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Adsense Canceled

         

jonnyQ

10:04 pm on Dec 16, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, it happened to me. Because Adsnese has been canceled I can discuss it is detailes. As many people received e-mail from google mine has been canceled due to illegal clicks which I have not personally generated nor hired anybody to do this. One day it just happened an I noticed that I was receiving 4,000 click that day. But before anything I usually got 230 clicks per day which resulted in around $250 a day. Now that day I have somehow received 4,000 clicks, but I made only 213 that day. I try to call google, by the way don't even bother becasue they don't have any live support nor they will help you on the phone. The only way is to go to google adsense page and click on support and fill out their request page. Untill they get back to you, well it takes time. They told me that the re-checked my account and confirmed illegal clicks therefore to prtoect their adwords advertisers they just shut it down. So ther is no way of getting your accounts back. So stuff like this happenes, I think when you notice a high increase it is better to contact google right away to let them know, otherwise they just shut you down easily without any questions. I think google needs to step up and create some kinf of protection for innocent adsense publishers. Maybe my competition didn't like me and they strt clicking on my ads or personally I have no idea what happened. I didn't see any increase in my traffic, but somehow clicks came from who knows where. The only thing is that I made $213 the day I got those 4,000 clicks. My site was real estate relared and I know that people pay big buck for adwords in real estate field. So if I got those 4,000 clicks..I should be getting more..right?..Well I only got $213, so maybe google screw up..just like to blame innicent adsense advertisers. Your thoughts?

gustavoa

9:13 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think adsense just needs competition, more than ever.

Gustavo

[edited by: Jenstar at 3:57 pm (utc) on Dec. 23, 2004]

cagey1

9:53 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes, that would tend to dillute the fraudulent clicks by spreading them around.

But then we will be faced with the inevitable "Adsense kicked me out but I'm still in MSN" threads.

walrus

9:57 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



<The difference in the cheque numbers from month to month has been about 20,000 (as discussed here in the past.>
Thanks Macro, i forgot, i have read that here.
What about the ones that dont make 100 minimum? Dosent that make it hard to speculate with any accuracy
as its going to be a variable that no one but Adsnse knows?

HughMungus

10:01 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



simple the site breaks the TOS in some way

Or one website matters so little and trying to work out potential problems with each site that might have invalid clicks is so much work that it's easiest and most profitable to just nix the account. That's probably what I'd do if I were Google, too.

HughMungus

10:05 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The other issue with "just invalidating clicks" is that then it becomes a new game where click fraudsters click, check to see if the click was counted, and if not, click using that method again. As it is now, no one knows for sure what triggers an account cancellation (just as no one can be absolutely sure why their site ranks where it does).

HughMungus

10:09 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Good point TN. It could be that the fraudulent clicks are not the issue but rather that some fraudulent clicks cause them to go look at the site in question and cancel the account because of the type of site (made for adsense, etc.).

gustavoa

10:30 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



<Yes, that would tend to dillute the fraudulent clicks by spreading them around.>

Competition would let google revise their terms and responsiveness to publishers, as there is no sense for adsense without publishers.

I don't complain about google's policies or way of doing business. But transparency and better attitude may be good outcomes from a more than welcome competition.

Gustavo

HellaCooL

11:34 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



OK, I don’t understand this.
If he had 4000 clicks and made less then when he had 230 clicks, apparently there was no harm done. Google already has a system that will not charge if the same person clicks on Adsense more than a few times in a certain amount of time.
Nobody lost money, nobody was damaged, but yet they had to close his account to protect publishers!?
By looking at his numbers, aren’t the publishers already protected?

gustavoa

11:56 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think it depends on what do you consider publisher.
I was assuming that publisher, in the "content adsense" context, was the person or group who publishes the content, hence the owner of the site who is partnering with google to make money from advertisements.

It seems that you don't share this definition... So, when you read "publishers" in my last post, read "who publishes content, and put the google adsense ads in their website".

Regards, Gustavo

TNJed

12:19 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>>"OK, I don’t understand this.
If he had 4000 clicks and made less then when he had 230 clicks, apparently there was no harm done. Google already has a system that will not charge if the same person clicks on Adsense more than a few times in a certain amount of time.
Nobody lost money, nobody was damaged, but yet they had to close his account to protect publishers!?
By looking at his numbers, aren’t the publishers already protected?"

This is exactly why I said what I did earlier. The fraudulent clicks are EASILY tracked AND stopped. However, that's not the issue.

