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  • Ecrire une actualité

    21 juin 2013, par

    Présentez les changements dans votre MédiaSPIP ou les actualités de vos projets sur votre MédiaSPIP grâce à la rubrique actualités.
    Dans le thème par défaut spipeo de MédiaSPIP, les actualités sont affichées en bas de la page principale sous les éditoriaux.
    Vous pouvez personnaliser le formulaire de création d’une actualité.
    Formulaire de création d’une actualité Dans le cas d’un document de type actualité, les champs proposés par défaut sont : Date de publication ( personnaliser la date de publication ) (...)

  • MediaSPIP v0.2

    21 juin 2013, par

    MediaSPIP 0.2 est la première version de MediaSPIP stable.
    Sa date de sortie officielle est le 21 juin 2013 et est annoncée ici.
    Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
    Comme pour la version précédente, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
    Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...)

  • Mise à disposition des fichiers

    14 avril 2011, par

    Par défaut, lors de son initialisation, MediaSPIP ne permet pas aux visiteurs de télécharger les fichiers qu’ils soient originaux ou le résultat de leur transformation ou encodage. Il permet uniquement de les visualiser.
    Cependant, il est possible et facile d’autoriser les visiteurs à avoir accès à ces documents et ce sous différentes formes.
    Tout cela se passe dans la page de configuration du squelette. Il vous faut aller dans l’espace d’administration du canal, et choisir dans la navigation (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10517)

  • Google Analytics 4 and GDPR : Everything You Need to Know

    17 mai 2022, par Erin

    Four years have passed since the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR, also known as DSGVO in German, and RGPD in French) took effect.

    That’s ample time to get compliant, especially for an organisation as big and innovative as Google. Or is it ? 

    If you are wondering how GDPR affects Google Analytics 4 and what the compliance status is at present, here’s the lowdown. 

    Is Google Analytics 4 GDPR Compliant ?

    No. As of mid-2022, Google Analytics 4 (GA4) isn’t fully GDPR compliant. Despite adding extra privacy-focused features, GA4 still has murky status with the European regulators. After the invalidation of the Privacy Shield framework in 2020, Google is yet to regulate EU-US data protection. At present, the company doesn’t sufficiently protect EU citizens’ and residents’ data against US surveillance laws. This is a direct breach of GDPR.

    Google Analytics and GDPR : a Complex Relationship 

    European regulators have scrutinised Google since GDPR came into effect in 2018.

    While the company took steps to prepare for GDPR provisions, it didn’t fully comply with important regulations around user data storage, transfer and security.

    The relationship between Google and EU regulators got more heated after the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) invalidated the Privacy Shield — a leeway Google used for EU-US data transfers. After 2020, GDPR litigation against Google followed. 

    This post summarises the main milestones in this story and explains the consequences for Google Analytics users. 

    Google Analytics and GDPR Timeline

    2018 : Google Analytics Meets GDPR 

    In 2018, the EU adopted the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) — a set of privacy and data security laws, covering all member states. Every business interacting with EU citizens and/or residents had to comply.

    GDPR harmonised data protection laws across member states and put down extra provisions for what constitutes sensitive personal information (or PII). Broadly, PII includes any data about the person’s :

    • Racial or ethnic origin 
    • Employment status 
    • Religious or political beliefs
    • State of health 
    • Genetic or biometric data 
    • Financial records (such as payment method data)
    • Address and phone numbers 

    Businesses were barred from collecting this information without explicit consent (and even with it in some cases). If collected, such sensitive information is also subject to strict requirements on how it should be stored, secured, transferred and used. 

    7 Main GDPR Principles Explained 

    Article 5 of the GDPR lays out seven main GDPR principles for personal data and privacy protection : 

    • Lawfulness, fairness and transparency — data must be obtained legally, collected with consent and in adherence to laws. 
    • Purpose limitation — all personal information must be collected for specified, explicit and legal purposes. 
    • Data minimisation — companies must collect only necessary and adequate data, aligned with the stated purpose. 
    • Accuracy — data accuracy must be ensured at all times. Companies must have mechanisms to erase or correct inaccurate data without delays. 
    • Storage limitation — data must be stored only for as long as the stated purpose suggests. Though there’s no upper time limit on data storage. 
    • Integrity and confidentiality (security) — companies must take measures to ensure secure data storage and prevent unlawful or unauthorised access to it. 
    • Accountability — companies must be able to demonstrate adherence to the above principles. 

