Getting back to the proposed scenario: then the (non-exempt) «information content provider» is clearly me, not
the ad company in question.
Not exact matches
The recent decline is due
in part to concerns over cord - cutting and increasing competition for
ad dollars, as well as
questions over the health of executive chairman Sumner Redstone, who owns 80 % of the
company's shares.
(
In fairness, his team did follow up on this question in a post on the company's «Hard Questions» blog, and has since updated its privacy policy and ad settings to make them easier to navigate
In fairness, his team did follow up on this
question in a post on the company's «Hard Questions» blog, and has since updated its privacy policy and ad settings to make them easier to navigate
in a post on the
company's «Hard
Questions» blog, and has since updated its privacy policy and
ad settings to make them easier to navigate.)
Airbnb defends its decision to drop 1,500 listings, insisting the
ads in question didn't fit the
company's «vision.»
The building
in question is partly owned by ConEd and the
ad prompts viewers to contact the
company at a number provided on the screen.
«As the
ad in question is the subject of a legal dispute between Ethical Oil and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, at the advisement of our legal department we will not accept the order until the matter is resolved,» the
company said
in a statement.
It would seem likely that HQ has — or will very soon have — more advertisers lining up to work with the
company on crafting custom trivia
questions,
ad spots, and any number of other marketing tie -
ins.
The
company explained
in a blog post part of its Hard
Questions series that the Russian
ads were delivered to Congress.
Crucially, though, the Facebook exec dodged one of the most pressing
questions facing her
company: Whether there's any overlap
in the way Russian agents targeted users on the site with the Donald Trump campaign's own
ad operation.
«One
question that has emerged is whether there's a connection between the Russian efforts and
ads purchased on Facebook,» Alex Stamos, the
company's chief security officer, said
in a statement.
The move by Google to re-allow
ad blockers back to the Play Store came
in after its decision was
questioned by some of the affected parties such as Rocketship — the
company behind Adblock Fast.