Forum Moderators: DixonJones
http*//www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/0789484250/edgate-20
But I am not on this page. I don't sell any products, and am not sure how Amazon could be sending anything to me. The only thing I can think of is some sort of user recommendation linking to me, but the product it pulls up has nothing to do with me.
I went through the last 5 days of raw logs and did not see any traffic from Amazon and am not sure why I missed this on the old analog referrer report until tonight.
Has anyone come across this before?
[edited by: engine at 4:09 pm (utc) on Mar. 20, 2003]
[edit reason] de-linked [/edit]
1) Browser gets confused and passes a referrer when it shouldn't
2) Someone wants to spam their affliate link around to make it rank better
On the off-chance it's #2 then you might want to edit your post in order to stop the link being click-able (normally remove the http:// prefix).
- Tony
I would sure hate to see referring url spam take on the volume it does with email. Luckily the number of log readers is a lot smaller than the number of people with email.
I'm playing with a little log analysis code at the moment and you can spot these fake referrers a mile off - they are either really low numbers or really high...
- Tony
This is showing in your logs because its spam, like the sites that spam you with porn crap in hopes you click on it. They are sending falsified requests while spidering the internet sending the URL to webmasters logs worldwide.
One way or the other it was spam and I am going to complain to Amazon about it.
The unfortunate thing is that most webmasters are very traffic greedy and image conscious. The combination of these two mean we will follow new/weird referrers back to the source to see how we are being presented on that site. This means that our "click through" rate might encourage the practice, however I hope that no one will ever buy anything from something like this so it does not become another mainstream tool in the spam arsenal.