Units of WPP, Omnicom and
Publicis, and at least one major advertiser, have signed on as charter members of controversial ad blocker AdBlock Plus’ Acceptable Ads Committee.
The
announcement, which was made by Cologne, Germany-based eyeo, the parent of AdBlock Plus, is intended to be an independent committee that will take over control of AdBlock Plus’ equally
controversial “acceptable ads” program, a de facto ratings system setting standards for the placement, “distinction” and size of ads
deemed acceptable to AdBlock Plus users.
The committee also represents a step by AdBlock Plus to defuse criticism that it is trying to assert a gate-keeping role in
determining which ads are acceptable or unacceptable to be rendered on user’s browsers.
In AdBlock Plus’ ecosystem, publishers can also pay to gain access to
installed user’s browsers, which some industry critics see as a form of greenmail or a “shakedown” requiring publishers to pay to gain access to their own users.
Conde Nast, Dennis Publishing, Local Media Consortium, TED Talks, and Leaf Group are among the charter publishers named to the committee.
Computer and technology marketer
Dell is the sole advertiser on the committee, and the agency units include: WPP’s J. Walter Thompson Worldwide, Omnicom’s TLGG and Publicis’ Saatchi & Saatchi.
A variety of ad-tech middlemen such as Rocket Fuel, Native Ads Inc., Sharethrough, The Media Trust, and Criteo are also on the committee, which eyeo describes as responsible for setting the
“criteria and the compromise between users who want to block intrusive ads and publishers who rely on advertising revenues.”
The company said the application process for
joining the committee is “still ongoing and continuous.”
MediaPost named AdBlock Plus its “Media
Supplier of the Year” for helping to bring attention to the role ad blocking, and new business models related to it, represent to digital advertisers, agencies and publishers.