Digg Content Ads for Where The Wild Things Are
Warner Brothers launched a variety of ad units on Digg today to promote opening weekend for “Where the Wild Things Are,” including Content Ads that pull existing, popular Digg stories into IAB ad units.

From TechCrunch:
“Last week, we wrote about Digg testing a new kind of ad that allowed sponsors to find previously submitted Digg content and and wrap it in their own ad unit. The first such ad just went live for everyone this morning. And it seems like a really great idea.
“Since I wasn’t able to see the ads before, I wondered if the actual Digg content portion of the ad would link back to the sponsor or to the actual story. Not only does it link back to the story’s permalink page, but it routes it through a DoubleClick referral. So yes, Digg is getting paid for each of these clicks, while users are being sent to content that quite likely do actually want to go to. Win-win.”
One clarification: IAB ad units on Digg, including Content Ads, are sold on cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) basis, so we don’t make more money if readers click on these banners, though we sure do like it when they do. (Digg Ads, the ad units that allow marketers promote their own content on Digg’s homepage — rather than content that’s already been submitted to Digg and has been voted to the homepage, like the stories featured in Content Ads — are priced on cost-per-click (CPC) basis.)
Here’s how the Globe and Mail described Content Ads (with color commentary from yours truly):
“In 2007, almost one-third of those surfing the Web clicked on an ad. Now the figure sits at just 16 per cent, and the vast majority of those clicks are driven by an even smaller group. Less than one in 10 users are ‘natural born clickers’ who account for most traffic to banner ads — the people most likely to click on ads are already inclined to do so.
“‘The more we can make advertising feel like a valuable experience … the better it’s going to work for advertisers, the more money we’re going to make, the happier the Digg community will be,’ said Chas Edwards, Digg’s chief revenue officer. The site’s strength is that its content is vetted by real people, he said. Each headline listed there has a yellow box beside it showing how many users ‘Digg’ the link. Users can also ‘bury’ inappropriate or uninteresting links.
“‘Those yellow boxes, and the blue headlines that point to content, you can think of that as the native language of Digg, the vernacular.’”
I’ve been caught FOUR TIMES in the last two days with digg open on a tab, when this retarded ad blurts out at full volume with kids screaming, putting me into a frantic search for the culprit tab, usually some spam site but no, in this case it’s the digg front page. Classy move, digg. I might just have to install Ad Block now..
Sorry for that, Adam. It was unintentional — the ad agency sent a faulty ad tag. We reached out to them Friday morning, as soon as we noticed the bug, and the corrected tag should be in place now.