Guidelines Archive https://www.iab.com/guidelines/ Empowering the Media and Marketing Industries to Thrive in the Digital Economy Tue, 11 Apr 2023 17:25:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 How the IAB Multi-State Privacy Agreement Can Help Industry Participants Meet their 2023 Privacy Challenges https://www.iab.com/guidelines/how-the-iab-multi-state-privacy-agreement-can-help-advertisers-meet-their-2023-privacy-challenges/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 12:43:12 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=158484 Blog Post: Advertisers’ Guide to the IAB MSPA The IAB Multi-State Privacy Agreement (MSPA) is an industry contractual framework intended to aid advertisers, publishers, agencies, and ad tech intermediaries in complying with five state privacy laws that will become effective in 2023 (in California, Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah). The MSPA is not a “model contract” … Continued

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Blog Post: Advertisers’ Guide to the IAB MSPA

The IAB Multi-State Privacy Agreement (MSPA) is an industry contractual framework intended to aid advertisers, publishers, agencies, and ad tech intermediaries in complying with five state privacy laws that will become effective in 2023 (in California, Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah). The MSPA is not a “model contract” or a template agreement; instead, it is a set of privacy-protective terms that spring into place among a network of signatories and that follow the data as it flows through the digital ad supply chain.

IAB Multi-State Privacy Agreement (MSPA)
Watch the MSPA Webinar VOD Here

The MSPA works together with the IAB Tech Lab’s Global Privacy Platform, a uniform privacy signaling specification that allows companies to communicate and honor consumer choices throughout the ads ecosystem.

How the IAB Multi-State Privacy Agreement Can Help Advertisers Meet their 2023 Privacy Challenges 1

The MSPA does not contain any commercial terms, but instead supplements commercial contracts amongst signatories with required privacy terms; and where no commercial contracts exist, the MSPA provides the baseline set of privacy terms required by law. Further, while publishers and advertisers can use the MSPA to cover all of their digital ad transactions, the MSPA also provides them the flexibility to enter into separate agreements with their ad tech vendors for other transactions using independent privacy terms. Such transactions would simply not be MSPA “Covered Transactions.”

Download the MSPA Explainer for Commercial Contract Attorneys

Download the MSPA Explainer for Ad Tech

Download the MSPA Explainer for Advertisers

Download the MSPA Explainer for Publishers

On December 1st IAB and IAB Tech Lab’s General Counsel Michael Hahn, IAB’s Assistant General Counsel Tony Ficarrotta, and IAB Tech Lab’s Senior Director, Privacy & Data, Rowena Lam presented the Path to State Privacy Law Compliance with the IAB MSPA webinar to discuss:

  • Industry compliance challenges
  • MSPA solutions to those challenges
  • Obligations of MSPA signatories
  • MSPA’s application to use cases
  • How the MSPA leverages the IAB Tech Lab’s Global Privacy Platform
  • What you need to do next to sign-up

Path to State Privacy Law Compliance Webinar – IAB MSPA Slides

Path to State Privacy Law Compliance Webinar – IAB Tech Lab GPP Slides

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State Privacy Laws: Access, Deletion, and Correction Obligations https://www.iab.com/guidelines/state-privacy-laws-chart/ Tue, 13 Sep 2022 17:32:35 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=156486 New state privacy laws coming into effect in 2023 include new requirements for companies to respond to, and in some cases pass on, consumer requests to access, delete, or correct their personal information. This chart summarizes those requirements in a succinct, one-page chart. Five new privacy state laws are taking effect in 2023: California Privacy … Continued

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New state privacy laws coming into effect in 2023 include new requirements for companies to respond to, and in some cases pass on, consumer requests to access, delete, or correct their personal information. This chart summarizes those requirements in a succinct, one-page chart.

Five new privacy state laws are taking effect in 2023:

  • California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) on January 1, 2023
  • Virginia Consumer Data Protection (CPDA) on January 1, 2023
  • Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) on July 1, 2023
  • Connecticut’s Act Concerning Personal Data Privacy and Online Monitoring, also known as the Connecticut Data Privacy Act (CTDPA) on July 1, 2023
  • Utah Consumer Privacy Act (UCPA) on December 31, 2023

Are you ready? Start preparing today.