    Google claimed to have taken steps to make all of their products GDPR compliant ahead of the deadline. But in practice, this wasn’t always the case.

    In March 2018, a group of publishers admonished Google for not providing them with enough tools for GDPR compliance :

    “[Y]ou refuse to provide publishers with any specific information about how you will collect, share and use the data. Placing the full burden of obtaining new consent on the publisher is untenable without providing the publisher with the specific information needed to provide sufficient transparency or to obtain the requisite specific, granular and informed consent under the GDPR.”

    The proposed Google Analytics GDPR consent form was hard to implement and lacked customisation options. In fact, Google “makes unilateral decisions” on how the collected data is stored and used. 

    Users had no way to learn about or control all intended uses of people’s data — which made compliance with the second clause impossible. 

    Unsurprisingly, Google was among the first companies to face a GDPR lawsuit (together with Facebook). 

    By 2019, French data regulator CNIL, successfully argued that Google wasn’t sufficiently disclosing its data collection across products — and hence in breach of GDPR. After a failed appeal, Google had to pay a €50 million fine and promise to do better. 

    2019 : Google Analytics 4 Announcement 

    Throughout 2019, Google rightfully attempted to resolve some of its GDPR shortcomings across all products, Google Universal Analytics (UA) included. 

    They added a more visible consent mechanism for online tracking and provided extra compliance tips for users to follow. In the background, Google also made tech changes to its data processing mechanism to get on the good side of regulations.

    Though Google addressed some of the issues, they missed others. A 2019 independent investigation found that Google real-time-bidding (RTB) ad auctions still used EU citizens’ and residents’ data without consent, thanks to a loophole called “Push Pages”. But they managed to quickly patch this up before the allegations had made it to court. 

    In November 2019, Google released a beta version of the new product version — Google Analytics 4, due to replace Universal Analytics. 

    GA4 came with a set of new privacy-focused features for ticking GDPR boxes such as :

    • Data deletion mechanism. Users can now request to surgically extract certain data from the Analytics servers via a new interface. 
    • Shorter data retention period. You can now shorten the default retention period to 2 months by default (instead of 14 months) or add a custom limit.  
    • IP Anonymisation. GA4 doesn’t log or store IP addresses by default. 

    Google Analytics also updated its data processing terms and made changes to its privacy policy

    Though Google made some progress, Google Analytics 4 still has many limitations — and isn’t GDPR compliant. 

    2020 : Privacy Shield Invalidation Ruling 

    As part of the 2018 GDPR preparations, Google named its Irish entity (Google Ireland Limited) as the “data controller” legally responsible for EEA and Swiss users’ information. 

    The company announcement says : 

    Google Analytics Statement on Privacy Shield Invalidation Ruling
    Source : Google

    Initially, Google assumed that this legal change would help them ensure GDPR compliance as “legally speaking” a European entity was set in charge of European data. 

    Practically, however, EEA consumers’ data was still primarily transferred and processed in the US — where most Google data centres are located. Until 2020, such cross-border data transfers were considered legal thanks to the Privacy Shield framework

    But in July 2020, The EU Court of Justice ruled that this framework doesn’t provide adequate data protection to digitally transmitted data against US surveillance laws. Hence, companies like Google can no longer use it. The Swiss Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner (FDPIC) reached the same conclusion in September 2020. 

    The invalidation of the Privacy Shield framework put Google in a tough position.

     Article 14. f of the GDPR explicitly states : 

    “The controller (the company) that intends to carry out a transfer of personal data to a recipient (Analytics solution) in a third country or an international organisation must provide its users with information on the place of processing and storage of its data”.

    Invalidation of the Privacy Shield framework prohibited Google from moving data to the US. At the same time, GDPR provisions mandated that they must disclose proper data location. 

    But Google Analytics (like many other products) had no a mechanism for : 

    • Guaranteeing intra-EU data storage 
    • Selecting a designated regional storage location 
    • Informing users about data storage location or data transfers outside of the EU 

    And these factors made Google Analytics in direct breach of GDPR — a territory, where they remain as of 2022.

