Shawn Lim
Oct 31, 2023

Why 'made-for-advertising' websites are harmful to advertisers and how to avoid using them

A desire for low-cost advertising gave birth to made-for-advertising (MFA) websites and continues to fuel them despite efforts by agencies and verification firms to clean up automated ad platforms and curate for quality.

Please sign in or register

Access limited free articles a month after free, fast registration.

Existing users sign in here

Forgotten Password?

Having trouble signing in?

Contact Customer Support at
[email protected]
or call+852 3175 1913

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

Whose idea is it, anyway?

Jindal Steel campaign that won silver and bronze at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity sparked a row over creative ideation with Wieden+Kennedy

6 hours ago

SIA retains PHD as media agency of record

EXCLUSIVE: After five years of working with PHD, Singapore's flag-carrier Singapore Airlines has retained the agency for media duties.

6 hours ago

Tech On Me: Can adtech wean itself off MFAs?

This week's edition: The fifth The Media Responsibility Index is out, Snap launches a real-time image model, and TikTok ads now have AI creators, among other tech news in the region.

7 hours ago

How I came out in the workplace

Every LGBTQ+ person has their own choice, timing and path to recognise their sexual identity publicly. Here, the director of HR at DDB Sydney gives her perspective.