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Ad fraud costs $8.2B a year in the U.S., say IAB and Ernst and Young

Image Credit: Illustration by Eric Blattberg (assets via Wiktoria Pawlak / Shutterstock)

A study by the Interactive Advertising Bureau and Ernst & Young says the interactive advertising industry in the U.S. is losing $8.2 billion a year to fraudulent impressions, infringed content, and malvertising.

To stop the losses, the IAB and EY say companies must “fix badly designed business processes and repair obvious flaws in the digital advertising supply chain.”

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The report, “What Is An Untrustworthy Supply Chain Costing the Digital Advertising Industry?,” was conducted independently by EY and sponsored by the IAB.

More than half the losses — $4.6 billion — come from “non-human traffic,” EY found. This refers to fake ad impressions created by bots or malware. The researchers said 72 percent of ad fraud losses happen on desktops and 28 percent on mobile.

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Infringed content — video programming, music, or other editorial content that’s illegally distributed on the Web — represents $2.4 billion of the total yearly losses.

Malvertising, or ads that expose users to dangerous third-party content, accounts for $1.1 billion of the losses. The IAB said $781 million of that total derives from ad blocking triggered by risky ad content.

Ernst & Young partner Nick Terlizzi said marketers and ad industry players need to get curious about their business partners. “Some basics include knowing your supply chain partners and investigating new potential relationships using address information, tax IDs, and background checks,” he said.

But how much time should industry players take away from bringing in new money and give to reducing losses? A lot, apparently.

“We must remain wholly focused on bringing this conversation to the forefront and developing systematic ways of eradicating this activity, enabling both publishers and marketers alike to thrive in this new age,” said Wenda Harris Millard, president and COO of MediaLink, one of the sponsors of the study.

Other study sponsors include AppNexus, MediaMath, Rocket Fuel, Xaxis, PubMatic, YuMe, OpenX, Pulsepoint, and Videology.

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