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- Are weight loss drugs making only the wealthy healthy?
- Latest Tech News from CNBC
- World's biggest chipmaker TSMC posts record 2024 revenue as AI boost continues
World's biggest chipmaker TSMC posts record 2024 revenue as AI boost continues
Beams secures $9M Series A to digitize UK home renovation market
Home renovation projects can be unpredictable for both customers and builders. Meanwhile, small contractors barely use modern software and home renovation giants, like IKEA, tend to trundle on with dated legacy software. UK startup Beams thinks it can solve this conundrum and has now raised a $9 million Series A funding round to crack the [β¦]
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Indiaβs payment strategy is cutting out Visa and Mastercard
As digital payments morph into strategic assets, India is offering a template for other nations seeking to reduce dependence on Western payment networks. Regulators around the world are notching up scrutiny on Visa and Mastercard over the fees they charge merchants, but India has chosen a different path: Creating rival payment networks that are increasingly [β¦]
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X is rolling out labels for parody accounts
X said today that it will now label parody or satire profiles to differentiate them from other accounts. In the past, users, including news presenters, have mistaken posts from parody accounts as authentic statements made by the actual people or entities. X said that the label would be visible on both accounts and posts. βWeβre [β¦]
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AI in 2025: Five trends for marketing, media, enterprise and e-commerce
After another year of rapid AI development and experimentation, tech and marketing experts think 2025 could help move adoption beyond the testing phase.
The factors in play come from multiple fronts. Tech companies are expanding access to AI content creation, agencies are working on ways to improve workflows for various tools, and enterprise-focused companies are looking for more ways to drive better performance with specific applications. Meanwhile, tech companies are rushing to deploy new ways for companies and consumers to use AI agents.
While there are plenty of topics to follow in the coming year, here are five things industry experts think will happen with AI in 2025 β not to mention all the news from Las Vegas this week during CES. (Read more in our 2024 AI news timeline and how platforms are evolving with AI content and ads.)
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- Digiday
- Media agencies face the uncertainty of a Trump 2.0 presidency and the rise of agentic AI in 2025
Media agencies face the uncertainty of a Trump 2.0 presidency and the rise of agentic AI in 2025
No one doubts that 2025 is going to be a fasten-your-seatbelt kind of year.
A new (but also not-so-new) president known to shake up norms, an expected deregulatory environment, but one that generally discourages pro-social initiatives and generative AI adapting and getting more powerful with each new iteration β the latest buzzword being βagenticβ AI.Β
So whatβs in store for the media agency world? A lot, it would seem. For one, the mid-December news that Omnicom moved to acquire Interpublic Group has observers and analysts thinking itβs bound to set off a wave of acquisition and consolidation among the other agency holding companies β at least most of them. Scenarios usually involve WPP, which has been the largest global holdco, or Havas, which has just spun out from parent Vivendi, making it a much easier acquisition target now.Β
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Here are the cases for and against AI agents
Ads that target AI agents rather than humans might sound like something ripped from the pages of sci-fi, but itβs a concept thatβs gaining traction among marketers thanks to recent musings by Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas. On the βMarketing Against The Grainβ podcast, he painted a picture of a future whereΒ βuser never sees an ad. Unlike Google, the different merchants are not competing for usersβ attention. Theyβre competing for the AI agentsβ attentionβ.
Naturally, Srinivasβ comments have unleashed a torrent of hot takes. Somewhere in the swirl of opinions, a few recurring arguments emerge β both for and against this seemingly far-fetched, yet not entirely implausible, vision.
Cases for ads served to AI agents
It provides a cleaner user experience
People are over the endless deluge of ads βΒ especially the ones that miss the mark entirety. But if AI agents became the new target for advertisers, the constant stream of ads could disappear from view altogether. The result? A cleaner, ad-free user experience, letting consumers enjoy the web and their platforms without the usual interruptions.