The issue is the publisher's site. Once Google starts snooping around your account due to stopped clicks or whatever, if they don't like what they see (namely sites built strictly for AS) then you are booted under "fraudulent clicks." Almost every reason to get booted would probably fall under fraudulent clicks regardless if clicks were the main reason or not.

Their job is not to protect your account from false clicks even though they can and do. Their job is to protect their advertisers and give them a good ROI.

jonnyQ

1:08 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks evrybody for your input. Apparently google protects only one side, that is their advertisers. But imagine this, you wake up one morning and find out that your adsense has been canceled. Immidiately you try to find out what happened, did somebody made any illegal clicks or did you accidentely click on some ads. Well no matter what answer might be, your account is still canceled and there is no way of getting it back. I was reading another posts here and there was exactly same sitation as mine, but this guy was smart and took out all the ads and reported it to google. For this effort google told him that they will monitor this situation, but his account stayed open. Maybe I should have done the same thing. But on the other hand, how am I supposed to know that?. There is no list of what to do, there is no information about these issues at all. I didn't check adsense account every day to see if there is anything weird going on. But I did saw the 4,000 clicks but did nothing..because I didn't know what to do. The only way to find out about this is to read posts like these ones and learn from others. I have a friend who has adsense and he will make 6 figures this year from them. When I told him about it he immdiately removed all his ads from html pages and ceated a script for a quick removal. But google should be the one who gives answer to this problem. From my side, it does suck that they just cancel my account. And maybe one day someone will get really pissed at them and purse this in a court, explaining that there was no way of knowing what to do. So I would suggest to everybody create a quick removal tool and report any weird activity to google. It almost sounds like a full time job.

walkman

1:52 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)



"purse this in a court, explaining that there was no way of knowing what to do"

finally a brilliant idea. Sue them for not wanting to do business with you. Teach them a lesson.

;)

europeforvisitors

3:10 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)



If a site is deemed "built for Adsense" then ALL clicks, regardless of their ligitimacy, are technically fraudulent.

Great point. Also, Google often uses the term "invalid clicks" rather than "fraudulent clicks"--and a click doesn't have to be fraudulent to be invalid.

RonNa

3:49 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The arguments are here over and over the same.

The points of questions are:
1. for what ever the reason, you can be kicked out
2. you do not get any explanation for it
3. everybody to whom that happened is surprised (at least)
4. why Google kick people out instead of solving a problem

Don't tell me, by explaining their findings they would give the hints how to cheat next time better. That is the least acceptable reason!

As a normal business man you would try to keep your customers, even he is an idiot! Simple because you make money with him. So why Google does not follow such simple business rule?

Why these threads of Adsense are getting now more and more emotional?
Because people try to earn money with it. They contribute their space to Google and that is taken away.

I agree, that if somebody goes to court, I am quite sure he will get paid to the last minute he offered the space to Google - Regardless what their TOS says, since he did offer the space, which has a price!

There is no difference with any employee. If you fire him, you have to pay till the last minute he was there. You cannot hold back anything.

gomer

6:38 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



jonnyQ and I have been through something very similar but had different outcomes and I want to share it with you.

One day this week, my account received a CTR of 5x higher than my avergage CTR. There was no increase in page impressions and my CPM for the day was down by 2/3. I run adsense on few sites and I am not talking about a handful of clicks or impressions.

I reported this to Google explaining to them my concern for the high CTR and asked if there was a reporting error. Of course, I was hoping it was not some sort of invalid clicks. In my email to Google, I also assured them that I had never clicked on any ads, never asked anyone to do so nor had I used any automated systems to do so.

Google's response can be noted as follows:
1) They thanked me for letting them know
2) They can't discuss proprietary technology
3) Google will continue to monitor the situation

More importantly, I was allowed to stay in the AdSense program.

As I said, I run AdSense on a few different sites and use Channels for monitoring. I did my own investigation when the Channel data for that day became available. The investigation was quick and the result was clear: one of my sites had an astronomically high CTR and the clicks were obviously invalid.

I immediately removed AdSense from the site. I also wrote Google back letting them know that while they are not saying anything about invalid clicks, I did my own investigation, and the clicks were invalid for sure. I will be analyzing my logs to see if I can determine what exactly caused the invalid clicks.

By the way, Google's process was also aware of the invalid clicks. While the CTR for these Channels was very high, Google's system was smart enough to make these earnings virtually zero and I am thankful for that. Advertisers should take comfort in knowing that as well.

