US parties fight for prime Web ad space
To ensure good ad placement, advertisers have to book pre-video ad space and home-page takeovers very early
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Washington
IT turns out that the Internet does not have infinite capacity. At least not for political ads. As an increasing number of US political campaigns and outside groups are finding out, premium space on the web has long been booked. Digital advertising is maturing much in the way television did, as targeting becomes more sophisticated and the definition of a viewer expands drastically.
"Many political strategists don't think of the Internet as something that can sell out," said Rob Saliterman, leader of the elections team at Google, which owns YouTube. "But in these smaller American states, just as there's a finite amount of TV inventory, there's a finite amount of YouTube inventory."
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