    2020-2022 : Google GDPR Breaches and Fines 

    The 2020 ruling opened Google to GDPR lawsuits from country-specific data regulators.

    Google Analytics in particular was under a heavy cease-fire. 

    • Sweden first fined Google for violating GDPR for no not fulfilling its obligations to request data delisting in 2020. 
    • France rejected Google Analytics 4 IP address anonymisation function as a sufficient measure for protecting cross-border data transfers. Even with it, US intelligence services can still access user IPs and other PII. France declared Google Analytics illegal and pressed a €150 million fine. 
    • Austria also found Google Analytics GDPR non-compliant and proclaimed the service as “illegal”. The authority now seeks a fine too. 

    The Dutch Data Protection Authority and  Norwegian Data Protection Authority also found Google Analytics guilty of a GDPR breach and seek to limit Google Analytics usage. 

    New privacy controls in Google Analytics 4 do not resolve the underlying issue — unregulated, non-consensual EU-US data transfer. 

    Google Analytics GDPR non-compliance effectively opens any website tracking or analysing European visitors to legal persecution.

    In fact, this is already happening. noyb, a European privacy-focused NGO, has already filed over 100 lawsuits against European websites using Google Analytics.

    2022 : Privacy Shield 2.0. Negotiations

    Google isn’t the only US company affected by the Privacy Shield framework invalidation. The ruling puts thousands of digital companies at risk of non-compliance.

    To settle the matter, US and EU authorities started “peace talks” in spring 2022.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that they are working with the Biden administration on the new agreement that will “enable predictable and trustworthy data flows between the EU and US, safeguarding the privacy and civil liberties.” 

    However, it’s just the beginning of a lengthy negotiation process. The matter is far from being settled and contentious issues remain as we discussed on Twitter (come say hi !).

    For one, the US isn’t eager to modify its surveillance laws and is mostly willing to make them “proportional” to those in place in the EU. These modifications may still not satisfy CJEU — which has the power to block the agreement vetting or invalidate it once again. 

    While these matters are getting hashed out, Google Analytics users, collecting data about EU citizens and/or residents, remain on slippery grounds. As long as they use GA4, they can be subject to GDPR-related lawsuits. 

    To Sum It Up 

    • Google Analytics 4 and Google Universal Analytics are not GDPR compliant because of Privacy Shield invalidation in 2020. 
    • French and Austrian data watchdogs named Google Analytics operations “illegal”. Swedish, Dutch and Norwegian authorities also claim it’s in breach of GDPR. 
    • Any website using GA for collecting data about European citizens and/or residents can be taken to court for GDPR violations (which is already happening). 
    • Privacy Shield 2.0 Framework discussions to regulate EU-US data transfers have only begun and may take years. Even if accepted, the new framework(s) may once again be invalidated by local data regulators as has already happened in the past. 

    Time to Get a GDPR Compliant Google Analytics Alternative 

    Retaining 100% data ownership is the optimal path to GDPR compliance.

    By selecting a transparent web analytics solution that offers 100% data ownership, you can rest assured that no “behind the scenes” data collection, processing or transfers take place. 

    Unlike Google Analytics 4, Matomo offers all of the features you need to be GDPR compliant : 

    • Full data anonymisation 
    • Single-purpose data usage 
    • Easy consent and an opt-out mechanism 
    • First-party cookies usage by default 
    • Simple access to collect data 
    • Fast data removals 
    • EU-based data storage for Matomo Cloud (or storage in the country of your choice with Matomo On-Premise)

    Learn about your audiences in a privacy-centred way and protect your business against unnecessary legal exposure. 

    Start your 21-day free trial (no credit card required) to see how fully GDPR-compliant website analytics works ! 

  • 5 Top Google Optimize Alternatives to Consider

    17 mars 2023, par Erin — Analytics Tips

    Google Optimize is a popular conversion rate optimization (CRO) tool from Alphabet (parent company of Google). With it, you can run A/B, multivariate, and redirect tests to figure out which web page designs perform best. 

    Google Optimize seamlessly integrates with Google Analytics (GA). It also has a free tier. So many marketers chose it as their default A/B testing tool…until recently. 

