So, I’ve seen many, many cases where major news portals have “sponsored” click-bait, often with outrageous headlines bordering on libel, photo-shopped pictures of celebrities beat up, gratuitously scantily clad, etc.
Do they just not care, as long as they rake in the cash? I’d be embarrassed to have that on my site, unless it was the national enquirer. I do think this contributes to the perception of “fake news.”
The only shame is if the clickbait isn’t sufficiently delectable to bring all the suckers around. Hence, over-the-top bait-and-switch garbage, all the better to bring the prey out.
If you find yourself even slightly interested in a clickbait (and who wouldn’t, they’re morbidly fascinating like highway wrecks and crime scenes), check whether Reddit may be able to save you a click or a dozen.
Do web sites pick their own individual ads? I was under the impression web sites use an ad service and the ads were based off of what the page visitor has in their cookies.
This is just my guess as a techie, I do not actually run any web sites. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Your understanding matches mine*, but I cut no slack for the website just because the primary culprit is the advertising broker. The website contracts with the broker, after all.
My understanding is based on no special insider position. It’s probably the same as yours: reading about how the internet works. Mostly on the internet.
Not only do the sites not pick their ads, the ads don’t pick their sites, as the kerfluffle about advertisers finding their ads on racist sites showed.
The whole point about cookies is that the ads are tailored to you. When I take my laptop to visit my grandson half the country away, my ads change dramatically.
The site Political Wire gets its money via subscriptions and the owner is blunt about the problems of digital advertising, including for legitimate news sites. Fewer sites directly buy ads, instead relying on ad networks and the ad networks are largely consolidated around a few big ones who rely on clickbait to make money: