Click Fraud Network

The Click Fraud Network is a community of online advertisers, agencies and search providers working together to discuss ideas, share best practices, and work closely to develop industry standards and solutions to the click fraud problem. Click Fraud Network members receive free basic access to Click Forensics click fraud reporting system which provides campaign reports detailing click fraud threat level by keyword and search provider. Additionally, the Click Fraud Network publishes aggregate data using the Click Fraud Index. This information helps members identify trends and communicate with each other about this growing issue. Join today and help us work together to solve the click fraud problem.
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Click Fraud Network

Under the Iceberg

Over the past two years we have been trying to bring attention to the real danger of click fraud.  It is a real problem that is getting worse not better.  Since we began reporting our Click Fraud Index, the overall rate has climbed over 20%.  This problem has been highlighted in mainstream publications including Business Week, USA Today and the Wall St. Journal.  No one today denies that click fraud is a problem and that it is having a negative effect on the growth of the online industry.

What may be less obvious is that click fraud is only the tip of the iceberg.  The bigger issue for our industry is the overall decline of traffic quality.  Advertisers want to get what they pay for and know that the traffic they buy has value.  Problems including: the growth of botnets, out of country traffic and other low quality traffic sources like made-for-ad sites and parked domains are hurting ROI.  Advertisers know this and have been demanding action from ad providers.  One recent example is the poor quality traffic that comes from social network sites like MySpace.  Google surprised Wall St by missing Q4 earnings due, in part, to their inability to monetize MySapce traffic.  Social network sites are notorious for having very low SiteScore’s.

So what is happening?  Smart ad providers are taking matters into their own hands.  They can’t afford to lose business and they are listening to their customers.  By using real time tools to detect invalid traffic, publishers can block it, redirect it or re-price it.  This is the way the industry is moving and we are working hard to lead the way.  It is encouraging to see ad providers like Yahoo see the dangers ahead and help their clients steer clear.  On the other hand, it is concerning others are on a collision course. 
Published Thursday, April 10, 2008 3:00 PM by Tom Cuthbert

Comments

 

Under the Iceberg | Click Abusers said:

April 11, 2008 4:05 AM
 

BodisMatt said:

When I first was a publisher with click-fraud detection companies such as you guys, I thought the same - that click-fraud is a big problem. And it is! But, not in the same way that everyone thinks. After we developed our own sophisticated click fraud system (and we are a domain parking company - nothing is worser than fraud with domain parking), we realized that this entire industry is not educated on what click fraud REALLY is. And I have to say - I am with Google on how much fraud there actually is actually debited from advertiser accounts, and that number is somewhere around 2%.

Here's the reason: Google and most other major ad networks, have a delay between the time they report you a click and between the time that the click was made. Let's just talk about Google - their time is 15 minutes. They figure that in 15 minutes, they can discard all but 2% of the click fraud within your account, and they can.

Your site can generate 200 clicks. Let's say 100 of those are actually invalid clicks that are being clicked on by scammers. The advertiser is NEVER charged for these clicks, although, each and every one of the clicks are indeed sent to the advertiser site. So even though the advertiser could see bad traffic in their referring log data - it does NOT mean that they are charged for them. Remember that 15 minute delay? Google has it for a reason, so that if the 1st click seems valid, they still have 15 minutes to see if any clicks following that 1st click would raise a flag that those clicks and the 1st click are the same fraud visitors, and would discard them all.

So in reality Google looks at a lot of data. First off, they look at impression data. Most importantly they look at impression data of your account, but they also store 18 months of actual impression data on their entire network. Secondly, they look at your click data.

I am in this industry, and I know that actually coming up with an effective system that would generate fraud effectively is NEARLY impossible. Yes it is possible, but you'd need so many computers, ip addresses, and most importantly inside-knowledge, that you'd have to make a 7 figure investment. And if you have 7-figures, there is just no reason to invest in click fraud, is there?

All these %s that you and every other company is seeing is mainly numbers from invalid bots. It is "invalid clicks", but it is not "fraud clicks".

Hope I helped!

August 15, 2008 12:48 AM
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