    Google will sunset Google Optimize by 30 September 2023

    Starting from this date, Google will no longer support Optimize and Optimize 360 (premium edition). All experiments, active after this date, will be paused automatically and you’ll no longer have access to your historical records (unless these are exported in advance).

    The better news is that you still have time to find a Google Optimize alternative — and this post will help you with that. 

    Disclaimer : Please note that the information provided in this blog post is for general informational purposes only and is not intended to provide legal advice. Every situation is unique and requires a specific legal analysis. If you have any questions regarding the legal implications of any matter, please consult with your legal team or seek advice from a qualified legal professional. 

    Best Google Optimize Alternatives 

    Google Optimize was among the first free A/B testing apps. But as with any product, it has some disadvantages. 

    Data updates happen every 24 hours, not in real-time. A free account has caps on the number of experiments. You cannot run more than 5 experiments at a time or implement over 16 combinations for multivariate testing (MVT). A premium version (Optimize 365) has fewer usage constraints, but it costs north of $150K per year. 

    Google Optimize has native integration with GA (of course), so you can review all the CRO data without switching apps. But Optimize doesn’t work well with Google Analytics alternatives, which many choose to use for privacy-friendly user tracking, higher data accuracy and GDPR compliance. 

    At the same time, many other conversion rate optimization (CRO) tools have emerged, often boasting better accuracy and more competitive features than Google Optimize.

    Here are 5 alternative A/B testing apps worth considering.

    Adobe Target 

    Adobe Target Homepage

    Adobe Target is an advanced personalization platform for optimising user and marketing experiences on digital properties. It uses machine learning algorithms to deliver dynamic content, personalised promotions and custom browsing experiences to visitors based on their behaviour and demographic data. 

    Adobe Target also provides A/B testing and multivariate testing (MVT) capabilities to help marketers test and refine their digital experiences.

    Key features : 

    • Visual experience builder for A/B tests setup and replication 
    • Full factorial multivariate tests and multi-armed bandit testing
    • Omnichannel personalisation across web properties 
    • Multiple audience segmentation and targeting options 
    • Personalised content, media and product recommendations 
    • Advanced customer intelligence (in conjunction with other Adobe products)

    Pros

    • Convenient A/B test design tool 
    • Acucate MVT and MAB results 
    • Powerful segmentation capabilities 
    • Access to extra behavioural analytics 
    • One-click personalisation activation 
    • Supports rules-based, location-based and contextual personalisation
    • Robust omnichannel analytics in conjunction with other Adobe products 

    Cons 

    • Requires an Adobe Marketing Cloud subscription 
    • No free trial or freemium tier 
    • More complex product setup and configuration 
    • Steep learning curve for new users 

    Price : On-demand. 

    Adobe Target is sold as part of Adobe Marketing Cloud. Licence costs vary, based on selected subscriptions and the number of users, but are typically above $10K.

    Google Optimize vs Adobe Target : The Verdict 

    Google Optimize comes with a free tier, unlike Adobe Target. It provides you with a basic builder for A/B and MVT tests, but none of the personalisation tools Adobe has. Because of ease-of-use and low price, other Google Optimize alternatives are better suited for small to medium-sized businesses, doing baseline CRO for funnel optimisation. 

    Adobe Target pulls you into the vast Adobe marketing ecosystem, offering omnipotent customer behaviour analytics, machine-learning-driven website optimisation, dynamic content recommendations, product personalisation and extensive reporting. The app is better suited for larger enterprises with a significant investment in digital marketing.

    Matomo A/B Testing

    Matomo A/B testing page

    Matomo A/B Testing is a CRO tool, integrated into Matomo. All Matomo Cloud users get instant access to it, while On-Premise (free) Matomo users can purchase A/B testing as a plugin

    With Matomo A/B Testing, you can create multiple variations of a web or mobile page and test them with different segments of their audience. Matomo also doesn’t have any strict experiment caps, unlike Google Optimize. 

    You can split-test multiple creative variants for on-site assets such as buttons, slogans, titles, call-to-actions, image positions and more. You can even benchmark the performance of two (or more !) completely different homepage designs, for instance. 

