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Can Adsense See the Origin of Your Incoming Traffic?

         

bigdealioo

4:52 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



1) In other words, does the Adsense javascript track from what Referrers visitors (and possibly other traffic information) come to your page displaying Adsense ads?

2) Is it against the TOS to make an effort to conceal the origin of the traffic? What I mean is.. putting every in-bound link thru a local referrer switch/re-direct, so the only referrers Google would see - would be something like yoursite.com/trafficmgmt.php?as=348&sdj=uuihA&8 ?

3) Did anyone get in trouble for doing what's described in #2?

P.S. To prevent overzealous replies (like "o but why would u wanna do this to good ol G?"), let me state the following right away:

We know that G is very secretive about many things (when secrecy benefits their business model) - so I believe I have my right to not disclose certain proprietary business information to G either.

MThiessen

5:35 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The more secretive *you* become, the more suspicious of *you* they become.

I would would personally be leery of you, if all your data was concealed. If I were google, I would have to wonder why?

You would put yourself in a small minority, and that would attract attention to yourself.

They may not even be able to figure out *why* you are doing it, and they may take the stance of "Why risk it?" and get rid of you.

Just a thought..

[edited by: MThiessen at 5:36 pm (utc) on April 21, 2007]

Hobbs

6:41 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

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



The ad script is called from your visitor's computer and the information they receive is visitor's IP, your web page URL containing the ad being the referrer along with the visitor's user agent.

MThiessen said all I wanted to say.

jomaxx

8:23 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

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1. Yes, and they have other means of determining where your traffic comes from as well.

2. Yes, although I'm not certain it's spelled out in the TOS.

3. Yes, "sneaky redirects" is one reason they have given for banning a publisher's site. For obvious reasons.

jomaxx

10:37 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



BTW, just noticed my answer contradicted Hobbs'. Those 3 things are all Google would see based on the HTTP request alone, but there's a lot more information about the session status passed by Javascript parameters (the ad size and shape and the publisher ID and channel all need to be passed, for example).

The question of the referrer came up in another thread a while ago, and when you actually mimic Google's code, you can see that the referring page to the current page is visible to Google (or was at the time).

Hobbs

11:24 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)

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You are most probably right jomaxx, after I wrote my reply I was wondering about the rest of the information needed to serve the ad, those must be passed too, there was a virus that forged the pub id on the browser side, that makes more sense.

bobothecat

11:33 pm on Apr 21, 2007 (gmt 0)



so I believe I have my right to not disclose certain proprietary business information to G either.

Unfortunately, it'll be Google that determines that. Just as you can leave them, they can leave you. I'd read the TOS very thoroughly, or just simply find another advertiser. No need for you to game them, or for you to feel gamed.

bigdealioo

7:54 am on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



1) Well the answer to question #1... I was pretty sure that it was a 'yes', just wanted to confirm. That Adsense javascript probably gathers more information about your traffic than G Analytics (or at least as much).

2) So it's not against the TOS but given the power of G ya'll simply afraid to try because G can ban you with no valid reason at all and steal your earnings with no re-course. You're basically afraid the G monster might not "like" it.

3) I'd be interested to hear from/about people who actually tried. I don't think I'm the only LEGITIMATE publisher who doesn't feel like providing G with information they're not entitled to.

Jean

9:05 am on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I don't think I'm the only LEGITIMATE publisher who doesn't feel like providing G with information they're not entitled to.

Bear in mind that Google is not forcing you to put their AdSense code in your pages. The easiest step if you want to keep information to yourself is to avoid the AdSense programme.

Hobbs

10:54 am on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

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ya'll simply afraid to try

People actually took the time to answer your question and in return you you're flaming? It's a consensual business relationship, get it?

DamonHD

11:05 am on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



At least one other regular WW contributor who disguised his referrer information had great trouble with G AS/AW afterwards, I suspect for all the reasons mentioned above, ie his traffic looked very "odd"/suspicious to G and they penalised him accordingly.

