Blindspot: Platform for Booking Digital Billboard Advertising Worldwide
By
Chris Messina
Sat on the counter overnight. Well past its best.
Summary
Blindspot is a platform that enables users to book digital billboard advertising worldwide, similar to booking an Uber. The service allows advertisers to select specific billboards, choose time slots, and dynamically swap creative content in real-time based on factors like weather, traffic, or crowd conditions. Advertising spots start as low as $1 per hour, including premium locations like Times Square.
Key quotes
· 4 pulledBlindspot lets you pick the exact billboards you want, the hours you need with a creative that works
swapped in real-time when the weather, traffic, or crowd changes
Spots are as low as $1/hour
Imagine your ads in Times Square or anywhere else in the world
You might also wanna read
Uber Launches Intelligence Insights Tool for Advertisers
Uber has launched a new intelligence insights tool for marketers as part of its advertising business expansion. The tool provides data and a
Blindspot Platform Enables Global Billboard Advertising Booking with Real-Time Creative Swapping
Blindspot is a platform that enables users to book digital billboard advertising worldwide, similar to booking an Uber. The service allows a
Azerion integrates Spotify Ad Exchange directly into Hawk DSP for programmatic ad access
Azerion has announced a direct integration of the Spotify Ad Exchange into its Hawk demand-side platform (DSP), allowing advertisers program
US programmatic CPMs rise 34% YoY in April 2026 as display surges and CTV declines
DataBeat's May 2026 Programmatic Trends Report reveals US programmatic advertising CPMs jumped 33.9% year-over-year in April 2026, with mont
Google I/O 2026 marks shift from search tool to AI decision agent, argues marketing analyst
Veronika Höller's blog post argues that Google's I/O 2026 announcements represent a fundamental shift in how search works — transforming it
Google I/O 2026 marks shift from search tool to AI decision agent, argues marketing analyst
Veronika Höller's blog post argues that Google's I/O 2026 announcements represent a fundamental shift in how search works — transforming it
