Currently running — worth a closer look.
Running across 1 GEO.
Running in a single market (India) — a focused test, not a broad rollout yet.
- 1 GEO
- Redirect chain checked
- LP host: thehindu.com
Reverse-engineered from the live ad — longevity, GEOs, and the affiliate funnel behind it. Verified by following the redirect chain on Jun 15. Free, no login.
Funnel, reverse-engineered
The campaign behind this creative
← the actual path the money takes.
Creative
The Hindu
Landing page
thehindu.com
where it lands
Product / Offer: not detected
Tracker: not detected
Affiliate network: not detected
How we know: the tracker and affiliate network come from the live redirect chain we followed and fingerprinted hop by hop. Greyed nodes weren’t detected.
Active
last seen 1d ago · 1 market
Running with a modest observed footprint so far.
Gravity
—
push pressure now · 30d index
Strength
3/100
overall scale · 30d index
Run
—
last seen 1d ago
Markets
1
countries seen
Landing page
thehindu.com
final host
Screenshot
—
not captured yet
Operator
—
unidentified
Network
Taboola
traffic source
Indians in Silicon Valley: caught between Donald Trump and AI
The Hindu@the
Explore how Indian immigrants in Silicon Valley navigate challenges posed by Trump-era politics and the AI revolution shaping their future.
Days alive is a profitability proxy — advertisers don’t pay to run losers.
Seen in
Geo reach
Single-geo testa single marketPredominantly Tier 2, concentrated in APAC — India.
What the data shows
The Hindu's Taboola creative has been running for 0 days across 1 country and first seen on June 15, 2026. It has been observed in India. The ad lands on thehindu.com. The Hindu is running 8 other creatives we have indexed, linked below for side-by-side comparison.
Creative headline: Indians in Silicon Valley: caught between Donald Trump and AI. Indexed on Taboola by mediabuyer.
Landing-page intelligence
Landing page intelligence
Where this ad lands
The lander is the product — screenshot, redirect chain, offer, tech stack, and on-page text in one place.
Landing page not captured yet
Our crawler renders each advertiser’s funnel on a rolling schedule. Recently observed ads are queued first — check back to see the full-page screenshot.
Host
thehindu.com
Path
/society/indians-in-silicon-valley-politics-donald-trump-jobs-artificial-intelligence/article70473686.ece
Full URL
Redirect chain
Chain not captured yet.
Final host: thehindu.com. Hop-by-hop capture runs as a separate pipeline; ads observed in recent ingests get crawled first.
Tracking parameters
No query string on this URL.
Tracking setup · Taboola
Taboola passes site, site_id, campaign_id, campaign_item_id and click-id by default. Map those to your tracker's source/sub1-4 fields. Use {click_id} as your unique click identifier when posting back conversions.
?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}Default Taboola setup template: ?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}
Tech stack
No third-party monetization stack detected — this appears to be a direct landing page.
Landing page hubs
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-16
▶
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-16
Indians in Silicon Valley: caught between Donald Trump and AI - The Hindu You are logged in Loading... LOGOUT You don’t have any Active Subscription. Subscribe now Subscribed with another email? Logout and Login with that one. Your active subscription(s) Account subscription benefits alongside Premium Stories, Editorials, Opinions and more. Unlock these with Subscription Products you've access to Additional Subscription Benefits eBooks Webinars Newsletters Games Account Settings Go to My Account Bookmarks Manage Subscriptions Need help with your subscription? customersupport@thehindu.co.in 1800 102 1878 June 2, 2026 e-Paper LOGIN Account eBooks Subscribe Search Live Now News SECTION News India World States Cities TOPICS Israel-US strikes on Iran Delimitation Ground Zero Spotlight NEWSLETTER The View From India Looking at World Affairs from the Indian perspective. 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SEE ALL NEWSLETTERS Children Elections SECTION Elections Assam Kerala Puducherry Tamil Nadu West Bengal Food SECTION Food Dining Features Guides Recipes Environment Real Estate Agriculture Brandhub SECTION Brandhub PR Release Connect with us The Hindu Best Places to Work June 2, 2026 e-Paper Search for topics, people, articles... India World Sport Data Health Opinion Science Entertainment Premium Videos Podcast Photos Visual Stories Specials TH Explains eBooks TH Games Newsletter Lit For Life The Huddle Home Society Indians in Silicon Valley: caught between Donald Trump and AI As American politics tightens and AI transforms work, the writer travels through Silicon Valley to examine how Indian immigrants are adapting, recalibrating and surviving Published - January 09, 2026 12:59 pm IST Nitin Chaudhary READ LATER SEE ALL Remove Illustration: Soumyadip Sinha Nishant Agarwal picks me up from my hotel in San Jose on a crisp Tuesday morning. He wants to take me to a new South Indian restaurant called Mylapore that has become the talk of the town. I ask him what makes it so popular, given the number of Indian restaurants already dotting the Valley. Agarwal, a 40-something acquaintance who I’d met through overlapping circles in Silicon Valley, thinks for a moment before answering: “The food is really authentic, so much so that on weekends, there’s a queue outside.” As we drive to Pleasanton where the restaurant is located, Agarwal mentions, almost in passing, that