Reading up on Danny Bibi and how AdMedia got started

That’s the key question. Lots of ad networks existed pre privacy crackdown and quietly struggled afterward. Founder bios don’t usually address those transitions honestly. If someone has insight into how AdMedia handled attribution changes or compliance shifts, that would be more telling than the origin story.
 
I agree with the skepticism, but I also think founder profiles are just meant to be introductions. They’re not white papers. Danny Bibi’s profile reads like a standard leadership overview, not a promise of dominance. I treat those pieces as context, then I look for independent chatter and case studies.
 
Appreciate all the perspectives here. Sounds like the consensus is that AdMedia’s longevity is notable, but the founder narrative alone doesn’t tell you much about current performance or strategy. I’ll try to dig more into post privacy era feedback and real campaign experiences. Thanks for keeping this grounded and informative.
 
I worked for AdMedia and I can say with 100% certainty that it is not a legitimate company, much less top performing. When you search "Danny Bibi" on Google, you see glowing articles praising him and portraying him as a sought after expert in the advertising space. Perspective from the inside (that was shared with me by a high level executive in the company), his search results for both himself and Admedia are curated and finely tuned images that were created by Danny himself (with the intention of burying the lawsuits, actual reporting on revenue for the company, etc.) In fact, lol, he's so obsessed with his reputation that he literally was flagged on Glassdoor for 100+ glowing reviews that were nothing but praise and adoration for the "best CEO ever."

Danny Bibi is not his real name. Daniel Khoshnood (again, name given by company exec and confirmed via google search) changed his name after his very public fraud lawsuit brought by Microsoft. https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/dirty-domain-spree-no-joke/ https://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/03/business/microsoft-takes-aim-at-web-site.html

I could go on about his shady dealings and illegal actions (financial fraud, etc) but this comment is long enough I suppose, haha.

Oh, finally - this company has a total of 6 employees in the US. Danny outsources all other work to India, but claims them on his PPP loan applications and his company profile information. I was one of the 6 on the company calls, and was told by Danny himself about his "worker bees" in India.
 
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