    With us, you can compliantly and ethically collect historical user data about any visitor, who’s entered any of the active tests — and monitor their entire customer journey. You can also leverage Matomo A/B Testing data as part of multi-touch attribution modelling to determine which channels bring the best leads and which assets drive them towards conversion. 

     

    Since Matomo A/B Testing is part of our analytics platform, it works well with other features such as goal tracking, heatmaps, user session recordings and more. 

    Key features

    • Run experiments for web, mobile, email and digital campaigns 
    • Convenient A/B test design interface 
    • One-click experiment scheduling 
    • Integration with historic visitor profiles
    • Near real-time conversion tracking 
    • Apply segmentation to Matomo reports 
    • Easy creative variation sharing via a URL 

    Pros

    • High data accuracy with no reporting gaps 
    • Monitor the evolution of your success metrics for each variation
    • Embed experiments across multiple digital channels 
    • Set a custom confidence threshold for winning variations 
    • No compromises on user privacy 
    • Free 21-day trial available (for Matomo Cloud) and free 30-day plugin trial (for Matomo On-Premise)

    Cons

    • No on-site personalisation tools available 
    • Configuration requires some coding experience 

    Price : Matomo A/B Testing is included in the monthly Cloud plan (starting at €19 per month). On-Premise users can buy this functionality as a plugin (starting at €199/year). 

    Google Optimize vs Matomo A/B Testing : The Verdict 

    Matomo offers the same types of A/B testing features as Google Optimize (and some extras !), but without any usage caps. Unlike Matomo, Google Optimize doesn’t support A/B tests for mobile apps. You can access some content testing features for Android Apps via Firebase, but this requires another subscription. 

    Matomo lets you run A/B experiments across the web and mobile properties, plus desktop apps, email campaigns and digital ads. Also, Matomo has higher conversion data accuracy, thanks to our privacy-focused method for collecting website analytics

    When using Matomo in most EU markets, you’re legally exempt from showing a cookie consent banner. Meaning you can collect richer insights for each experiment and make data-driven decisions. Nearly 40% of global consumers reject cookie consent banners. With most other tools, you won’t be getting the full picture of your traffic. 

    Optimizely 

    Optimizely homepage

    Optimizely is a conversion optimization platform that offers several competitive products for a separate subscription. These include a flexible content management system (CMS), a content marketing platform, a web A/B testing app, a mobile featuring testing product and two eCommerce-specific website management products.

    The Web Experimentation app allows you to optimise every customer touchpoint by scheduling unlimited split or multi-variant tests and conversions across all your projects from the same app. Apart from websites, this subscription also supports experiments for single-page applications. But if you want more advanced mobile app testing features, you’ll have to purchase another product — Feature Experimentation. 

    Key features :

    • Intuitive experiment design tool 
    • Cross-browser testing and experiment preview 
    • Multi-page funnel tests design 
    • Behavioural and geo-targeting 
    • Exit/bounce rate tracking
    • Custom audience builder for experiments
    • Comprehensive reporting 

    Pros

    • Unlimited number of concurrent experiments 
    • Upload your audience data for test optimisation 
    • Dynamic content personalisation available on a higher tier 
    • Pre-made integrations with popular heatmap and analytics tools 
    • Supports segmentation by device, campaign type, traffic sources or referrer 

    Cons

    • You need a separate subscription for mobile CRO 
    • Free trial not available, pricing on-demand 
    • Multiple licences and subscriptions may be required 
    • Doesn’t support A/B tests for emails 

    Price : Available on-demand. 

    Web Experimentation tool has three subscription tiers — Grow, Accelerate, and Scale with different features included. 

    Google Optimize vs Optimizely : The Verdict 

    Optimizely is a strong contender for Google Optimize alternative as it offers more advanced audience targeting and segmentation options. You can target users by IP address, cookies, traffic sources, device type, browser, language, location or a custom utm_campaign parameter.

    Similar to Matomo A/B testing, Optimizely doesn’t limit the number of projects or concurrent experiments you can do. But you have to immediately sign an annual contract (no monthly plans are available). Pricing also varies based on the number of processed impressions (more experiments = a higher annual bill). An annual licence can cost $63,700 for 10 million impressions on average, according to an independent estimate. 

    Visual Website Optimizer (VWO) 

    VWO is another popular experimentation platform, supporting web, mobile and server-side A/B testing and personalisation campaigns.

