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Adbot, Inc. was a privately held Internet advertising company in Chicago owned and operated by James R. Frith, Jr. The company was a pioneer in the delivery of display advertising on the Internet and was extant from April 1997 to December 1997, at which time it ceased operations due to a legal disputes with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.


History

Adbot announced the introduction of its auction market for Internet advertising on Jan 23, 1997. On April 10, 1997, the company held its first live outcry auction, pairing a number of small publishers with interested advertisers.Kirk, Jim. "Loop firm to auction space with guaranteed `hit' counts Who reads Web ads?". Chicago Sun-Times. 1997-04-10. p25 (Financial). By mid-summer, Adbot was well on its way to selling more than 100 million placements and had completed a closed loop of ad delivery and publisher payments. Adbot operated under this model until Dec 5, 1997. On that date, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, t ...
raided Adbot's office resulting in the cessation of normal operations, as part of an investigation into securities fraud related to Frith's Chicago Partnership Board (CPB) operation, the ill-advised source of Adbot's start-up funding. Despite efforts to separate from the troubled CPB and continue operations, the company was ordered to liquidate all assets and was shuttered in December 1997. Frith eventually was found by a jury to be not guilty of securities fraud, but was convicted of two securities law violations (out of 23 charges) for operating his CPB broker-dealership without enough money in its reserve accounts. The conviction was based on a financial shortfall on a single day in 1997. The case notably became reference case law regarding auditing requirements for securities firms.


Auction-based model

As with typical advertising networks of the day, publisher sites of similar topical interest were grouped into ad networks. For the purpose of the auction model, these networks were broken into lots. Because every lot was sold at a price set by the bidders, the placement of Internet advertising units into otherwise unsold inventory was guaranteed. Impression guarantees protected bidders from under-delivery. The auction model established the market price of display advertising based on a simple supply-demand mechanism. This was in contrast to Adbot's larger competitor, DoubleClick, where ad placement pricing was negotiated between the ad network operator and marketers. At the time, the auction model was novel in the industry, though others were to follow using the same or similar models.


Clients

According to the Adbot web site the client list included advertisers such as Hotmail, Idealab's original version of Answers.com, and Expedia.com. Publishers in the client list included companies such as the
Experts Exchange Experts Exchange (EE) is a website for people in information technology (IT) related jobs to ask each other for tech help, receive instant help via chat, hire freelancers, and browse tech jobs. Controversy has surrounded their policy of provid ...
, Dine.com, the Weather Underground and MapBlast, which would become part of
MSN MSN (meaning Microsoft Network) is a web portal and related collection of Internet services and apps for Windows and mobile devices, provided by Microsoft and launched on August 24, 1995, alongside the release of Windows 95. The Microsoft Net ...
's mapping product.Microsoft Redirecting MapBlast to MSN
. Directions Magazine. 2003-04-10.


References

{{Reflist


External links


Internet Archive for adbot.com

Highbeam
s list of press releases and articles regarding Adbot

with listing of Adbot, including mission statement

Adbot press releases
Adbot in News
Adbot influence in social advertising Defunct companies based in Chicago Digital marketing companies of the United States United States corporate case law Marketing companies established in 1997 Companies disestablished in 1997