Tell me more ×
Webmasters Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for pro webmasters. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Which advertising network has an API I can use to show my users targeted ads based on certain dictionary words present in their user-generated content, similar to GMail's targeted ads?

Edit: The user-generated content is not public and is therefore not indexed by Google, so AdSense is not an option.

share|improve this question
Um, Adsense ... – John Conde Jan 14 '11 at 13:34
1  
@John, the content is not public and is therefore not indexed by Google. And if it's not indexed, it can't be contextualised by AdSense. – pate Jan 14 '11 at 14:26
If it's not public you'd need to work out a way for someone to index it to be able to determine what Ad's they want to show with your content. A keyword isn't enough data for someone to decide if your page is exactly what they want to advertise on or not. – XOPJ Jan 14 '11 at 14:30
...which is why I'm looking for an advertising API to which I can feed an anonymised set of words based on the user's private content. – pate Jan 14 '11 at 14:42
2  
I don't know of any ad network that will let you do that - mostly because people would game the system passing in fake keywords once they figure out what pays the best. There are ad servers you can use to do that - but then you would need to sell the ads yourself. – James Avery Jan 14 '11 at 20:40
show 5 more comments

2 Answers

You can try Semantic Engine's Contextual Advertising API.

Contextual Advertising API features include:

  • analyzing the content of a page on-the-fly and matching it to a relevant advertising category;
  • extraction of key concepts from a page.

Free trial available.

share|improve this answer

You should have a look at adzerk, it serves the ads aswell as gives you all the back end dashborad / monitoring - www.adzerk.com

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.