    Similar to others, VWO offers a drag-and-drop visual editor for creating campaign variants. You don’t need design or coding knowledge to create tests. Once you’re all set, the app will benchmark your experiment performance against expected conversion rates, report on differences in conversion rate and point towards the best-performing creative. 

    Similar to Optimizely, VWO also offers web/mobile app optimisation as a separate subscription. Apart from testing visual page elements, you can also run in-app experiments throughout the product stack to locate new revenue opportunities. For example, you can test in-app subscription flows, search algorithms or navigation flows to improve product UX. 

    Key features :

    • Multivariate and multi-arm bandit tests 
    • Multi-step (funnel) split tests 
    • Collaborative experiment tracking dashboard 
    • Target users by different attributes (URL, device, geo-data) 
    • Personal library of creative elements 
    • Funnel analytics, session records, and heatmaps available 

    Pros

    • Free starter plan is available (similar to Google Optimize)
    • Simple tracking code installation and easy code editor
    • Offers online reporting dashboards and report downloads 
    • Slice-and-dice reports by different audience dimensions
    • No impact on website/app loading speed and performance 

    Cons

    • Multivariate testing is only available on a higher-tier plan 
    • Annual contract required, despite monthly billing 
    • Mobile app A/B split tests require another licence 
    • Requires ongoing user training 

    Price : Free limited plan available. 

    Then from $356/month, billed annually. 

    Google Optimize vs VWO : The Verdict 

    The free plan on VWO is very similar to Google Optimize. You get access to A/B testing and split URL testing features for websites only. The visual editing tool is relatively simple — and you can use URL or device targeting. 

    Free VWO reports, however, lack the advertised depth in terms of behavioural or funnel-based reporting. In-depth insights are available only to premium users. Extra advertised features like heatmaps, form analytics and session recordings require yet another subscription. With Matomo Cloud, you get all three of these together with A/B testing. 

    ConvertFlow 

    ConvertFlow Homepage

    ConvertFlow markets itself as a funnel optimisation app for eCommerce and SaaS companies. It meshes lead generation tools with some CRO workflows. 

    With ConvertFlow, you can effortlessly design opt-in forms, pop-ups, quizzes and even entire landing pages using pre-made web elements and a visual builder. Afterwards, you can put all of these assets to a “field test” via the ConvertFlow CRO platform. Select among pre-made templates or create custom variants for split or multivariate testing. You can customise tests based on URLs, cookie data and user geolocation among other factors. 

    Similar to Adobe Target, ConvertFlow also allows you to run tests targeted at specific customer segments in your CRM. The app has native integrations with HubSpot and Salesforce, so this feature is easy to enable. ConvertFlow also offers advanced targeting and segmentation options, based on user on-site behaviour, demographics data or known interests.

    Key features :

    • Create and test landing pages, surveys, quizzes, pop-ups, surveys and other lead-gen assets. 
    • All-in-one funnel builder for creating demand-generation campaigns 
    • Campaign personalisation, based on on-site activity 
    • Re-usable dynamic visitor segments for targeting 
    • Multi-step funnel design and customisation 
    • Embedded forms for split testing CTAs on existing pages 

    Pros

    • Allows controlling the traffic split for each variant to get objective results 
    • Pre-made integration with Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager 
    • Conversion and funnel reports, available for each variant 
    • Access to a library with 300+ conversion campaign templates
    • Apply progressive visitor profiling to dynamically adjust user experiences 

    Cons

    • Each plan covers only $10K views. Each extra 10k costs another $20/mo 
    • Only one website allowed per account (except for Teams plan) 
    • Doesn’t support experiments in mobile app 
    • Not all CRO features are available on a Pro plan. 

    Price : Access to CRO features costs from $300/month on a Pro plan. Subscription costs also increase, based on the total number of monthly views. 

    Google Optimize vs CovertFlow : The Verdict 

    ConvertFlow is equally convenient to use in conjunction with Google Analytics as Google Optimize is. But the similarities end up here since ConvertFlow combines funnel design features with CRO tools. 

    With ConvertFlow, you can run more advanced experiments and apply more targeting criteria than with Google Optimize. You can observe user behaviour and conversion rates across multi-step CTA forms and page funnels, plus benefit from first-touch attribution reporting without switching apps. 

