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accidental click on own ads

         

miracle

4:32 am on Jul 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I accidentally clicked on one of my ads yesterday and immediately reported to Google. Does anyone know how serious they take these accidental clicks? I don't want to get in trouble.

Web Footed Newbie

9:47 pm on Jul 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I can't believe this topic is still alive, but since it is, here is the close:

Don't worry,
don't fuss,
Accidental clicks are not so much.
If you want to do it again,
You should ban yourself,
you silly holligan!;)
WFN

Sierra_Dad

10:00 pm on Jul 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member




AdsenseAdvisor,
That gives me an idea! Wouldn't it be great if [just like the preview tool plugin] you guys can build a small tool for publishers that can be installed so that ABSOLUTELY NO clicks from THAT particular computer would count. This will help in a lot of ways.

And if I were an anti-Google hacker, I'll hack that tool and spread it through spyware, viruses, worms, etc.

Once the whole internet is infected, free Adwords advertising for everyone!

vabtz

10:47 pm on Jul 15, 2005 (gmt 0)



The worst part was the second time I did it they made me wear a scarlet C for a week. The embarrassment made me more thoughtful.

gregbo

8:14 pm on Jul 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



davthp and fenimor: You are not discriminating between what makes business sense (to you) and what is technically possible. If you want to say "Adding a click here or there if you get a undred clicks a day is irrelevant from a revenue perspective therefor Google doesn't care" ou are entitled to that opinion, and perhaps that is true. However, if you want to say "Google cannot detect one click out of hundreds" you are totally wrong. They have our IP address from you logging into your account. They simply match it with the click, and presto -- you're busted.

What if you log into your account from an IP that's dynamically assigned, or is a publicly used IP (such as one would find in an Internet kiosk or some such)? Things could get out of hand quite quickly from an administrative standpoint if G or any other ad provider had to maintain such lists. (Imagine if there is a problem that causes IPs to remain on the lists when they should have been removed, and the ensuing lost opportunities for revenue.)

gregbo

8:15 pm on Jul 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If that is the case then the system must be hugely open to abuse, surely, by "maliciously" clicking competitor adsense ads?

Am I being dumb about this? :)

CPC is inherently vulnerable to abuse.

Jean

9:21 pm on Jul 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



ASA, as you mentioned the AdSense preview tool, could you maybe tell us why Google has not developed one that works with Firefox and other browsers? I never use IE unless I am testing a page layout and it feels unnatural to dig it out just to preview ads.

incrediBILL

9:47 pm on Jul 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Blocking by IP is only useful if you have a static IP or semi-static IP like you get from most cable modems. Anyone with AOL or any other dial-up or IP pooling service tend to get their IPs switched even DURING A SESSION, on AOL this can happen in as short a time as 15 minutes so blocked by IP is useless for most people.

What would work better would be for Google to set a cookie in your browser that identifies you as an AdSense publisher with YOUR AdSense ID and machine ID. When you click a link if the AdSense ID amd your machine ID in your cookie matches the AdSense ID on the link and stored machine ID for your account, they could simply not count those clicks yet still count clicks when you're not on your web sites.

They could even let you know the links were in "safe mode" where clicks by you wouldn't be counted by checking your cookie before displaying the ads and putting an "*" before or after the links in the ads.

Pretty simple unless you zap your cookies, but then you wouldn't see the "safe mode" indicator.

gregbo

3:59 am on Jul 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



What would work better would be for Google to set a cookie in your browser that identifies you as an AdSense publisher with YOUR AdSense ID and machine ID. When you click a link if the AdSense ID amd your machine ID in your cookie matches the AdSense ID on the link and stored machine ID for your account, they could simply not count those clicks yet still count clicks when you're not on your web sites.

Hmmm ... but you would have to log into your account, or do something in order to ensure that the cookie is set. Perhaps most (honest) people would remember to log in (they'd be reminded by not seeing the safe-mode indicator). Perhaps G could offer some incentive for people to use the service, e.g. a small credit to their accounts.

dt1961

6:05 pm on Jul 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



To JamesR3

Stop being pathetic

This 39 message thread spans 2 pages: 39