Download the State Privacy Laws’ Compliance Chart

Download the Report

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IAB CCPA Compliance Framework for Publishers & Technology Companies https://www.iab.com/guidelines/ccpa-framework/ Thu, 05 Dec 2019 14:50:12 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=93142   The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) was enacted to provide California consumers with greater transparency and control over their personal information. In many ways, the CCPA is a first of its kind law in the United States: an omnibus statute that seeks to create broad privacy and data protection rules that apply to all … Continued

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The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) was enacted to provide California consumers with greater transparency and control over their personal information. In many ways, the CCPA is a first of its kind law in the United States: an omnibus statute that seeks to create broad privacy and data protection rules that apply to all industries doing business in one jurisdiction, California, rather than focusing on a single sector or specific data collection and use practices. The CCPA was created in response to changing public perceptions. Users, rightfully, want to understand and have the option to exercise control over their own data.

Creating a new industry framework to support CCPA compliance amongst publishers (i.e., those that own, control, and/or operate a digital property) and technology companies engaged in programmatic and direct transactions (the “Framework”) requires careful consideration, implementations in a technologically-complex and important ecosystem, and balancing of different perspectives and business models. We believe that the Framework and the accompanying Limited Service Provider Agreement (the “Agreement”) accomplish this by providing ad tech companies with assurances that participating publishers provide California consumers with explicit notice and the opportunity to opt-out of the “sale” of their personal information. Participating publishers will also have assurances that technology companies and vendors use personal information pursuant to limited CCPA permitted “business purposes” when California consumers exercise the right to opt-out of the sale of their personal information.

How Does It Work?

The Framework requires participating publishers that choose to sell the personal information of California consumers in the delivery of digital advertising to provide “explicit” notice regarding their rights under the CCPA, to explain in clear terms what will happen to their data, and to notify the downstream technology companies with which the publishers do business that such disclosures were given.

It also requires publishers to include a “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” link on their digital properties. When a user clicks that link, a signal is sent to the technology companies with which the publishers do business via a technical mechanism that is based upon specifications developed by the IAB Tech Lab.

Strict rules, which will be effectuated through the Agreement, shall apply after the consumer clicks the link. Not only will the Agreement require the sale of personal information to cease in such instance, but it will cause downstream technology companies to become service providers of the publisher. Doing so imposes strict limitations on data use by publishers and technology companies to only those specific and limited business purposes that are permitted under the CCPA.

Two significant benefits accrue from the Agreement. First, for participants in the Agreement, it creates a simple and efficient vehicle from which to create service provider relationships in the data supply chain without the need of having to enter into hundreds of separate contracts. Second, and most important, it provides participants with the opportunity to demonstrate accountability by requiring them to submit to audits and/or self-certifications to ensure that when the consumer opts out, limited personal information is being used only for purposes permitted by the CCPA.

Download the IAB CCPA Compliance Framework Document (PDF)

Sign the Limited Service Provider Agreement

Download the CCPA Compliance Framework Tech Specs via IAB Tech Lab

For more information, contact info@iabprivacy.com.

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OpenRTB Dynamic Native Ads API https://www.iab.com/guidelines/openrtb-dynamic-native-ads-api/ Tue, 17 Sep 2019 21:36:10 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=116051 This spec describes the outer native object, which includes the ad unit (the 6 types of native ads defined by the IAB Native Advertising Playbook) and the layout. While the Native Ads API is designed to be used with OpenRTB, it provides a set of fundamentals that are useful in non-RTB environments like in-app SDK … Continued

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This spec describes the outer native object, which includes the ad unit (the 6 types of native ads defined by the IAB Native Advertising Playbook) and the layout. While the Native Ads API is designed to be used with OpenRTB, it provides a set of fundamentals that are useful in non-RTB environments like in-app SDK object description.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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Header Bidding Guidance https://www.iab.com/guidelines/header-bidding-guidance/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 21:40:43 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115798 In 2016, the Header Tag Task Force assembled within the IAB Tech Lab to determine the appropriate scope for standards development in header bidding. Considering the recent growth of header bidding yield management strategies, the IAB Tech Lab Board of Directors determined a need for baseline open protocol for integrating header tag technology with an … Continued

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In 2016, the Header Tag Task Force assembled within the IAB Tech Lab to determine the appropriate scope for standards development in header bidding. Considering the recent growth of header bidding yield management strategies, the IAB Tech Lab Board of Directors determined a need for baseline open protocol for integrating header tag technology with an ad server.

