Addressable TV: Unwatchably bad television with unwatchably bad ads customized for you.
Advertising: Computer-generated banner ads blocked by 37% of all people and ignored by the remaining 63%.
Agile: Two days to create an ad, four months to approve it.
Banner ad: An ad seen mostly by bots and never clicked on. (See interactive ad.)
Broadcast TV: What American households claim not to be watching for an average of eight hours a day.
Caveat: 20 minutes of saying everything that's wrong with a :30-second spot.
Caveat: 20 minutes of saying everything that's wrong with a :30-second spot.
Click-through-rate (CTR): A precise measurement of near absolute zero.
Conference call: 14 people typing. One person saying "who just joined?"
Content: Anything longer than a commercial and of lower quality.
Contextual advertising: Targeted annoyance.
Conversion rate: See Click-through-rate above.
Cookie: The primary currency of the Surveillance Economy.
Customer-acquisition: A measurement based on the spurious idea that people are objects to be acquired.
Data-mining: Selling other people’s property without their knowledge and against their will.
Experience: A synonym for “seeing.” eg. “I experienced that site.” Formerly, “I saw that site.”
Immersive: Something someone tells you is supposed to be interesting.
Immersive: Something someone tells you is supposed to be interesting.
Interactive ad: An ad people interact with by ignoring it completely.
Meeting: 8 people texting; 8 people typing; 2 people talking; nobody listening.
Meeting: 8 people texting; 8 people typing; 2 people talking; nobody listening.
Pop-up ad: The last thing you see before you install an ad-blocker.
Print: Non-applicable.
Privacy: See above.
Print: Non-applicable.
Privacy: See above.
Re-targeting: Data-driven stalking.
Rich-media: Unviewed ads that make media departments rich.
Robust: A complicated way of building something no one will visit.
Tracking: Surveillance.
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