AdTech is the primary business model of the data economy ecosystem or,
in other words, the “money making machine that fuels the Internet”.
In 2021, the global ad spending across platforms reached $763.2
billion, and it is expected to rise 10% in 2022. Moreover, in 2020,
97.9% of Facebook’s and 80% of Google’s global revenue was
generated from advertising, and, excluding China, these companies,
together with Amazon, will dominate 80% to 90% of the market in
2022. Yet, despite the extraordinary importance of AdTech within the
global economy, its methods and processes are extremely opaque, and
thus incredibly difficult to control and regulate. [...]

The investigation identified more than 21 million cookies per single
visit to the landing page of all these websites, belonging to more than
1200 different companies, which translates to an average traffic of 197
trillion cookies per month, resulting in 11,442 monthly metric tonnes
of CO2 emissions. 

It’s important to understand that this number reflects browser-based
cookie traffic and does not include app tracking activity, so we
estimate this number to be dramatically higher. 
[...]

# Highlights

[1] The carbon costs of the tracking cookie ecosystem from the top one
million websites have been measured for the first time.

[2] The top one million websites contain a total of 21,805,649 cookies.

[3] Cookies are sent around over 198 trillion times per month.

[4] The most installed cookie in our sample list is _ga (Google
Analytics), found on over 534 thousand sites.

[5] The first thousand cookies (the top 0.018%), by the number of sites
they are installed on, cause a stunning 50% of all the emissions, and
the top 1% of cookies (a little over 53 thousand) corresponds to 82% of
emissions.
[...]

# Conclusions

In any case, cookie-based tracking technologies are not the only
solution available to advertisers today – complex fingerprinting, for
instance, can provide the exact same amount of information.

On the other hand, behavioural advertising as a whole is under scrutiny
not just because of privacy or (newly raised) environmental concerns,
but also simply because there is evidence that it might not be as
beneficial for publishers as it is for advertisers.

Continua su https://carbolytics.org/report.html


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