The “Standard Header Container Integration with an Ad Server” standardizes how header tags and containers interact with ad servers. This will allow for header bidding to scale with industry consensus on the process within the ad server. The expected audience for this standard includes technical leads and product owners at sell-side and at intermediary partner companies. Non-standard setups, yield management strategies, and current market adoption rates are outside the scope of this document.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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OpenMedia https://www.iab.com/guidelines/openmedia/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 21:31:49 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115794 OpenMedia is the perspective and methodology for the specification landscape within which our programmatic standards live. It is the new common framework for Tech Lab technical specifications and protocols (OpenRTB, OpenDirect, etc.).The approach is both conceptual (improving understanding of the specification landscape) and pragmatic (functioning as a tool to indicate where new standards will be … Continued

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OpenMedia is the perspective and methodology for the specification landscape within which our programmatic standards live. It is the new common framework for Tech Lab technical specifications and protocols (OpenRTB, OpenDirect, etc.).The approach is both conceptual (improving understanding of the specification landscape) and pragmatic (functioning as a tool to indicate where new standards will be most effective). OpenMedia describes a layered approach (similar to Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) network model) to organizing transactional specifications and domain specifications – or simply; a layer for how to transact and a layer to describe what is transacted.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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Open Measurement SDK https://www.iab.com/guidelines/open-measurement-sdk/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 20:58:47 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115770 Ad viewability is often measured by vendors or systems that are independent of the systems that serve and display ads. Access to the data that these measurement providers need could mean having code for multiple providers on one site or app. IAB’s Open Measurement project was initiated to develop a scalable solution that minimizes code … Continued

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Ad viewability is often measured by vendors or systems that are independent of the systems that serve and display ads. Access to the data that these measurement providers need could mean having code for multiple providers on one site or app. IAB’s Open Measurement project was initiated to develop a scalable solution that minimizes code used to provide data to measurement providers.

The IAB Open Measurement SDK (OM SDK) offers common code and libraries for facilitating third-party access to measurement data. Sites and apps that integrate the OM SDK can send measurement signals to an API, the Open Measurement Interface Definition (OMID). Measurement providers can place tags that collect these signals.

While Open Measurement relies on the OM SDK and OMID during operation, IAB Tech Lab offers several resources to encourage adoption across the industry.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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Secure Interactive Media Interface Definition (SIMID) https://www.iab.com/guidelines/simid/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 20:45:08 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115756 SIMID was born from the desire to support interactive ads in a safe and secure environment for publishers and also to enable better cross-platform support by supporting mobile, SSAI and OTT devices. A main tenet of SIMID is the separation of the interactive layer from the media asset – both being delivered by VAST 4.x. … Continued

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SIMID was born from the desire to support interactive ads in a safe and secure environment for publishers and also to enable better cross-platform support by supporting mobile, SSAI and OTT devices. A main tenet of SIMID is the separation of the interactive layer from the media asset – both being delivered by VAST 4.x. This clear separation allows publisher players to be in control of their streams and enables use cases such as server-side ad insertion (SSAI), as well as live streaming.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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Guidelines for Identifier for Advertising (IFA) on OTT Platforms https://www.iab.com/guidelines/guidelines-for-identifier-for-advertising-ifa-on-ott-platforms/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 20:43:43 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115754 The Guidelines for Identifier for Advertising (IFA) on OTT platforms are recommendations on how to maintain a high-quality advertising experience within over-the-top television (OTT) environments. Those technical guidelines provide instructions on best practices for delivering targeted ads, as well as controlling ad frequency and rotation across a wide variety of disparate smart TVs, connected devices, … Continued

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The Guidelines for Identifier for Advertising (IFA) on OTT platforms are recommendations on how to maintain a high-quality advertising experience within over-the-top television (OTT) environments. Those technical guidelines provide instructions on best practices for delivering targeted ads, as well as controlling ad frequency and rotation across a wide variety of disparate smart TVs, connected devices, and other OTT systems.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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Common Ad Transport Standard (CATS) https://www.iab.com/guidelines/cats/ Sun, 15 Sep 2019 20:36:07 +0000 https://www.iab.com/?post_type=iab_guideline&p=115746 Standardizing how requests (and responses) are made is key to allow any two entities to “speak” to each other. While OpenRTB exists as a standard for transacting ad inventory in an RTB transaction, there are a number of other scenarios where no standard exists. For example, making a subsequent request for ad creatives (whether in … Continued

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Standardizing how requests (and responses) are made is key to allow any two entities to “speak” to each other. While OpenRTB exists as a standard for transacting ad inventory in an RTB transaction, there are a number of other scenarios where no standard exists. For example, making a subsequent request for ad creatives (whether in programmatic or direct) was never standardized in the same way. SSAI is another area with new use cases that require standardized ad requests. While VAST 4.x partially addressed these by specifying VAST request guidelines and macros, it usability and scale are limited by some technical constraints such as URL length limits for HTTP GET requests.

CATS aims to address these gap by defining an ad request standard that can be used for both RTB and non-RTB use cases, while building on top of existing specifications like AdCOM.

Download via IAB Tech Lab

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