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- Digiday
- CES Briefing: Agency compensation models in the AI era, a speedrun of the CES show floor & Disneyβs tech showcase
CES Briefing: Agency compensation models in the AI era, a speedrun of the CES show floor & Disneyβs tech showcase
This edition of Digidayβs daily CES Briefing examines how brands and agencies are seeing a need to change payment structures to account for AI tools handling some agency work, what marketing and media execs may have missed on the CES show floor and how Disneyβs tech showcase reflects real-time bidding finally being fast enough for live sports.
Agency compensation models in the AI era
A change to how clients pay agencies seems inevitable in the AI era. How the agency compensation model should change, though, is anyoneβs guess. But it has very much been a topic of discussion during CES this week.
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Marketers question TikTok ban refunds ahead of Supreme Court debate
TikTokβs new ultimatum β shutdown in the U.S. or get a lifeline from the Supreme Court β is the latest plot twist in a whirlwind month thatβs left markets in a tailspin. With the appβs future hanging by a thread, marketers are navigating murky waters, scrambling to make sense of what it all means for their plans.
Late last month, Chris (not his real name) fired off an email to his TikTok rep. As the go-to guy for managing client ad spend at his agency, he needed clarity ahead of a critical moment for the app, the looming federal deadline that could force ByteDance to sell TikTok β or face a U.S. ban. The response he got wasnβt just telling, it was practically a confession. TikTok reps were offering make-goods to advertisers locking in ad inventory through the end of the second quarter.
For the first time since whispers of a ban began six years ago, TikTok seemed to be bracing for the possibility that its American swan song might not be far off.
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Why creatorsβ pushback against Honey is about more than skimmed affiliate revenue
Over the past two weeks, a growing cohort of digital creators has spoken out against the Honey browser extension for swapping creatorsβ affiliate marketing links with its own. Beyond their stolen affiliate revenue, however, creators are criticizing β and suing β Honey because they believe it has hurt their ability to sign future brand partnerships.
The controversy kicked off on Dec. 21, 2024, when the YouTuber MegaLag released a video essay claiming how Honey, a PayPal-owned browser extension, makes money by replacing creatorsβ affiliate marketing links with its own, thus gleaning a share of affiliate revenue that would otherwise go to the creators themselves. A Honey representative did not respond to a request for comment.
Since December, the Honey scandal has become something of a cause cΓ©lΓ¨bre within the YouTube community, in part due to the fact that prominent creators such as James βMrBeastβ Donaldson and Marques βMKBHDβ Brownlee had previously promoted the service in sponsored videos. On Jan. 2, legal YouTubers such as Devin βLegalEagleβ Stone initiated a class-action lawsuit against the company.
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AirPods as hearing aids? The smartest assistive tech
The uncomfortable truth about social media networks
Silicon Valleyβs largest start-ups to shun IPOs in 2025
How Watch Duty Keeps Up With the California Wildfires
- Tech News - Latest Technology and Gadget News | Sky News
- 2024 the first year to breach global warming threshold - and it brought deadly impacts
2024 the first year to breach global warming threshold - and it brought deadly impacts
First Chromecast with Google TV update of 2025 rolling out
Last year, Google released eight updates for its streaming dongles. The first Chromecast with Google TV update of 2025 is now rolling out, with Android 14 not yet here.
moreβ¦Every smartphone in LA accidentally received a wildfire evacuation alert
As wildfires rage for the third consecutive day through parts of Los Angeles, now including the Hollywood Hills, several neighborhoods have been forced to evacuate for safety purposes. But on Thursday afternoon, a wildfire evacuation alert was mistakenly sent to the smartphone of every resident in Los Angeles County, a region with more than 9 [β¦]
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This security system shoots paintballs at intruders
Doorbell cameras are standard fare these days. More and more people have invested in connected security systems, as the technology has become both cheaper and more user friendly. Thereβs one important thing these system wonβt do, however: shoot people and animals with paintballs. That is, however, pretty much the Eve PaintCamβs whole M.O. Carrying the [β¦]
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Tesla launches new-look Model Y in China
Tesla has revealed a new-look Model Y meant for the Chinese and other Asian-Pacific markets, marking the first major update to the SUV since its launch in 2020. The redesign comes as Tesla finished 2024 having delivered fewer vehicles than it did in 2023. It was the first year-over-year drop since the company started selling [β¦]
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