Revive Adserver is an open-source advertising server that is licensed under the GNU General Public License. It features an integrated banner management interface and tracking system for gathering statistics. It used to be known under different names in the past, most recently as OpenX Source. In Sep 2013, OpenX Source was sold to Andrew Hill and rebranded Revive Adserver.[2] The current code base for OpenX Enterprise and Revive Adserver (formerly known as OpenX Source) are completely separate.

Revive Adserver
Stable release
5.4.1[1] / May 12, 2022; 22 months ago (2022-05-12)
Repository
Written inPHP
TypeAdvertising server
LicenseGNU General Public License and proprietary
Websitewww.revive-adserver.com

The software enables web site administrators to rotate banners from both in-house advertisement campaigns as well as from paid or third-party sources, such as Google's AdSense. Revive Adserver provides standard banner rotation, click tracking, zone-based ad selection, zone-based campaign targeting, direct ad selection, ad targeting (per browser, domain, language, etc.), ad capping and support for Adobe Flash banners.

History edit

OpenX Source began as phpAdsNew, a fork from a similar project called phpAds, created by Tobias Ratschiller in 1998. When the phpAds project came to a halt in 2000, Wim Godden decided to create phpAdsNew by expanding the project with new features. He hoped the 'New' moniker would be temporary, lasting only until Ratschiller could update the phpAds website. Unfortunately, this only happened years later, after the name phpAdsNew was too well established to be changed.[citation needed]

During the time period between 2001 and 2002, Wim Godden led the phpAdsNew project and later received help from developers such as Niels Leenheer and Phil Hord, continually adding new features and improving the existing ones. After the release of version 1.9, a completely revised version 2.0 was created. This task was led by Niels Leenheer. The new version included many new features as well as a revised graphical user interface.

After gaining in popularity and earning support from the open-source community, the project was renamed to OpenAds. Features that were built for phpAdsNew 2.0 were also integrated into the latest OpenAds software, which at this point had reached version 2.3.[3]

When version 2.4.4 was released in 2007, OpenAds was once again rebranded under a new name: OpenX. The final 2.4 version is v2.4.11 and was released in March 2009.[4]

In 2011, the OpenX company disabled direct downloads of the software (a form must be filled out). Wim Godden subsequently made all GPL versions from phpAds 1.2.0 to OpenX 2.8.11 available.[5]

Revive Adserver can be extended with help of plug-ins.

In 2020 and 2021, compromised Revive ad servers were used to deliver malvertising (advertisements which led victims to install malware). Researchers estimated number of victims to be in "the tens if not hundreds of million of devices".[6]

References edit

  1. ^ "Download Revive Adserver".
  2. ^ "OpenX Sells Open Source Ad Serving Product". 2013-09-13.
  3. ^ Matt Asay (July 26, 2007). "Advertising the open-source way with Openads". cnet. Openads is one of the most interesting open-source projects/companies on the planet. Period. It's an open-source ad server. Like DoubleClick without the lock-in or fees. In other words, it's open source--100 percent GPLv2. I guess it should be no surprise that the world's most popular ad server, powering Web 2.0 business models, is open source, just as the LAMP stack is the technological basis for Web 2.0 sites/services. I've been following Openads since May, when my friend Bryce Roberts indicated that he was considering investing in the company. (And so he/O'Reilly Alpha Tech Ventures did, along with Index Ventures, Mangrove Capital Partner and First Capital in a $5 million Series A round of funding, as Tim O'Reilly reports.)
  4. ^ "Index of /OpenX-releases/OpenX-2.4". Matteo Beccati. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
  5. ^ "Opensource.be - phpAds / PhpAdsNew / OpenAds / OpenX downloads".
  6. ^ Goodin, Dan (2021-04-19). "Millions of web surfers are being targeted by a single malvertising group". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2021-04-20.