-->
Save your FREE seat for Streaming Media Connect in November. Register Now!

Data, Personalization, and Practical Magic

Article Featured Image

Steven Johnson’s new book, The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror, and the Rise of the Modern Detective, has been justly acclaimed for packing all of the punch of great detective fiction. But Johnson’s modern detectives aren’t interro­gation room intimidators. They’re a handful of early 20th-century information science pioneers who brought data-driven detective work to the NYPD. These proto-data architects not only revolutionized crime fighting, but they also planted the seeds of our modern data- saturated surveillance state.

 

One of the book’s most memorable scenes concerns the trial of burglar Charles Crispi in 1911, in which detective Joseph Faurot introduced fingerprint evidence for the first time in an American courtroom. Faurot had built a card catalog of fingerprint data categorized by various ridge patterns that enabled him to match a collected fingerprint with any print on file within 6 minutes. Though Faurot knew he had Crispi dead to rights, convincing a jury using entirely unfamiliar science presented a unique challenge.

 

After 4 hours spent painstakingly explaining the science of whorls, arches, and loops and drawing only blank stares from the jury, Faurot proposed a magic trick: With the detective out of the room, the court would take fingerprints from all 12 jurors, then take a second set of prints from one randomly selected juror. The detective then returned and ID’d the matched prints in seconds, quickly making converts of them all.

 

Discussions of data acquisition, application, and monetization that would have seemed like the most mind-blowing magic to denizens of other eras proved ever-present at Streaming Media NYC, the reimagined and rebooted Streaming Media event that made its raucously well-received return to Manhattan in May. The first Streaming Media event to emphatically position itself (by way of new conference chair Evan Shapiro) as a stock-taking, industry-recalibrating follow-on to the previous week’s TV advertising industry upfronts, Streaming Media NYC deftly steered clear of data discussion-as-information-science-semi­nar and hewed closer to the magic trick vibe.

smnyc 2024 ai debate

 

In a spirited AI debate that helped kick off the show, General Creativity CEO Robert Tercek painted a striking picture of how far we’ve come from a few thousand fingerprints classified in card catalogs: “As you walk around New York City with a phone in your pocket, you’re leaving a trail of data smog that’s being collected by hundreds of companies,” he said. “About 300 companies know that we are all in this room because our phones are in close proximity. They’re collecting a profile. And they know that we have some things in common because we’re in this room together. That data is incredibly useful for marketers.”

 

In his animated closing keynote, eschewing the increasingly fossilized “data as the new oil” metaphor, Shapiro put a fresher analogy in circulation: “In our media universe, I think we have to really get our heads around the idea that data is the bloodline—that everybody has content, but [we struggle] to understand how that content is being used, how to get that content discovered, and how to keep that content relevant.”

 

If using data to drive streaming monetization was the week’s overarching theme, misusing data took center stage in Streaming Media NYC’s curtain call: “Who here has seen the same ad many, many times across multiple services in on-demand video in the course of one night?” Shapiro asked. “That is our fault. That is a bad use of data. The people in this room have access to technology to fix this user experience problem. The over-frequency of ads is a bad thing for our ecosystem. It’s bad for the user, it’s bad for the advertiser, it’s bad for the platform, and it’s bad for the brand. No one wins, and there is no excuse for it.”

 

Personalizing user experiences is arguably streaming media’s signature magic trick, and we’ve got the data and the tools to pull it off. No more excuses.

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

Cue the Sunset: The Rise and Fall of Reality TV

Though Emily Nussbaum's Cue the Sun: The Invention of Reality TV reads more like a biography than like an obituary, the book lands as reality TV appears to be shrinking along with the scripted side of the business. More than one pundit has proclaimed its demise at the hands of TikTok, the "now everyone grows up on video" platform that reality TV prefigured.

SMNYC: Four Debates, Two Topics, One Educational Day

On Monday, May 20, Streaming Media NYC hosted four debates on two topics that represented a fantastic programming win for the conference. The first half of the day was dedicated to AI and covered the full range of topics from authorship to copyright to privacy and more. The second half of the day featured two panels debating the definition of premium content, the value of social media as well as the question of how CTV measures up against mobile as an advertising platform. Read on to get caught up.

SMNYC Highlight: Fireside Chat With Roku President Charlie Collier and Media Cartographer Evan Shapiro

On Wednesday, May 22, 2024, at Streaming Media NYC, media cartographer Evan Shapiro sat down with Charlie Collier, President of Roku Media and former President of AMC, for a deep dive discussion about the development and current dominance of Roku, the #1 streaming TV platform in America. They talked about how Roku's UI brings "simplicity and delight" to their EPG, the ways that Roku collaborates with other platforms and publishers, and the need for a new media ecosystem to support creative risk-taking in the streaming era.

SMNYC Keynote Highlights: Beat The BUZZR & Brand Vs. Retail

On Tuesday, May 21, at Streaming Media NYC, a series of morning keynotes featuring leading industry figures covered a wide range of topics, including how Microsoft and Fremantle are gamifying FAST and capitalizing interactive TV, and a lively debate about brand versus retail with Crackle, Uber Advertising, IAB, and Witz About Her.

SMNYC Debates: TO AI, OR NOT TO AI?

On Monday, May 20, at Streaming Media NYC, two lively debates on the topic of AI in Media and Entertainment showcased leading industry figures. The first, "AI: Boon Or Bubble?" examined the ways that AI has entered every sector of the media, business, and technology worlds, and it explored how much of AI's insurgency is a fad, and how much of it is the actual future of streaming. The second, "The Real Value Of Artificial Intelligence," explored the fearmongering around the idea that "AI is coming for our jobs," and focused on how AI/ML might make workflows more efficient and effective, grow or refine reach, and help to boost bottom lines.

Post-Peak Performance in the M&E Universe

The recent Subscription Wars report commissioned by U.K.-based digital payments tech company Bango points to consumer dissatisfaction with the fractured state of subscription services in general and the increasing appeal of indirect subscription options and super-bundles of aggregated services sold through telcos like Optus in Australia. Perhaps it's another sign of less-than-inspiring times that the best thing consumers say streaming services can do for them is to stop standing out from the crowd and start disappearing into it.