Doubleverify issues warning on growing ads.txt fraud with new Transparency Center guidance

Doubleverify has highlighted the surge in deceptive ads.txt schemes and is providing guidance for greater ad spend protection.
The announcement:
DoubleVerify (“DV”) (NYSE: DV), a leading software platform for digital media measurement, data, and analytics, today issued guidance in its Transparency Center to help advertisers navigate a rise in schemes designed to exploit ads.txt — the industry standard that enables publishers and platforms to publicly declare authorised digital inventory sellers.
The DV Fraud Lab has identified more than 100 cases of ads.txt deception since the standard’s launch in May 2017, with a significant increase in recent years, as fraudsters manipulate the system to appear legitimate and divert ad spend away from trusted publishers.
“Bad actors are exploiting ads.txt and advertisers often have no idea it’s happening,” said Gilit Saporta, head of the DV Fraud Lab. “It’s a growing risk that demands more scrutiny from buyers, sellers and vendors.”
The scale of this deception is evident in Synthetic Echo, a network of over 200 AI-generated, ad-supported websites recently uncovered by the DV Fraud Lab. Monetised through multiple SSPs and exchanges, Synthetic Echo churns out low-quality AI content and uses deceptive domain names — like espn24.co.uk, nbcsportz.com, and cbsnewz.com — to mislead programmatic platforms and buyers into mistaking them for legitimate publishers.
According to DV’s analysis — detailed in the public alert available on DV’s website — the deception extends to ads.txt files. The DV Fraud Lab found near-identical ads.txt files replicated across Synthetic Echo sites, exposing how fraudsters scale these schemes by cloning authorised seller lists.
After DV publicised information about Synthetic Echo in January, a Wired report prompted several of the news publishers whose brands were misused to say they plan to pursue legal action.
[Go] here to review DV’s full guidance and best practices regarding ads.txt – https://doubleverify.com/ads-txt-under-attack-how-fraudsters-exploit-a-system-meant-to-protect-advertisers/
Source: Einsteinz Communications