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Adblock Plus Unveils 'Acceptable Ads' Platform to Sell and Serve Ads 3w315

Adblock Plus Unveils 'Acceptable Ads' Platform to Sell and Serve Ads
Highlights
  • Acceptable Ads Platform will decide whether ads are acceptable or not
  • Acceptable ads will not be blocked by the software
  • Adblock Plus is trying to make a truce with ad publishers
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Eyeo, the maker of the Adblock Plus ad-blocking extensions and apps, has been working on Acceptable Ads for a while. The aim, according to the company, is to block only annoying and intrusive ads, while allowing white-listed Acceptable Ads to -through. In some versions of the extensions, s can choose to allow these non-intrusive ads, apart from choosing their own crowdsourced filter list. The company has now gone one step further, unveiling the Acceptable Ads Platform. 45336v

(Also see: Adblock Plus Unveils a Way s Can Tip the Websites They Visit)

The Acceptable Ads Platform is essentially an ment network that serves ads that adhere to the company's non-intrusive ment policy. These ads are whitelisted, and will not be removed by Adblock Plus from the webpage, the company said in its blog.

The company says its Acceptable Ads Platform was developed in collaboration with publisher platform provider ComboTag, and that it has been launched in beta form right now. The platform is meant for publishers and bloggers, and lets them choose from a "marketplace of pre-whitelisted ads."

Talking about the specifics of Tuesday's announcement, Eyeo says it has opened its policy of Acceptable Ads to make the whitelisting process more transparent, and its recently formed independent committee is scheduled to meet later this year to take forward the policy. With a new mechanism, s and publishers will be able to rate ments, data which will then factor in the real-time bidding process when selecting whitelisted ads from the marketplace.

The Acceptable Ads Platform will see publishers keep 80 percent of ad revenue, while 20 percent will be divided amongst other parties involved in serving the ads, including a fixed 6 percent cut for Adblock Plus. The exchange is an attempt at a truce between rs, publishers, and ad-blocking software, as struggle between them is reaching unprecedented levels.

Of course, the entire concept of ad-blockers allowing certain ments through is not new, and, Mozilla co-founder Brendan Eich's unveiled a way s can tip the websites they visit while blocking ads or seeing only whitelisted ads.

In the meanwhile, while some companies, mostly news websites, are not even allowing s to view their content without stopping the ad-blockers, others like Facebook have found innovative ways to get its ments past blocking software.

Last month, Facebook made an announcement that it will embed ments with the content available on its website to prevent their blockage by ad blockers. This move by the company was followed by a quick reply from Adblock Plus that it found a way to by the technique used by the social networking website. Facebook, however, adapted to the by and came out on top again.

According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, Google and ad tech specialist AppNexus also will also be involved in selling ad space via the Acceptable Ads Platform, by offering the space to potential buyers through their own ad exchange platforms.

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