-->
Save your seat for Streaming Media NYC this May. Register Now!

Primetime Supports HTML5 for Mobile, Improves Authentication: IBC

Article Featured Image

Adobe released a variety of improvements for Primetime just in time for IBC, with the chief being expanded support for HTML5. Primetime, Adobe's platform for multiscreen TV content and advertising, now supports HTML5 for mobile browsers and devices. That lets broadcasters reach more viewers and serve more ads, the company notes. Adobe may have created Flash, but it wants the world to know it's platform agnostic.

"We are all in on HTML5," says Campbell Foster, Primetime marketing director, in an interview.

With the latest improvements to the Primetime platform, he says, Adobe is focusing on three Ms: multiplatform, measurement, and monetization. Measurement means that Adobe Analytics is now integrated with the Primetime TVSDK, giving broadcasters access to a variety of data from over-the-top and TV Everywhere delivery. It can measure views on desktops; devices by Apple, Amazon, Google, and Roku; and Xbox and PlayStation gaming consoles.

Monetization figures in because Adobe has added dynamic ad insertion (DAI) for any connected device for multiscreen live, linear, and VOD, with full engagement metrics. (Ad insertion for HTML5 video will arrive in Q4.) The Primetime data management platform pulls in second- and third-party data to deliver information about viewers to advertisers so they can sell audience segments. This is all negotiated media not bidded, Foster says, adding that customers aren't asking for bidded media.

Adobe has created a server-side work-around to get data from Apple TV views, since, Foster notes, it's difficult to get native code on an Apple TV. The server-side code is able to grab engagement metrics. Adobe is also creating federated analytics for content owners and distributors, so that both parties have access to the same underlying data and avoid the disputes that come from conflicting metrics.

Adobe is improving TV Everywhere authentication, frequently a stumbling block for consumers, with this update. Primetime now supports OAUTH 2.0, a protocol that allows for home-based authentication and longer authentication sessions. TV Everywhere apps will also pre-fetch video so that playback starts in under a second.

Primetime is now used in 70 percent of U.S. and Canada households, Foster says, thanks to partnerships with Comcast, DirecTV, Time Warner Cable, and others.

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Adobe Launches Primetime Planning Platform for Streamed Video Ads

With the TV Media Management platform, broadcasters and agencies can forecast demographic availability for IP content months in advance.

Adobe Primetime Gains Dynamic Ad Insertion for DASH Video: MWC

Media companies can use stream stitching to reach more viewers while taking advantage of lower CDN costs, Adobe says.

Best Practices for Friction-Free TV Everywhere Authentication

In this strategic session, speakers from Adobe, Comcast, Viacom, and more look at the recommended best practices that the Open Authentication Technology Committee has proposed to achieve friction-free authentication and discuss a set of guidelines that aim to create a seamless user experience.

Akamai Incorporates Adobe Primetime Server-Side Ad Insertion

The collaboration pairs Akamai's scale with Adobe's ad technology, and should launch commercially in Q3.

Adobe to Highlight a More Robust Primetime Offering at NAB

Major League Baseball is partnering with Adobe this season, and served 2.7M live video streams on opening day.

Adobe Primetime Joins Marketing Cloud, Offers Advanced Targeting

With the two platforms linked, marketers can get granular data on viewer engagement and deliver ads to specific demographics.