Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Business
  5. Mobile
  6. News

Ads that look like articles are on the rise, and they’re coming to Apple News next

Add as a preferred source on Google

Ad blockers are more popular — and some would argue necessary — than ever, and while this is great for those reading on the Web, publishers and advertisers aren’t as thrilled about it. One of the methods advertisers have come up with to battle the rise of ad blockers involves ads that are embedded directly within content, often masking themselves as “real” content.

These types of ads have come to a number of services and websites recently, and Apple News is next on the list, according to a specification document aimed at developers, Business Insider reports. The specification was updated to include a new native ad banner format as well as ads that will “display directly in the content feeds, in line with News articles.”

Recommended Videos

If these ads were left entirely up to Apple, it would be an easy assumption that the ads would be low-key — the company doesn’t want to drive its customers away from Apple News. The problem, according to Kunal Gupta, CEO of advertising-tech firm Polar, is that the content that displays in the ads is up to the publisher.

“Publishers that participate in Apple News put an RSS feed into Apple News. That feed is essentially a feed of content and some of those pieces of content might be branded content,” Gupta told Business Insider. “The onus is on the publisher in that case to very clearly label and title that content.”

According to the document, the ads are meant to blend in with their surrounding articles, and are in the same font. The only intentional tip-off of their real nature is a small tag reading “sponsored” in the lower left. Publishers who don’t use the appropriate metadata to mark their sponsored content could find their Apple News access revoked.

This might not be the only way that Apple is looking to monetize Apple News. Rumors of a subscription model have been floating since the service’s launch, and in January reports surfaced that Apple was looking into adding pay walls for some publishers.

Kris Wouk
Former Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
Halide 3.1 update brings straighter photos, a warmer look, and smarter focus taps
A few weeks after launch, Halide is already leveling up with new tools and a warmer look.
Halide 3.1

Smartphone photography has become an over-processed mess, prioritizing algorithms over authenticity. I recently saw an Instagram post comparing iPhone 6 Photos to iPhone 17 Pro photos, and honestly, in some shots I preferred the results from the decade-old camera. It’s one of the reasons why apps like Halide have become so popular. 

People prefer authenticity now, and Halide’s Process Zero mode, which strips away all the extra processing Apple piles onto your photos, is a breath of fresh air. A few weeks back, Halide released its Mark III update that introduced features like Looks, a set of film-inspired color profiles, along with a full Photo Lab for editing RAW files, complete with a histogram, a Film tab for grain and vignetting, and support for importing RAW files from external cameras.

Read more
Your child isn’t the only one addicted to a phone, says new study
Researchers say parents' screen habits could have long-lasting effects on their children's emotional development.
Father and son bonding over smartphones while relaxing on a comfortable couch at home

For years, conversations around screen time have focused almost entirely on children. How much YouTube is too much? Should teenagers be on social media? When should a child get their first smartphone? A new study suggests we may have been asking the wrong question.

According to research published last month in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Psychology (via Bloomberg), it's not just children's screen habits that matter. Parents who are constantly distracted by their phones may unintentionally weaken their emotional bond with their children, potentially leaving lasting developmental and psychological effects. The study surveyed 600 U.S. adolescents aged 12 to 17, many of whom reported feeling ignored or sidelined when their parents were absorbed in their devices.

Read more
Google Photos can now turn your ordinary videos into AI-generated works of art
Google's new Video Remix tool uses Gemini to relight, restyle, and even replace backgrounds in just a few taps.
Google Photos Video Remix

Google is giving Photos another dose of Gemini. The company has announced Video Remix, a new AI-powered editing tool that can transform ordinary video clips into stylized creations with just a few taps. Rather than requiring professional editing skills, Google says the feature lets users quickly reinvent existing videos using creative AI effects directly inside Google Photos.

Think of it as Photo Remix, but for videos

Read more