Sorry I have to disagree with you Ads placed around the video I think 
is more distracting than a preroll or post roll....why would I watch 
a video 16X9 and in the "black bar" areas there is a bunch of ads 
placed there?  I know I woundn't.  

Or course I don't think advertising is "evil" like a lot of people 
either.  But that is another conversation...

Heath
http://batmangeek7.blogspot.com

--- In [email protected], "Enric" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I've put up a post on my Lucid Media blog that may be of interest
> here.  It is the rational for not placing ads within videos:
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/37s2ma
> or
> http://lucidmedia.cirne.com/index.php/2007/03/02/the-case-against-
advertising-in-net-video/
> 
> Blog text follows:
> ==================
> Recently methods of advertising in video have become active in
> development and implementation. Originally when I heard the rational
> for Ads in net videos from Revver, I thought it worthwhile. Provide 
a
> method for people making video on the net to gain revenue from their
> work. This would support net videomakers continuing their work. 
There
> had been entries on the yahoo videoblogging group and on blogs for 
Ads
> targeted to the audience and content of the video. Similar to Google
> showing Ads that try to relate to keyword searches; an Ad for Harley
> motorcycles could appear on a videoblog entry about a weekend
> motorcycle hog excursion with friends.
> 
> Unfortunately, specifying include an Ad in my video on Revver, 
blip.tv
> and others means you can have a powerful, emotive video on the
> relationship to one's father followed by a upbeat commercial for 
Juicy
> Fruit gum. Or a irreverent video of doing a prank on someone 
followed
> by a commercial for the Heart Association. Now this problem probably
> just relates to the technicality of specifying categories for the 
Ad's
> relationships to video content and the amount of different Ads
> available. With time the correlation of Ads to video content and the
> viewership should have stronger matching.
> 
> The question is why have Ads in videos on distributed networks.
> Traditionally, on a television set broadcast a advertisement had to
> exist within the video stream. No other location was provided for
> placement. However on the internet an Ad does not need to be in the
> video. It can be anywhere around the video on the web page. Either
> top, left, right, bottom or lower down the page. Now video on the 
net
> does not mean just a web page. It can be an iPod, mobile phone, 
Tivo,
> or even projected in a theatre film festival. All of these non-
website
> screens can and probably will develop methods of displaying more 
than
> just a video stream. A future iPod, mobile phone, digital TV and
> theatre projector will be able to show more than just the video. 
Like
> the Opera super- and sub-titles projected separately from the
> performance, these screens will probably eventually have dynamic
> separate information areas where Ads can appear. Further with the
> usage of different screen ratios than 4x3 (16x9, etc.), space can be
> made available around the video to place Ads. This puts advertising 
in
> the video stream, but does not directly break up the video 
continuity.
> 
> Google proved the failure of putting ads directly in searches. Flash
> Ads that pop-up and dance up over the content of web-pages send 
people
> away from sites. And Ads that interrupt the video, even at the end,
> will be found to be ineffective. They will either drive people away
> from watching the videos if at the start or middle or tend to not be
> watched if at the end. Ads placed around the video will work since
> people can choose to pay attention to the periphery of a video if 
the
> ad relates to their interest or ignore that area.
> ==================
> 
>   -- Enric
>   -======-
>   http://www.cirne.com
>


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