G probably doesn't give a s*** about where your customers came from except (a) to help reassure itself that your traffic is legit and (b) *possibly* for general statistical purposes and (c) *possibly* to help in its general crackdown on MFA contentless arbitrage "Web SPAM". I think (a) is the most likely, and doesn't hurt you at all. The rest only hurt you if G cares and if you are hurting the end-user Web experience (in G's opinion, and mine in this case too).

Rgds

Damon

jomaxx

5:05 pm on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



bigdealioo, you're either NOT legitimate or you're trolling. The nonsense about Google stealing publishers' money makes me suspect you've already been banned and this is your way of figuring out why.

Powdork

10:28 pm on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

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It is also possible that G can use the referrer for your benefit. For example they could tell if your visitor came from a click on an adsense block or from advertising in their serps. They could then make sure those ads didn't show again. If they have info about the page your user comes from that could also be used to determine the placement of ads on your pages.
If it doesn't happen now, it could in the future.

jomaxx

10:48 pm on Apr 22, 2007 (gmt 0)

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I forgot about that aspect of it. For visitors direct from a search engine, the referrer also enables Google to target ads to the original search term.

bigdealioo

7:39 am on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, the TOS says "don't alter Adsense code" and I don't. But there's nothing about making it easy for G to micro-analyze my traffic.

Now, if they noticed this and said "we don't like it, so we don't want you as a partner, byebye" - that would be 1 thing and I wouldn't have a problem with it.

Another thing is when they would say "we dont like it so we don't want you as a partner AND we're gonna STEAL all of your un-paid earnings". Now that's something different, and of course I would have a problem with that.

I'm talking about this to respond to people who mentioned the partner-partner thing. You don't wanna be my partner for whatever reason? Fine. But that doesn't give you the right to steal the money I earned WITHOUT VIOLATING YOUR RULES OR ANY LAWS during our partnership.

Now for those who like to jump to conclusion and make assumptions: I've never been banned by Adsense.

But I have heard many stories of G banning people who did NOT violate TOS or any laws AND STEALING THEIR MONEY (yea, chew on this). Are you gonna go as far as to say, there's never been a case of G "withholding" (stealing) Adsense earnings when they had absolutely NO legitimate/legal reason to do so?

Marcia

8:02 am on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

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What if you hide referrers and your traffic is coming from an account using cloaked, redirected pages? Think they'd be stealing if they banned you for that reason?

ronin

9:36 am on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

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But I have heard many stories of G banning people who did NOT violate TOS or any laws AND STEALING THEIR MONEY

Yes, so have I. I've never seen any evidence though. The same story can be retold many times in many different places very loudly. That doesn't make it true.

benevolent001

9:42 am on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The Google knows very well from where you are getting traffic , the issue has been taken up due to excessive use of Adwords Adsense duo use for monetizing websites , Google knows much more then even we can imagine or think

jomaxx

6:31 pm on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Seriously, if I really thought Google was likely to arbitrarily steal my earnings, then I simply wouldn't do business with them.

Lucky for me I don't and I do.

MThiessen

10:21 pm on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Sounds like being a bit too greedy, scared to death the mighty G might get an extra nickel. So scared your willing to risk your account over it...

Sounds like you are just plain in the wrong business.

Marcia

11:01 pm on Apr 23, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



They need to know where traffic comes from (and other information) for very legitimate reasons. For one thing, geo-targeting could be involved.

Then, a big time issue could well be problems with traffic from "auto-surf" programs, so they'd absolutely need to know the source of traffic for that reason alone. I've seen a site that got booted that had been involved with auto-surf programs.

[edited by: Marcia at 11:07 pm (utc) on April 23, 2007]

MikeNoLastName

1:26 am on Apr 24, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"G probably doesn't give a s*** about where your customers came from"

I wouldn't be so sure. Evidence from when we were temporarily missing from the G index, seemed to show pretty clearly that they valued clicks originating from visitors who got to our site from OTHER search engines much more highly than those who found us from G.

bigdealioo

9:33 am on Apr 25, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



No, I don't think G has a "right" to know the origins and other proprietary details of my traffic. If they have a valid reason to believe that my traffic violates TOS, then yes, they could investigate and ask me the origins. But it should not be a "guilty until proven innocent" thing.