    Though CovertFlow has a free plan, it doesn’t include access to CRO features. Meaning it’s not a free alternative to Google Optimize.

    Comparison of the Top 5 Google Optimize Alternatives

    FeatureGoogle OptimizeAdobe TargetMatomo A/B testOptimizely VWOConvertFlow

    Supported channelsWebWeb, mobile, social media, email Web, mobile, email, digital campaignsWebsites & mobile appsWebsites, web and mobile appsWebsites and mobile apps
    A/B testingcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Easy GA integration check mark iconXcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Integrations with other web analytics appsXXcheck mark iconcheck mark iconXcheck mark icon
    Audience segmentationBasicAdvancedAdvancedAdvancedAdvancedAdvanced
    Geo-targetingcheck mark iconcheck mark iconXcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Behavioural targetingBasicAdvancedAdvancedAdvancedAdvancedAdvanced
    HeatmapsXXcheck mark icon

    No extra cost with Matomo Cloud
    〰️

    *via integrations
    〰️

    *requires another subscription
    X
    Session recordingsXXcheck mark icon

    No extra cost with Matomo Cloud
    X〰️

    *requires another subscription
    X
    Multivariate testing (MVT)check mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Dynamic personalisation Xcheck mark iconXcheck mark icon〰️

    *only on higher account tiers
    〰️

    *only on the highest account tiers
    Product recommendationsXcheck mark iconX〰️

    *requires another subscription
    〰️

    *requires another subscription
    check mark icon
    SupportSelf-help desk on a free tierEmail, live-chat, phone supportEmail, self-help guides and user forumKnowledge base, online tickets, user communitySelf-help guides, email, phoneKnowledge base, email, and live chat support
    PriceFreemiumOn-demandFrom €19 for Cloud subscription

    From €199/year as plugin for On-Premise
    On-demandFreemium

    From $365/mo
    From $300/month

    Conclusion 

    Google Optimize has served marketers well for over five years. But as the company decided to move on — so should you. 

    Oher A/B testing tools like Matomo, Optimizely or VWO offer better funnel analytics and split testing capabilities without any usage caps. Also, tools like Adobe Target, Optimizely, and VWO offer advanced content personalisation, based on aggregate analytics. However, they also come with much higher subscription costs.

    Matomo is a robust, compliant and cost-effective alternative to Google Optimize. Our tool allows you to schedule campaigns across all digital mediums (and even desktop apps !) without a

  • Why does Google Chrome not play one of my mp4 files with H.264 codec, while Firefox does ?

    23 mai 2023, par Paul Levy

    I have two mp4, both with H.264 codecs. One plays in Chrome (I didn't create it) and the other downloads and plays in my computer's video player rather than in-browser. Both play completely fine in Firefox. I've searched and cannot understand how to make it work in Chrome (Version 113.0.5672.126 on Mac). I'm writing the videos with ffmpeg version 4.3.6-0.

    


    Here are the selected ffprobe outputs for the two videos (the first doesn't play in Chrome, the second does) :

    


    


    Video : h264 (Main) (avc1 / 0x31637661), yuv420p(progressive), 2880x960, 1684 kb/s, 100 fps, 100 tbr, 12800 tbn (default)

    


    


    


    Video : h264 (Main) (avc1 / 0x31637661), yuv420p(tv, bt709, progressive), 240x426 [SAR 1:1 DAR 40:71], 20 kb/s, 29.97 fps, 29.97 tbr, 30k tbn (default)

    


    


    I'm creating the first video with the following flags (merging the audio has no impact) :

    


    ffmpeg -i VIDEO -i AUDIO -c:v copy -af aresample=async=1:first_pts=0 -loglevel error -vcodec libx264 -profile:v main -preset medium -movflags +faststart -pix_fmt yuv420p -y OUTPUT


    


    where I create VIDEO by merging 3 videos horizontally with :

    


    ffmpeg -i VIDEO_1 -i VIDEO_2 -i VIDEO_3 -filter_complex hstack=inputs=3 -loglevel error -vcodec libx264 -profile:v main -preset medium -movflags +faststart -pix_fmt yuv420p -y VIDEO