By David Kesmodel and Julia Angwin
The Wall Street Journal
Published: 11/27/2006
Excerpt:
Last month, FoxNews.com ran an article about
Republican House Speaker Dennis Hastert's postelection prospects. In
the story, the words "house," "speaker" and "leadership" were
underlined twice.
The underlines weren't for emphasis -- they were clues
that those words were doubling as advertisements. When readers moved
their cursors over the underlined words, a pop-up advertisement would
appear, obscuring some of the text of the article. The ad above the
word "speaker," for instance, was for the search engine Ask.com.
"Search Ask.com for Speakers," it said, and linked readers to the site.
This type of online advertising within the text of an
article, known as in-text advertising, has been around for a while. But
it used to be relegated to niche sites like the videogamers' haven
IGN.com and ScienceDaily.com. Now it is appearing on some mainstream
journalistic Web sites, like those of News Corp's
Fox News, Cox Enterprises Inc.'s Atlanta Journal-Constitution and
Hearst Corp.'s Popular Mechanics magazine. That marks a departure from
a long-observed tradition in the print medium of keeping editorial
content separate from advertising.
I'm really glad that this article was posted. I thought...