Yaccarino has flown to London to hold talks with UK media agencies amid another brand-safety crisis for the app formerly known as Twitter.
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The Media Leader columnist and Creativebrief editorial director Nicola Kemp joins Omar Oakes and Jack Benjamin for this candid discussion of the biggest stories in media and advertising this week.
Is it a loose and inaccurate metric or one of the most important we need to be watching?
Social media companies are preferring to be called “community-based” or “entertainment” platforms. The implication: they collectively have a branding problem.
On Wednesday, US senators excoriated the CEOs of Meta, TikTok, X, Snap and Discord for alleged harms their platforms have brought to children.
Analysis: The company is rehiring content moderators ahead of a likely grilling in front of US Congress, but talent may come at a shortage.
Right-wing populist media may not have a scaled audience, but it still has influence. Charlie Makin examines what this means for advertising ahead of a record year for elections in 2024.
Analyst Ian Whittaker and Ipsos UK CEO Kelly Beaver shared their 2024 outlook, from interest rates to elections.
Analysis: New figures from the Reuters Institute show the extent to which Facebook and Twitter’s deprecation of support for news publishers is impacting their ability to reach audiences.
Advertisers are leaving Twitter and taking their money elsewhere, including to rivals such as Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and TikTok.