Technology Today

The tradition of sitting through a barrage of ads in exchange for being entertained began with radio, flourished with the arrival of television and followed the mass migration online.As the massive $35 billion in advertising revenue captured by YouTube and Instagram in the last quarter indicated, online advertising around social media, influencers and streamers already represents roughly half of the total amount spent on television advertising at its 2018 peak of $72.4 billion.Entertainment businesses are under enormous pressure to create new revenue models as linear advertising becomes less relevant to consumers, a potential harbinger for another boom in advertising technology as companies try to keep audiences engaged.Instagram $20 billion advertising haul, first reported by Bloomberg, comes as Alphabet, Google parent company, disclosed advertising revenue of $15.1 billion at its YouTube subsidiary for the first time.Taken together, those figures mean that the market share of advertising commanded by television may shrink to a quarter of all advertising spending sooner than the 2022 prediction from eMarketer, as reported in MarketingLand.
While search on Google and Amazon are clear winners — as is Facebook — other technology companies are likely to see a windfall as advertisers chase consumers to new places.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Everyone using Gmail given new inbox warning - watch out for dangerous hidden message


Forget Ring - this Blink doorbell alternative is only £28.99


Leading 20 pieces of tech Brits miss the most - consisting of corded phones and movie video cameras


Everyone utilizing Chrome put on red alert and informed to clear browsing data immediately


Rare deal that rivals Amazon sale sees Samsung Galaxy Smartwatch plummet to £39


Get a free Samsung Galaxy Watch - tech editor shares where to discover it


Fortnite down RECAP: Epic Games release declaration as video game continues to be offline


Top Tech: Sky launches UK's 'fastest broadband' with big 5Gbps fibre upgrade


Virgin Media users alerted they deal with new streaming block - examine your television and act now


All UK WhatsApp users put on alert and provided with immediate pointer this week


Gtech's 'perfect' cordless vacuum package is £& pound; 200 off and makes cleaning 'a lot simpler'


TOWIE's Pete Wicks succumbs to 'fake' Wimbledon influencer who tricked him


Sky summertime sale cuts cost of family essentials but Virgin has something much better


UK Fire television Stick users will be obstructed from popular streaming app on this exact date


Nifty Samsung code gets Galaxy fans this mobile for less


Sky TV block as brand-new crackdown interrupts UK homes from viewing content totally free


Sky's biggest-ever conserving on Gigafast broadband cuts £& pound; 96 off the ultimate upgrade


Google is fixing a major issue with your Gmail inbox, and free upgrade is coming soon


Top Tech: 5 Amazon-rivalling deals from Apple, Samsung, Shark and more


Amazon Prime Day: Favourite tech gizmos and home appliances we actually use and love


Consumers can get an Echo Pop speaker for less than ₤ 6 if they do one easy thing


Sky is dispensing a huge upgrade, however just if your postcode is on this list


Amazon slashes ₤ 450 off Shark self-emptying robotic vacuum in mega Prime Day offer


Newest Kindle hits lowest ever cost in Amazon Prime Day deal with over ₤ 100 off


Samsung unveils new Galaxy, and it makes your current Android phone appearance extremely inferior


Simply hours remain on Virgin Media's complimentary 4K TV deal - act quickly


Everyone with an Android phone placed on red alert as massive new threat validated


The 'finest' smart device of 2025 confirmed - has the iPhone or Android come out on top


Amazon's best Apple deals for Prime Day consisting of iPhone, iPad and AirPods


Tech professional warns 'never state yes' to 3 questions from callers you don't recognise


Millions of Brits 'forced to function as online security guards' for elderly family members