Difference between revisions of "Category:Privacy Sandbox"

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Revision as of 14:01, 13 February 2021

Privacy Sandbox is a set of proprietary Chrome browser APIs that provide information to buyers and sellers of digital media.[1] Many of these APIs rely on server-side components.

This page lists Google Privacy Sandbox projects as well as proposed modifications to these projects to better meet the needs of publishers and marketers. When an organization other than Google is proposing a project in the list below there name appears in parentheses.

Media Planning Projects

Given a goal of the Privacy Sandbox is to prevent marketers from understanding which audiences are interacting across different publishers, this will not be directly addressed by this project.

Experience Management Projects

Marketers engagement requirements are to show their content to their desired audience in the right context, while limiting the frequency capping across these different publishers. The "right" context is determined by the relative cost for a subsequent value generated from the exposure, such as brand awareness, click or conversion. Part of determining a desired audience is also filtering Non-human traffic.

Publisher engagement requirements are to show their content to their desired audience, while controlling for publisher business rules, such as controlling which types of advertising content can appear or appear together on the same page to a particular audience. Privacy Sandbox's time-delayed feedback may not meet publisher requirements for A/B testing nor quality assurance of their advertising.

A goal of the Privacy Sandbox is to limit the precision of audience segments in context, as well as to limit the real-time feedback marketers receive to update their measurement and budget allocations. Thus the Privacy Sandbox engagement proposals either force marketers to choose to control audience OR context, but not combine the two, or alternately force marketers to engage imprecise cohorts defined by Google.

Reporting Projects

Marketers reporting requirements are to understand which content generating relatively better outcomes when shown to particular audiences in particular contexts. The attribution of outcomes, which often occur on marketer properties, is part of the process that enables marketers to value the publisher inventory they buy.

A goal of Privacy Sandbox is to prevent the link of positive outcomes on marketer properties back to particular publisher contexts.

Measuring Effectiveness and Ecosystem Impact

Many marketers are concerned that the effectiveness of their media would be impaired by having reduced access to accurate, complete and real-time feedback across the various publishers they advertise on. Many ad-funded publishers are concerned that their revenues would decline as a result of this reduced effectiveness.

Below are a few studies and approaches to quantify the impact on the ecosystem, expected by the roll out of Privacy Sandbox:

  • Google's Effects of Disabling Third-party Cookies on Publisher Revenue[2]
  • Fledge
  • Teetar (Criteo)

References