The Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement (CIMM) and the Society for Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) have commenced work on a critical next step toward widespread industry adoption of Ad-ID and Entertainment Identifier Registry (EIDR) coding for all advertising and video content assets. At the centre of this effort is the establishment of the optimal open standard technical solution for the actual binding of Ad-ID and EIDR identifiers to video assets. The media industry currently has no standardised, open method of directly associating content identifiers with the audiovisual content itself.
CIMM’s advocacy platform, commonly known as Trackable Asset Cross-Platform Identification (TAXI), calls for all sides of the media ecosystem to coalesce around unique identifying codes — similar to the ubiquitous Universal Product Codes (UPC) used in many other industries. These codes are provided by either Ad-ID, the industry standard for identifying advertising assets across all media platforms, or EIDR, a global registry for unique identification of movie and TV content.
Participating organisations that embrace the Ad-ID or EIDR coding as well as CIMM and SMPTE’s forthcoming open standard technical solution can better monetise video assets across distribution platforms, increase efficiency and accuracy of media workflows, and improve cross-platform media measurement by making it easier to track assets across television, broadband, and mobile video.
“Today, the transfer of content throughout the media ecosystem is rife with thousands of siloed, proprietary avenues that have resulted in massive inefficiencies, errors, and waste,” said CIMM Managing Director Jane Clarke. “The growing support for the TAXI initiative is a testament to the frustration with the existing system and a sincere willingness to effect change.”
As part of this initiative, CIMM and SMPTE formed a study group comprising CIMM members and representatives from media organisations, ad agencies, and vendors who are meeting regularly to discuss the issues and challenges, and ultimately, to agree on the best binding process to enact. The study group held its first session on August 13th, and the discussion focused on creating a roadmap to define such things as use cases, technical requirements, and binding technology candidates, all of which will provide valuable input to the group’s expected report. The outcome will be a key next step for the TAXI initiative and successful industry-wide adoption.
“We are fully supportive of the effort underway to implement a UPC type of embedded identification for professional video content and advertisements,” said SMPTE Executive Director Barbara Lange. “We are eager to lend our engineering expertise to support such an important endeavour and we are looking forward to evaluating potential technical solutions in the months ahead.”
Part of the group’s Charter is to author a request for information (RFI), soliciting input from the industry at large for approaches to binding IDs to media.