A technique for implementing in a networked client-server environment,
e.g., the Internet, network-distributed advertising in which
advertisements are downloaded, from an advertising server to a browser
executing at a client computer, in a manner transparent to a user
situated at the browser, and subsequently displayed, by that browser on
an interstitial basis, in response to a click-stream generated by the
user to move from one web page to the next. Specifically, an HTML
advertising tag is embedded into a referring web page. This tag contains
two components. One component effectively downloads, from an distribution
web server and to an extent necessary, and then persistently instantiates
an agent at the client browser. This agent "politely" and transparently
downloads advertising files (media and where necessary player files),
originating from an ad management system residing on a third-party
advertising web server, for a given advertisement into browser cache and
subsequently plays those media files through the browser on an
interstitial basis and in response to a user click-stream. The other
component is a reference, in terms of a web address, of the advertising
management system. This latter reference totally "decouples" advertising
content from a web page such that a web page, rather than embedding
actual advertising content within the page itself, merely includes an
advertising tag that refers, via a URL, to a specific ad management
system rather than to a particular advertisement or its content. The ad
management system selects the given advertisement that is to be
downloaded, rather than having that selection or its content being
embedded in the web content page.