In today's ExchangeWire news digest: Roku acquires the rights to collapsed Quibi's portfolio of content; the CMA launches a formal investigation into Google's plans for its Privacy Sandbox; and TikTok ends 2020 as the world's highest-grossing app.
Roku has reached a deal to take exclusive ownership of Quibi’s former content. The purchase, which is the streaming service’s biggest move in procuring original content, gives Roku the global distribution rights to the short-lived short-form video platform, which shut up shop last year just 6 months after launching.
Whilst the deal excludes some Quibi content, such as its daily news shows, as well as its infrastructure, it’s the folded platform’s star-studded portfolio of original shows from the likes of Idris Elba, Anna Kendrick, and Chrissy Teigen that makes the move worthwhile for Roku. Whilst the financial details remain undisclosed, insider sources value the deal at under USD $100m (£74.1m). News of the agreements saw Roku’s shares climb 5% on Friday (8th December).
It’s understood that US-based streaming powerhouse will make the former Quibi properties available to viewers for free from the Roku channel later this year. As they did during their initial run on Quibi, the adopted shows will feature advertising.
The deal ends Quibi’s short life-span on a more positive note. Founder and former CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg has said that he is “thrilled” that Quibi’s content has been picked up by Roku.
In a press release published on Friday (8th December), the regulator revealed that it would consider whether the Sandbox could result in a disproportionate amount of advertising spend to be diverted towards Alphabet-owned Google “at the expense of its competitors”. The watchdog goes on to say that it has already raised “a number of concerns” with the possible effect the suite of targeting solutions could have in a recent market study. These concerns include the possibility that the Sandbox “could undermine the ability of publishers to generate revenue and undermine competition in digital advertising”.
The CMA asserts that it was already assessing the Privacy Sandbox, which will replace third-party cookies with a new, ostensibly more privacy-focused toolset for targeted advertising, alongside the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). The regulator says that it will “engage” with Google as it begins a formal investigation.
This perhaps surprising achievement is according to data from app analytics company Apptopia, which revealed that the ByteDance-owned social media sensation took the top spot ahead of second-place Tinder (USD $513m/£380.2m), with Google-owned YouTube coming in third (USD $478m/£354.3m). TikTok was also far-and-away the most downloaded app of the year, boasting 850 million global downloads.
2020 proved a big year for video and streaming platforms, with Disney+ and Tencent Video joining TikTok and YouTube in the top 5. Streaming heavyweight Netflix saw its app draw in a gross profit of USD $209m (£154.9m), putting it in 10th place.
A more surprising winner in 2020, however, was Facebook, which despite being at the centre of a number of controversies (including the Stop Hate for Profit advertising boycott and a watershed Antitrust Subcommittee hearing in the US) saw its flagship Facebook app make it into the top 5 most downloaded, alongside the apps of sister platforms WhatsApp and Instagram.
Adform, the most powerful and safe media buying platform built for game changers, celebrates today…
Opti Digital, a premium ad revenue platform, unveils a new brand identity that embodies its…
In today’s Digest, Ireland pushes for Big Tech to vet financial ads, Warner Bros. Discovery…
We look at some of the key findings from this year’s All In Census (created…
This week, Google dominated headlines with bold moves across content, advertising, and AI, while lawmakers…
Intent IQ, a leading provider of identity resolution and data technology, today (May 8th, 2025)…