Facebook

Peer39 Plays Semantic Defense

by John Gaffney on Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Peer39 Plays Semantic Defense

Semantic targeting has opened the promise of true contextual placements for brands and publishers. In this world of octomoms, errant athletes, and cyberterror. Several targeting firms are turning toward stressing their ability to play semantic defense for brands as well as efficient semantic placement. With that in mind, Peer 39 has announced the general availability of SemanticProtect, a solution that leverages semantic targeting to protect brands in real time.

The new product is aimed at avoiding risky, negative and controversial content. According to Peer39 CEO Amiad Solomon, As content continues to change in real time, SemanticProtect monitors and registers page changes and automatically updates new content restrictions. The technology applies a list of restrictions to pages avoiding placement of ads next to negative content such as disasters, crime, adult material, and inappropriate objectionable language. SemanticProtect leverages Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning to better understand and identify the meaning within content, helping brands to avoid being perceived in a negative light due to content adjacencies.

 "Some content can be a dangerous move for brands," said Amiad Solomon, CEO and founder of Peer39. "SemanticProtect qualifies the meaning of page content and protects from placement next to material that is in not in harmony with the brand. As page content continues to change, Peer39 provides advertisers and publishers alike with a solution to successfully navigate.”

Solomon says Peer39s customer base of publishers, agencies and exchanges have requested the protective approach. He says it is a continuing sign that publishers continue to evaluate and adopt semantic targeting as a next level of search optimization.

"A company's reputation is a key asset, especially in today's tough economic climate. Monitoring and protecting brands against negative sentiment is a struggle for many, employing critical time and management attention," said Gordon Crovitz, Peer39 Advisory Board member and former publisher of The Wall Street Journal. "Peer39's SemanticProtect gives both advertisers and publishers peace of mind, knowing that advertisements will be placed in appropriate contexts."

Tags: semantic targeting, peer 39

Post a comment

Name*:
Email*:
Comment*:
Verification code*:
 
refresh image

Comments (2)

January 27, 2010, 01:01 PM
dls3498: AdPepper's iSense is way better than what Peer39 is currently doing. I've seen a demo of their product and Peer39's. Peer39 is way behind on how accurately and efficiently they are analyzing and classifying pages, not to mention how they are conveying those taxonomy's to ad providers to better monetize those impressions.

January 26, 2010, 04:15 PM
zoohandler: Nothing this company is doing is innovative. Facebook, MySpace and many other user generated content sites are monetizing their inventory by doing brand protection as well as scraping pages for data to be used in keyword target in their ad servers. Why would they pay a Peer39 to do it for them...peace of mind is not adding another layer of complexity to an already complex ad serving landscape.