And right off the bat, I’m delighted to share that four ad exchanges have dropped Breitbart from their inventories as a result: Consumable, Nexxen (formerly Unruly), Brightcom and OpenWeb have blocked Breitbart from their inventories.
Let’s look at how:
1. Breitbart is operating under an account called Voranda
In most cases, Breitbart can’t operate under its own name anymore. (Nobody wants them.) They’re getting around it by working with third party ad networks who help Breitbart back into the supply chain under other corporate names.
By using the ads.txt protocol, we have found Breitbart operating under the name Voranda. And it looks like Breitbart (or whoever is working on their behalf) is taking advantage of lax processes at the ad exchange level.
In October, Brightcom authorized an account called “Granite3” to sell ads on the domain “voranda.com.” In August of this year, the account was quietly changed to “Breitbart” and “Breitbart.com.”