Forum Moderators: martinibuster
One of the items being tracked is the amount earned. At 3:00pm it may be $30 and 30 clicks and at 4:00pm it may be at $25 for 35 clicks.
Does anyone have any idea of what is going?
* These are examples and not real data :)
I'd guess it's some sort of fraud filter that's kicking in.
Based on my experience and other posts on this board, I'm almost certain that the numbers in the online reporting tool are unaudited figures, and that invalid clicks are never deducted from the posted totals (even though they're deducted from the publisher's pay).
I believe the most likely explanation for up-and-down report numbers is a time lag when updated figures are copied across multiple servers. You might hit an updated server one time and a server that's still showing old results the next time you look. (This doesn't happen too often, but it does happen now and then.)
Yes, the fraud filter would make sense. If this is the case, then I now have a way to track the number of fraudulent clicks Google believes occurred on my site. Cross-referencing this with my logs should show me the offenders.
I should also be able to get an idea of what those fraudulent clicks were worth.
I would love to see a filter on their end rather than worry about the dreaded letter that everyone talks about here.
Yes, the fraud filter would make sense. If this is the case, then I now have a way to track the number of fraudulent clicks Google believes occurred on my site. Cross-referencing this with my logs should show me the offenders.I should also be able to get an idea of what those fraudulent clicks were worth.
If this in fact this reporting behavior is an indication of fraud, keep in mind that fraudulent activity may not show up in your logs and even if it does it may be difficult to detect. Fradulent activity which is spread across many IP addresses, which consists of repeated right-clicks from a page on your site or consists of loading an AdSense URL with your AdSense ID from somewhere other than an AdSense ad block on one of your pages will be difficult to impossible to detect.
In reply to europeforvisitors:
In reply to richmondsteve:
I see your point.
Although I could take the times that the fraud filter kicks in and compare them to my website log files. If I see an IP address that has visited during these times over many days, I might get an idea of the person causing this deviation.
I see your point.Although I could take the times that the fraud filter kicks in and compare them to my website log files. If I see an IP address that has visited during these times over many days, I might get an idea of the person causing this deviation.
True - you might. I can't argue with that. I'm just playing devil's advocate though - even if you knew there were fraudulent clicks I think they'll be hard to detect, especially if your site is high-traffic and the fraud isn't blatant - meaning many clicks of your web pages from the same IP over a short period. If I go to your site and right-click an AdSense ad once per minute for an hour you'll only see one page view from my IP in your web server logs. If I do it from a bot on 50 servers and/or computers I've hacked the attack will be spread across 50 different IPs. I'm not trying to tell you not to investigate, but these are things you need to be aware of it you do.
If I do it from a bot on 50 servers and/or computers
I think though, that most users are not as creative as you would be when trying to generate fraudulent clicks. Creating a bot to use multiple servers and executing an ad is not a trivial task.
I understand you’re playing the devil’s advocate, no problem. It is better to try than not try at all. Do nothing and your outcome is guaranteed.
E.g., for example say at noon I have 1000 impressions with 70 clicks, and by midnight I have 10K impressions but only 150 clicks.
Maybe Google just updates clickthroughs faster than they update impressions?