Intrusion Detection: Winter 2011 (COMP 5900X): Difference between revisions
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Very good paper with a wealth of technical infromation on how AdWords works: | Very good paper with a wealth of technical infromation on how AdWords works: | ||
'''Google AdWords as a Network of Grey Surveillance''' | '''Google AdWords as a Network of Grey Surveillance''' | ||
[http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02082010-004431/unrestricted/Roberts_HM_T_2010.pdf] | [http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02082010-004431/unrestricted/Roberts_HM_T_2010.pdf] |
Revision as of 03:23, 16 January 2011
Android advertisement services
Google Adwords
AdSense: - Advertising program that's used by publishers - Contexual Advertising (to surrouding context)
AdWords: - an ad brokerage system - a pay-per-click advertizing program used by Advertisers - Advertisers create short, text based ads that are very closely relatated to chosen keywords and then allow those ads to be shown on other people's web sites that feature the chosen keyword.
Instead of the traditional model of displaying ads on manually chosen sites, AdWords displays the ads according to the content of the hosting web page (“travel,” “new york giants,” “perfume”), and advertisers pay the host each time a user clicks on an ad. Google makes money from the system both by hosting ads on its own search and other sites and by collecting a commission for all ads hosted on other sites.
AdWords consists of 3 main parts: the ranking part that drives its search and ad lists, the terming part that drives its association of ads with content, and the valuing part that drives its valuation of ads.
AdWords technically refers to only one of several sub-systems (the one that attaches the smartertravel.com ad to the word “smart travel”) that constitute the larger AdWords system, along with Google's search and AdWords ad ranking systems and the AdWords pay-per-click / ad auction payment system.
Publishers get paid by:
- Unique visits - Click-through-rate - Avergage cost-per-click
A code snippet provided by Google and embedded in the publishers page grabs the Ads off Google's Ad server. A third party Ad server can be used through AdSense.[http://www.google.com/adsense/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=94145 ]
"How will Google prevent malware from third-party ads?
Google is actively working with trusted advertisers and partners to reduce the risk of malware. We specifically forbid fourth-party calls or sub-syndication to advertisers or vendors we haven't certified.
Also, all third-party ads are checked for malware when they're initially entered into our system. Google also employs an automated malware checker that continuously scans all third-party creatives running through the network. Any ad with malware will be automatically pulled from the network to protect our partner websites and their users."
Very good paper with a wealth of technical infromation on how AdWords works: Google AdWords as a Network of Grey Surveillance [1]
Google Display Network [2]
AdSense for mobile content [3]
inMobi
iOS advertisement services
iAds
This is what I could find so far, please feel free to correct any mistakes - Ben
iAd [4] is an Apple created web advertisement framework integrated to iOS starting with iOS 4. To embed iAds into an iPhone/iPad app, the programmer can use the Xcode IDE [5] to add "Ad Banners" into their apps. Some tutorials of adding banners can be found in the following links:
iAds are created using web technologies, such as HTML5, CSS, JavaScript, using a tool called iAdProducer [6]. To have advertisements served, the ad creator must join the iAd Network [7], and submit their ad(s) for review. [8] The distribution and selection of ads is done by the Apple iAd network, and does not currently support "house ads" (ads where ad author = app developer), but will allow the app developer to "exclude ads from competitors or other unwanted advertisers based on specific keywords, URLs, and application Apple IDs" [9]
Google Adwords
Google AdWords on the iPhone/iPod/iPad is the same service as found on PCs save for minor customizations. These customziations include targetting ads for the platform [10] in addition to key words, and ensuring results fit on the display [11] of the mobile device.
The rearranging of the ad can be attributed to at least the user-agent (UA) in a web request. This can be tested with changing the user-agent in the browser of a PC and performing searches on Google. Instructions on changing the UA for Mozilla Firefox can be found at: http://johnbokma.com/mexit/2004/04/24/changinguseragent.html and iPhone UAs can be found at: http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/iphone-user-agent/
See the AdWords description in the Android section above for a more detailed description.