he works at ByteDance, the Chinese company that owns TikTok. “Even in these times,” I exclaim, becoming self-conscious almost instantly. Tariffs, layoffs, politics, trade barriers, bans, EVs — there are heaps of touchy topics in the U.S. these days, and I keep reminding myself to pause, to self-censor, to choose my curiosity carefully. Agarwal senses my discomfort. “At this time, it’s okay,” he says. “Let’s see how it goes with ‘the Trump’.” It has been almost a year since Donald Trump’s return to power as President of the United States, and the aftershocks are no longer abstract. Visa rules are tightening again, H-1B fees have crept up, and renewals are taking longer. Even seasoned engineers speak in lowered voices about travel, paperwork, and whether a job change is worth the risk. Hanging on to the American Dream I have come to Silicon Valley to unfurl, for myself, the chaos born of a cocktail of divisive politics and the unconstrained AI revolution. I have only recently moved to the U.S., crossing not just geographies but professional worlds, leaving behind the predictability of Europe for a country in mid-argument with itself. On one side are tightening borders, and polarising factions; on the other, an AI boom so unconstrained that it seems to race ahead of regulation. I want to see how these forces co-exist in the place where they collide most visibly. That question has brought me to the Valley. Losing entry level jobs to AI I had landed in San Francisco earlier that day and taken the Caltrain down to San Jose to meet Agarwal. The line will eventually be electrified, even reimagined for high-speed travel. For now, it chugs gently, making its way through Palo Alto, Mountain View, and Cupertino — names synonymous with Apple, AMD, Adobe, Intel, Meta, and Stanford University. From the upper deck, I look around. The carriage is filled with people bent over MacBooks. Some are young, campus-bound perhaps. Others have greying hair. What unifies them is a quiet uniform: jeans, sneakers, hoodies, AirPods in, iced lattes within reach. Nishant Agarwal (left) with the writer, Nitin Chaudhary Outside, it is warm and sunny. Not far away, rocky hills seize the horizon, their steely greys contrasting with the light, shiny blue of the Californian sky. It looks idyllic, a place to walk, to think, to wonder, to create. Later, as Agarwal drives me through this landscape, I ask him how serious the tech layoffs are, the ones everyone seems to be worried about. “They’re real,” he tells me. “Every day, hundreds are losing their jobs. Entry-level jobs have completely disappeared. It’s not a good time to come study in the U.S.” “Why so?” I wonder aloud, as we sit at Mylapore, eating ghee podi idlis dipped in spicy sambar. It is too heavy a meal for a light morning, but I am hungry, and the food reminds me of days back in India. So, I keep eating. “Well, that’s not because the companies are suffering,” Agarwal explains patiently, “but because they’re pivoting — for and because of AI. Some companies like Apple have hired AI agents as interns to test the waters. Everyone’s trying to optimise, and at the same time, hoping to land on a business model that pays. Until then, the churn will continue.” What share of jobs where Indians are employed in Silicon Valley will be impacted, I wonder. Done with food, Agarwal brings a paper napkin and takes out a pen. “Roughly 20%-25% of tech workers in Silicon Valley are originally from India,” he starts jotting on the back of the napkin. “Given that Silicon Valley employs roughly 250,000 high-tech workers, we are talking about 50,000 Indians working here. Since we are talking about entry-level jobs getting impacted first, that would be around 30% of the lot. So, all in all, roughly 15,000 Indians in the Valley could be in roles where AI plays a substantial part of their tasks.” Fewer students from India Later that afternoon, Agarwal drops me at the town centre, in Sa…
Text scraped from the landing page for research purposes. © respective owners. This text is sourced from the advertiser's public landing page; for removal, contact dmca@luba.media.
Observed daily (last 30 days)
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Sibling creatives from this campaign
Other creatives in Other on Taboola
The rest of the set they’re running — see what else this angle is paired with.
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KKRTC bus conductor who dropped off elderly midway suspended
Dhurandhar’s humiliation kink
Missile interceptors in U.S.-Iran war
India’s RCEP Strategy: Gains Without the China Risk
Hybrid kitchens: How families are cooking with less LPG
Tested headline variants8
Tested headline variants
The Hindu's own A/B test — which headline they kept
The advertiser’s own A/B result, handed over: ranked by days running, the survivor on top. Variants they stopped running are struck through — they tested and killed those angles.
- #1KKRTC bus conductor who dropped off elderly midway suspendedWinning angle59d9 content tokens
- #2India’s RCEP Strategy: Gains Without the China Risk57d7 content tokens
- #3Assam CM threatens to sue Congress leader for foreign assets ‘exposé’0d9 content tokens
- #4Congress Seeks More Seats; DMK Sticks to 25+1 Formula0d7 content tokens
Winning angle: the headline they kept alive longest — it beat the other variants they tested. Model this one; treat the rest as discarded experiments.
More from The Hindu8
More from The Hindu
KKRTC bus conductor who dropped off elderly couple midway suspended - The Hindu…
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