The ad
industry's Trustworthy Accountability Program is unveiling a new anti-fraud initiative with two components -- a registry of "verified" companies, and a new payment-identification system.
Starting today, online ad companies will be able to apply to TAG for verification. The organization will then conduct background checks on the applicants, and provide training to them, says CEO
Mike Zaneis.
"If you want to get TAG certified, you have to make sure your platform is clean," Zaneis says.
Companies that apply will have to provide a tax ID number, corporate
address, and the name of a "compliance officer" who will be responsible making sure the company meets its obligations.
The registry will be open to marketers, ad networks, agencies and
publishers in the supply chain. The cost of joining will be $10,000 per year
After companies are certified, they will receive a unique identifier that can be passed along with every piece of
inventory, Zaneis says.
In addition to the registry, TAG will roll out a payment-identification system that aims to prevent fraudsters from receiving payment.
Zaneis says that TAG is
still building the technological platform for the unique identifiers, but that the program should be operational by January.
The major ad agency holding companies, Google, AOL, Rubicon
Project, AppNexus and Index Exchange are among the businesses supporting the initiative.