OpenAI is accelerating its path to advertising monetization. According to reports, this AI giant has opened its doors to dozens of advertisers and launched a brand-new chatbot advertising service.
The interesting part lies in the pricing model. Unlike the traditional pay-per-click approach used by Google and Amazon, OpenAI is taking a different route, billing directly based on the number of ad impressions. The logic is straightforward: users see the ads and money is made; whether they click or not doesn't matter.
Currently, the scale of testing is tightly controlled. Only a few early testers are involved, and OpenAI requires each to spend no more than $1 million during the several-week trial period. The ads are scheduled to go live in early February. However, there is a gap—OpenAI has not yet implemented a self-service purchasing system. In other words, advertisers currently cannot manage their campaigns independently and must wait for the technology to catch up.
Behind this cautious rollout strategy is a balancing act. On one hand, OpenAI is eager to generate new revenue through advertising and shopping features; on the other hand, they are wary of aggressive ad placements alienating users who find chatbot ads annoying. That’s why they are adopting a gradual and refined approach.
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CryptoMotivator
· 2h ago
Charging based on impressions? That's a pretty crazy logic—users don't even have to click to pay. ChatGPT is really turning into an information feed.
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DataPickledFish
· 6h ago
Charging based on the number of impressions? That's some logic—it's like users have to pay just to breathe.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 11h ago
Charging based on impressions? That's a pretty harsh logic, users have to pay even if they don't click... Feels like we're one step closer to enshittification again.
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 11h ago
Charging based on impressions? This logic... users don't even have to click, but still have to pay. Isn't this just exploiting the system?
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MoneyBurnerSociety
· 11h ago
Charging by the number of impressions? This guy really wants to turn ChatGPT into a trash short video app.
But then again, users have to pay whether they click or not... I’ve learned this logic; next time I do a project, I’ll do it the same way.
A $1 million trial-and-error cost is truly the way big companies operate. We small investors don’t even have the qualification to participate.
They start charging before the self-service system is even ready. Isn’t this the standard "building the plane while taking off" approach? Haha.
In reality, they’re just afraid of user complaints, so they have to pretend to be very cautious. Actually, they’re just broke and going crazy.
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SandwichHunter
· 11h ago
Getting paid based on the number of impressions, OpenAI is trying to solidify its moat, smart...
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OvertimeSquid
· 11h ago
Charging based on impressions? Isn't that just a disguised way to harvest users? Anyway, whether users click or not, they still get charged.
OpenAI is accelerating its path to advertising monetization. According to reports, this AI giant has opened its doors to dozens of advertisers and launched a brand-new chatbot advertising service.
The interesting part lies in the pricing model. Unlike the traditional pay-per-click approach used by Google and Amazon, OpenAI is taking a different route, billing directly based on the number of ad impressions. The logic is straightforward: users see the ads and money is made; whether they click or not doesn't matter.
Currently, the scale of testing is tightly controlled. Only a few early testers are involved, and OpenAI requires each to spend no more than $1 million during the several-week trial period. The ads are scheduled to go live in early February. However, there is a gap—OpenAI has not yet implemented a self-service purchasing system. In other words, advertisers currently cannot manage their campaigns independently and must wait for the technology to catch up.
Behind this cautious rollout strategy is a balancing act. On one hand, OpenAI is eager to generate new revenue through advertising and shopping features; on the other hand, they are wary of aggressive ad placements alienating users who find chatbot ads annoying. That’s why they are adopting a gradual and refined approach.