DoubleVerify sues Adalytics for defamation over claims of bot detection failures, demanding a jury trial.
The lawsuit highlights tensions in the ad industry regarding fraud and the credibility of verification services.
Adalytics’ report alleges major brands and government agencies served ads to bots, despite using verification services.
The legal battle may influence future ad verification practices and calls for independent audits.
In the latest drama out of the ad verification world, DoubleVerify sued research firm Adalytics for defamation, and is demanding a jury trial. Filed in a Maryland district court, the lawsuit contends Adalytics’ March 28 report falsely claimed DoubleVerify’s bot detection fails and that advertisers are wrongly billed. Adalytics retorts the case is “without merit,” vowing to defend its research as serving the public interest, Adweek reported.
Industry flashpoint: This legal fight is not merely a corporate dispute but a flashpoint crystallizing the ad industry’s deep-seated anxieties over fraud, the trustworthiness of its watchdogs, and the demand for real transparency. The outcome will undoubtedly shape the credibility and future of ad verification itself.
The core dispute: Adalytics’ 240-page report alleged major brands and U.S. government agencies served ads to obvious bots, despite using services from DoubleVerify, IAS, and HUMAN Security. DoubleVerify’s April 7 rebuttal shot back, calling the report “inaccurate and misleading.” DV argues Adalytics misunderstands that GIVT caught post-bid isn’t billed, wrongly flagged the URLScan bot (which DV states doesn’t self-declare), and muddled GIVT with truly malicious SIVT—all, DV claims, to hawk its own products.
Conflicting standards: The Media Rating Council said Adalytics’ research overlooked standard industry IVT filtration, which happens primarily post-bid, as MediaPost detailed. IAS and HUMAN Security echoed this, disputing Adalytics’ methods. Adalytics has a history of contentious reports, facing an ongoing defamation suit from Colossus SSP since May 2024, and U.S. Senator Mark Warner had previously, in March 2025, pushed for DOJ/FTC probes into ad verification, pointing to existing high-level unease.
Advertiser crossroads: The showdown puts advertisers in a tough spot, navigating what eMarketer analysis describes as a “highly opaque and contentious space.” While open dialogue on ad quality is vital, the current legal climate “could suppress” it. The situation fuels calls for independent audits and more sophisticated, multi-layered verification to protect ad investments. The resolution will either temper critical research or compel greater rigor from verification firms and their scrutineers alike.
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