Just like G doesn't tell you how much of each click's worth it takes for itself and how much it gives to you. Very neat, basic piece of info... anyone in any normal "partnership" would not mind knowing, eh? But you accept this concealment of crucial business information simply because G says "we're not disclosing it".

So G doesn't disclose whatever they feel like.. and I don't think I have to disclose my traffic origins as long as I'm not breaking TOS. Only seems fair to me.

Anyway, it looks like I'm not gonna get a response from people who actually tried what I've described. Cause this forum is full of people who think G stands for God and who are scared to death to do anything that might potentially displease this "God".

DamonHD

9:43 am on Apr 25, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Personal attacks on people who don't agree with you don't increase your "rightness".

I'll say again as I did above, at least one WW member seems to have done what you are suggesting and come a cropper afterwards (discussed in private email and I'm not going to "out" them) whether by coincidence or not.

Unless your volume is *huge* then it's unlikely to be worth G's effort to treat you differently to all its other partners and take "on trust" what you feel that you need to keep from them. G may simply not find your business worth its risk and time for special-case handling, without any view on the rightness or wrongness of your actions or theirs. AS/AW is a mass-market product.

Rgds

Damon

jatar_k

12:36 pm on Apr 25, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



bigdealioo

If you are using their javascript and putting it on your site, and therevby on your user's machine then they can see whatever they want and you gave them the ok for that.

If you don't want their client side code on your client's browser then don't use adsense.

simple as that

if you want to try and hide that info you are probably going to have to play with the js and that will definitely get you banned if caught

as DamonHD mentioned, yes people have gotten banned for what you are asking

The thing about bouncing the traffic around is that your referers will get harder to track for you, your users may have some issues if you miss something and really

what's the point?

europeforvisitors

1:11 pm on Apr 25, 2007 (gmt 0)



No, I don't think G has a "right" to know the origins and other proprietary details of my traffic. If they have a valid reason to believe that my traffic violates TOS, then yes, they could investigate and ask me the origins. But it should not be a "guilty until proven innocent" thing.

Marcia explained why Google might need to know where your traffic comes from. And how does monitoring to prevent potential fraud equate with as assumption that you're "guilty until proven innocent?" It's just common sense, like having security people in a casino or auditors in a bank. What's more, it's completely voluntary on your part, because you aren't locked into a long-term contract--you can tell Google to get stuffed at any time.

bigdealioo

6:25 pm on Apr 26, 2007 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It seems like some people (cough, jatar, cough) didn't read the thread carefully:

I will not tamper with the Adsense Javascript in any way and will put it on my site in its uber-pristine-virgin site. What I intend to do... is pass all incoming traffic to the page that contains Adsense thru an onsite traffic handling (re-direction) script.

This does not violate Adsense TOS but it does limit the Adsense Javascript's ability to spy on the origins (Referrers) of my traffic (as all referrers will look like mysite.com/traffic.php?param1=2289as&param2=whatever8933

jatar_k

6:29 pm on Apr 26, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



hehe, yes I did

you might run into some issues with this, probably when spiders come to look at specific pages

how are you going to intercept the incoming traffic? I would assume the excample you showed would not be what you see in SEs

jomaxx

6:34 pm on Apr 26, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Dealio, either do it or don't do it. If you think anybody really cares either way, they don't. They're simply giving you the correct answer.

DamonHD

6:37 pm on Apr 26, 2007 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Hi,

And I read what you said too. And as I said, another WW member who similarly 'laundered' traffic seemed to be in significant difficulty (not banned, just rotten ROI etc) with G afterwards, which may or may not be linked.

If G can't vouch for the clicking traffic, G may not pay well (or at all) for it.

Elsewhere it has been suggested that G may pay *more* for traffic from certain sources, eg possibly from its competitors. If so, you'd probably lose out there for a start.

Rgds

Damon

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