The Media Trust Releases 2026 Intelligence Report: “When Advertising Entered the Cyber Conversation”
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9:00 AM on Wednesday, March 4
The Associated Press
MCLEAN, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 4, 2026--
The Media Trust (TMT), a global leader in digital trust and safety for more than 20 years, today released its 2026 Intelligence Report, When Advertising Entered the Cyber Conversation: A Look Back at 2025 and the Digital Safety Imperative for 2026.
The report documents a defining shift in the digital ecosystem: in 2025, advertising infrastructure was no longer viewed solely as a revenue engine. It became increasingly recognized by regulators, media companies, and the public as part of the cyber risk landscape.
High-profile enforcement actions, evolving government policy initiatives, and increased scrutiny of platform accountability, including measures undertaken by major publishers and global technology companies, signal a clear shift. Neutrality is no longer viable. For publishers, platforms, and brands, ignoring malicious activity within advertising systems carries measurable consequences: reputational damage, regulatory exposure, lost revenue, and growing legal liability.
The question entering 2026 is not whether responsibility exists. It is how organizations will operationalize it.
Drawing on proprietary, real-time threat detection data from The Media Trust’s global infrastructure, which analyzes more than 200 billion ads monthly across 100,000+ digital properties, the report details how malvertising, malicious redirects, cloaked landing pages, and AI-enabled manipulation tactics are actively exploiting advertising systems as scalable attack surfaces.
TMT’s data shows these threats are not random. They concentrate geographically, target specific user communities, and follow monetization pathways designed to extract economic value at scale. Digital crime within the ad ecosystem is structured, repeatable, and increasingly automated.
“Advertising has always been part of the digital media function,” said Chris Olson, CEO of The Media Trust. “What has changed is the scale and sophistication with which threat actors exploit that infrastructure. The advertising supply chain now represents both economic opportunity and systemic risk. The organizations that recognize this and invest in prevention will protect both their consumers and their revenue.”
Key Findings from the 2026 Intelligence Report
Advertising as Infrastructure
Advertising systems now operate as high-speed execution environments for third-party code, making them efficient pathways for malware, fraud, and surveillance when exploited.
AI is Accelerating Both Defense and Attack
Artificial intelligence is reshaping the threat landscape. Attackers are using AI to scale evasion and automate malicious campaigns, while real-time defensive AI has become essential to detecting and blocking harmful activity before it reaches users.
Digital Crime is Local
Threat activity is no longer diffuse. State-by-state and global analysis shows digital attacks concentrate geographically, exposing specific regions and communities to disproportionate risk.
The Human Cost is Measurable
Malicious advertising produces direct financial loss, brand damage, and revenue disruption. Beyond economics, manipulation campaigns and scams increasingly affect vulnerable populations with real-world consequences.
Cybersecurity vs. Digital Safety
The report distinguishes system-level security from human-level safety, arguing that compliance alone is insufficient in today’s data-driven advertising ecosystem.
Accountability is Becoming Enforceable
Regulatory scrutiny, advertiser expectations, and governance standards are converging. Organizations that fail to address malicious activity within monetization systems face mounting reputational, financial, and regulatory risk.
“The risk is not whether digital threats exist,” Olson added. “The risk is assuming they can be tolerated without consequence. The companies that take responsibility for prevention will protect their brands, their balance sheets, and their audiences. Those that do not will absorb the cost.”
A Call for Industry-Wide Responsibility
The report concludes with what The Media Trust calls The Guardian Imperative: protecting people and protecting profit are not competing priorities, they are operationally linked.
When malicious creatives degrade user trust, traffic declines. Fraud diverts advertiser spend, weak enforcement increases regulatory exposure, and diminished user trust impacts long-term monetization. Consumer protection, brand integrity, and revenue performance are structurally connected within the advertising ecosystem, and weaknesses in one area directly affect the others.
The organizations that invest in proactive threat detection, real-time enforcement, and shared intelligence do more than reduce risk. They strengthen long-term monetization resilience.
Availability
The full 2026 Intelligence Report, When Advertising Entered the Cyber Conversation, is now available at: https://info.mediatrust.com/2026-intelligence-report
About The Media Trust
The Media Trust is a global leader in digital trust and safety, providing real-time threat detection and mitigation across advertising, publishing, and digital ecosystems. With more than two decades of expertise and proprietary AI-driven monitoring technology, The Media Trust helps organizations eliminate malvertising, protect consumers, and safeguard digital revenue while strengthening trust across the open internet. Learn more at: www.mediatrust.com.
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KEYWORD: VIRGINIA UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: ADVERTISING COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY TECHNOLOGY ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE INTERNET PUBLISHING
SOURCE: The Media Trust
Copyright Business Wire 2026.
PUB: 03/04/2026 09:00 AM/DISC: 03/04/2026 09:03 AM
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260304602982/en