BBC To Start Carrying Ads

By Christopher Nickson
October 19, 2007


BBC Worldwide, which runs the BBC outside the UK, has said international BBC web site users will begin seeing ads.

It might not seem like a big deal, but it’s certainly a historic one. The BBC will start carrying advertising.
 
Well, not all the BBC (which is funded by the $270 annual license free every TV-owning British household pays), but ads will begin appearing on the BBC web site for all those outside the UK.
 
That’s run by BBC Worldwide, which states it’s become necessary to help plug the $4 billion shortfall the company expects, and which has already prompted the net shedding of 1,800 jobs and the selling of the Corporation’s flagship Television Center building).
 
The BBC Worldwide TV channel already carries ads, but the web site has remained sacrosanct until now, with the exception of video. Now, however, everything is fair game in the wake of rising Internet ad revenues.
 
"Introducing advertising on international traffic to news pages is a natural development in the growth of the BBC's commercial news services," Richard Sambrook, director of BBC global news, told the BBC.
 
Geo-IP technology will pick up on the IP addresses of users to be sure only those outside the UK are targeted.
 
The decision is likely to upset other UK media, and the British Internet Publishers Alliance has said the move could affect the revenue of its members, claiming that ads could affect the BBC’s reputation for impartiality. No timetable for the intrudiction of ads has been given.
 
In the end, though, it simply shows that in the modern world money has the loudest voice.


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