad faith publishers"—websites that post fake news, extremist content, misinformation, and conspiracy theories, as well as websites engaged in advertising fraud. They also apply pressure to individual advertisers and to adtech companies to remove their ads from these publishers.[2]

Among their first stories in Branded was the topic of brand safety organizations blocklisting the word "coronavirus" during the COVID-19 pandemic, without any attempt to determine if a website was a legitimate publisher. Atkin and Jammi said this was having a detrimental effect on the news industry, and that ads were being blocked from publications including The Boston Globe, CBS News, and Vox as a result of the broad filters.[3][2] They have reported more broadly on keyword blocklists, which they have argued is reducing funding to reporting on important topics; for example, Atkin wrote in Branded in June 2020 that Fidelity Investments had blocklisted the words "immigration" and "racism". According to a Vice Media executive, articles they had published that pertained to George Floyd, protests, and Black Lives Matter earned 57% lower advertising rates despite being some of the most highly-visited.[6]

Beginning in August 2020, Atkin and Jammi have reported on "dark pool sales houses": where a group of unrelated publishers share an ID on an ad exchange, leading to the group being misrepresented as a single entity. This has allowed publishers to circumvent blocks from ad exchanges, as well as illegitimately draw better cost per mille (CPM).[1][7][8]

In April 2021, the group reported that some large American adtech companies, including Google and Criteo, had been placing advertisements on Russian-backed disinformation websites even after the websites had been sanctioned by the United States Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control. American companies doing business with sanction groups can result in severe criminal penalties. The adtech companies all stopped working with the Russian sites following the Check My Ads report.[9]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Barwick, Ryan (October 27, 2021). "Disinformation and ad-tech activists Check My Ads are starting a nonprofit". Morning Brew. Archived from the original on 2021-10-27. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Lundstrom, Kathryn (August 13, 2020). "Sleeping Giants Co-Founder Launches Check My Ads". Adweek. Archived from the original on 2020-08-17. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Edelman, Gilad (August 13, 2020). "She Helped Wreck the News Business. Here's Her Plan to Fix It". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Lundstrom, Kathryn (29 October 2021). "These Activists Plan to Uproot the Disinformation Economy". Adweek. Archived from the original on 2021-10-29. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Atkin, Claire; Jammi, Nandini (March 24, 2021). "How two women are taking on the digital ad industry one brand at a time". dist://ed (Interview). Interviewed by M.J. Kelly. Mozilla Foundation. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  6. ^ Beer, Jeff (June 16, 2020). "Are your company's digital ads funding racism and hate? This new firm will check for you". Fast Company. Archived from the original on 2020-06-16. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  7. ^ Stenberg, Mark; Shields, Ronan (September 29, 2021). "What Marketers Need to Know About IAB's Latest Crackdown". Adweek. Archived from the original on 2021-09-29. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  8. ^ Stenberg, Mark (September 9, 2021). "What You Need to Know About Dark Pool Sales Houses". Adweek. Archived from the original on 2021-09-09. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  9. ^ Blustein, Andrew (May 17, 2021). "How Ad Tech Wound Up Monetizing Sanctioned Russian Websites". Adweek. Archived from the original on 2021-05-17. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
edit