Innovid now screens inventory for HTML5 video ads for the first time. On Monday, July 3, the steady death march for the once-popular media format reaches what could be its final fadeout. And, in another sign that HTML5 video ads are taking Flash’s place, video ad serving platform Innovid announced this week that it is working with authentication service DoubleVerify to keep HTML5 video ads away from bad pages. Those site pages are ones that DoubleVerify judges to be fraudulent or to contain content that is hostile to an advertiser’s image. The objectionable content is determined by scanning the inventory’s content and comparing it to keywords or other guidelines provided by the advertiser. This is the first time that Innovid, which says it has about a third of the market, has taken these precautions with HTML5 video ads. Attend the largest search marketing conference on the East Coast: SMX East this October in NYC. You'll get useful, proven tactics in SEO, SEM, conversion optimization, social media, mobile and more. Register now! About The Author
On Monday, July 3, the steady death march for the once-popular media format reaches what could be its final fadeout.
On that day, Google will no longer support Flash video ads on its industry-dominating tools, including DoubleClick’s Campaign Manager, Bid Manager or Ad Exchange, or in AdWords or DoubleClick for Publishers.
And, in another sign that HTML5 video ads are taking Flash’s place, video ad serving platform
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