Abstract
We propose a hybrid auction mechanism for sponsored search, where bidders can be truthful or not, and are
accordingly treated differently. Our class of hybrid mechanisms give incentives for non-truthful bidders to
bid truthfully, while behaving as a non-truthful auction if no bidders are truthful.
Our motivation is that the Generalized Second Price (GSP) auction (the current mechanism of choice) has
appealing properties when ads are simple (text based and identical in size). But GSP does not generalize
to richer ad settings, whereas truthful mechanisms, such as VCG do. Hence there are incentives for search
platforms to migrate to truthful mechanisms, but a straight switch from GSP to VCG either requires all
bidders instantly bid truthfully or incurs significant revenue loss.
We introduce a transitional mechanism which encourages advertisers to update their bids to their valuations,
while mitigating revenue loss. The mechanism is equivalent to GSP when nobody has updated their
bid, is equivalent to VCG when everybody has updated, and it has the same allocation and payments of
the original GSP if bids were in the minimum symmetric Nash equilibrium. In settings where both GSP
ads and truthful (TF) ads exist, it is easier to propose a payment function than an allocation function. We
give a general framework for these settings to characterize payment functions which guarantee incentive
compatibility of truthful ads, by requiring that the payment functions satisfy two properties.
Finally, we compare the revenue of our transitional mechanism with revenues of GSP and VCG mechanisms
when run on a sample of Bing data.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | 11th Ad Auctions Workshop (2015) |
| Number of pages | 21 |
| Publication status | Published - 2015 |
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