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The Online Advertising Industry: Economics, Evolution, and PrivacyDavid S. EvansUniversity of Chicago Law School; University College London; Global Economics Group April 10, 2009 Journal of Economic Perspectives, Forthcoming Abstract: Online advertising accounts for almost 9 percent of all advertising in the United States. This share is expected to increase as more media is consumed over the internet and as more advertisers shift spending to online technologies. The expansion of internet-based advertising is transforming the advertising business by providing more efficient methods of matching advertisers and consumers and is transforming the media business by providing a source of revenue for online media firms that compete with traditional media firms. The precipitous decline of the newspaper industry is one manifestation of the symbiotic relationship between online content and online advertising. Online-advertising is provided by a series of interlocking multi-sided platforms (also known as two-sided markets) that facilitate the matching of advertisers and consumers. These intermediaries increasingly make use of detailed individual data, predictive methods, and matching algorithms to create more efficient matches between consumers and advertisers. Some of their methods raise public policy issues that require balancing providing consumers more valuable advertising against the possible loss of valuable privacy.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 41 Keywords: Advertising, Online Advertising JEL Classification: M3, M37 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: April 16, 2009Suggested Citation |
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