Home The Big Story The Big Story: GDPR Turns Five

The Big Story: GDPR Turns Five

SHARE:
The Big Story podcast

Happy birthday, GDPR! Can you believe just five years ago the European Union put into effect the General Data Protection Regulation?

The law went into effect in May 2018, mere months after Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica scandal. And it created a snowball effect for data privacy regulation, as US states and other countries followed in its wake.

The effects of GDPR have been massive, but they’ve also taken time to unfurl. It took five years, for example, for GDPR to net its first billion-dollar fine (though Meta is contesting it). And the law’s effect on competition, publishers and ad tech companies is still underway.

On this week’s episode, we bring on Garrett Johnson, a professor at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business. He has conducted research into how the law affected a number of metrics, including sites’ tagging strategies, consent rates, overall traffic and, ultimately, the impact on conversions.

We also discuss a recent casualty of GDPR: the third-party data company AddThis. The widget stopped collecting data in Europe almost a year after GDPR went into effect, but took another four years to wither on the vine completely.

Owner Oracle, which paid somewhere around $200 million for the tech in 2016 when it wanted to “bulk up” on audience data, told publishers to remove the widget from its site this spring as part of the shutdown.

But if GDPR did in AddThis, why did it take so long for it to fade into the sunset? We get into the nuances of regulation and how ad tech products work.

Must Read

How Chinese Sellers Are Quietly Reshaping US Consumer Habits

American consumers are buying more and more online products directly from Chinese manufacturers. It’s an important change, though many online shoppers are unaware.

T-Commerce Vs. Shoppable TV

Television commerce, or T-commerce, is similar to shoppable TV: both refer to buying something you see on television. But shoppable TV is far more nascent – and also has different implications on attribution.

Why White Claw’s Parent Company Is Pouring Investment Into Headless Commerce

A booze brand and a “headless commerce” platform walk into a meeting with the CFO. That might sound like the setup for a punchline, but it’s just how mar tech works these days.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

As MMM Rides Again, Google Finds Its Place In The Conversation With Meridian

Tracking is a mess. Attribution is broken beyond repair. IP address identity data may go the way of the dodo. Which means marketing mix modeling is back, baby!

Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

The Rise Of Ecommerce Ad Metrics

As ecommerce adoption has grown, measurement has shifted away from proxies towards metrics that show business results – a move away from clicks and views towards sales and profitable growth.

Comic: Off-Platform Media

How RMNs Use MFA And Cheap Inventory To Game Attribution Rules

Retail media is built on its attribution quality, but real purchases can be gamed by programmatic metrics and create perverse incentives for RMNs to serve ads across low-quality inventory.