Programmatic video platform Altitude Digital announced Thursday that it's partnering with DoubleVerify to combat ad fraud.
Ad fraud -- which
the Association of National Advertisers and WhiteOps projected will cost
advertisers $7.2 billion in 2016 as a result of fraudulent impressions -- is blamed for much of the industry's trust issues around transparency. An ANA and Forrester study earlier this
year found almost 70% of respondents cited higher bot fraud in programmatic buys as a concern, and some said lack of inventory and data transparency among other
issues posed challenges to the overall programmatic experience.
That's where third-party verification partners like DoubleVerify come in.
With the partnership, DoubleVerify will pre-screen video impressions before they reach an auction, filtering out violations such as non-human bot fraud, masked URLs,
hidden ads and impression laundering. Altitude Digital's other anti-fraud partners include Moat, Sizmek's Peer39 and Integral Ad Science, which the company partnered with in May 2015.
A lot of
publishers don’t have a handle on how much non-human traffic is in their inventory, said Altitude's CTO, Manny Puentes, adding that there’s always some form of non-human
traffic across publications. So the partnership with DoubleVerify will help publishers understand the DNA of their inventory, Puentes said, and advertisers buying
on Altitude's platform will be protected from seeing fraudulent traffic.
He added that DoubleVerify was chosen as a partner because the company made it easy to
leverage and integrate its tech into Altitude Digital's platform, so clients can see how KPIs are performing and get actionable insights.
Puentes said protecting
publishers and advertisers alike is an ever-evolving task. "Coming together as a community to to surface clean inventory is our responsibility," he said. "And we need to be accountable
for that."
In January, the company announced a premium video inventory guarantee giving advertisers the option of only paying for 100% viewable, fraud-free, and
brand-safe advertising impressions, Real-Time Daily reported.