The race against the loss of the third-party cookie has created a slew of competitors. Here is Digiday’s guide to who is in and out.
September 23, 2021
Barely a week goes by without another twist in the industry’s attempt to contort itself around the issue of privacy. What was in last year — in some cases even a month ago — is out now. Which makes it no better time to cover what’s in and what‘s out in the privacy crisis that has engulfed the ad industry. This is the ninth piece of The Long Goodbye, our 10-part editorial series covering life after the third-party cookie. Visit our continuously updated landing page here and read more below.
With new types of data and both supply- and demand-side assets, the first-party data network is increasingly interoperable, transparent and accountable. Download this new report to learn more.
This week’s Media Briefing previews the upcoming Digiday Publishing Summit, which kicks off on Sept. 27 and will feature speakers from media companies including The Washington Post, BDG, Group Nine Media and Essence.
A Salt Lake City, Utah-based company is one of a number of employers looking for new ways to engage employees and foster office culture despite the continued work from home environment due to the Delta variant.
Maria Reeve didn’t set out to become the first person of color to oversee the Houston Chronicle’s newsroom. But now that she is, she’s making it count.
You received this email because you’re a member of the Digiday community. If someone forwarded this to you, subscribe for yourself here.