So why did jonnyQ get booted and why was I allowed to stay in?

I don't know jonnyQ but I suspect he is just as honest as I am and he has never clicked on an ad. So why did I get a pass and why did he get booted?

I think that contacting Google right away really helped. I know jonnyQ that you now wish you had - I too wish you could take that back.

But I don't think that is the whole picutre.

Some may say I run cleaner sites, have a longer history or am generally a more valuable publisher. I don't think it is any of these. Ultimately, I think there is a certain degree of luck involved.

I feel very lucky and grateful that Google believed the true story I was telling them. Or perhaps it was not even that and I just happened to score a little better on their automated fraud detection system.

There are some posters here that think if you never click on your ads and run good clean sites, you can't get booted from Adsense. I really wish I could believe that.

There are many automated processes out there that can wreak havoc on a site. We are all small when compared to Google and they won't shed any tears in cutting us loose.

Once again, I am grateful that it turned out for me and realize I just might have easily been booted out like jonnyQ. One thing I am convinced of: if you suspect suspicious activity in your account, report it right away. In my opinion, it can't hurt if you are truly honest. Oh yeah, and keep an eye on your stats.

By the way, when this happened to me this week, I posted here at WW:

[webmasterworld.com...]

(When I first reported this to Google, my CTR was 7x normal, later in the day, it came down to about 5x.)

david_uk

7:41 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



We know that some people get booted and protest their innocence. Jenstar etc. have then gone on to prove some fraud.

I think it's also clear that some people get booted innocently. Although the senior people here assure us that it can't happen, in some cases you get the feeling that innocent publishers get booted without human intervention by some bot at googleplex.

I have emailed AS with queries a couple of times, and always get a canned response that often has little to do with the question asked. Strikes me anyone trying to report a problem would meet with the same canned responses, and no human intervention.

Clearly the bot's they use do the job intended in protecting the advertisers, but it's also clear that there are sufficient innocent publishers being caught out for them to review how they deal with the issue. Obviously Google need to protect advertisers, and it's equally obvious that Google need to protect publishers, and many of us here feel they don't. Hence the paranoia about being booted.

As far as I can see, my site would easily pass the "Sniff test", but if some problem occured I get the feeling that trying to get somebody at G to discuss the problem with me just wouldn't happen.

I know that G don't want to discuss policies, or proprietary technology etc. But there is a solution that would stop all of us being so paranoid and would protect advertisers without having to do any of that.

Namely have a stated policy whereby if they detect a possible fraud, they stop serving ads immediately, suspend the account and allow an appeal before booting people. We'd all feel better if we felt there was at least the chance to appeal formally before being booted, rather than depend on luck as to if a publisher stays or goes as currently seems the case. Not all of us check our logs or stats all the time. Some of us look at these once a week. It could be possible that an account has been closed nearly a week before the publisher was even aware there was a problem!

Having a formal appeal policy would not damage relations between G and advertisers. In fact, having a clear policy would both assure advertisers that their investment is being protected against fraud, and publishers that they matter too. It would not mean G had to disclose anything G didn't want to. It would still enable G to boot people off for fraud. I think many of us feel that although G need quality publishers, G 's attitude to us sometimes makes us feel like scum.

[edited by: david_uk at 7:53 am (utc) on Dec. 18, 2004]

europeforvisitors

7:51 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)



There are some posters here that think if you never click on your ads and run good clean sites, you can't get booted from Adsense. I really wish I could believe that.

I don't think anyone has suggested that. But if you never click on your ads and run good clean sites, it's less likely that you'll be booted by AdSense. Of course, other factors could come into play, too, such as your account history, how much revenue you're earning for AdSense, and whether your category or type of content has a greater statistical likelihood of generating invalid--and not necessarily fraudulent--clicks. (Note that I said "could": we don't know for sure, because Google isn't telling.)

Also, as I believe Macro pointed out, Google has the right to terminate the agreement at any time, for any reason--just as the publisher does. That's something publishers should keep in mind when relying on AdSense for their monthly income or even their pocket money.

RonNa

7:57 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



For me it seemed a little bit different. I started with Adsense a month ago and had of course no experience how it works. I was wondering that the earnings are more or less like a lucky draw: one day 100 impressions, 20 click through and zero income, the next day 6 impressions 1 click through and 10 US$ income!

I asked Google about that and got the answer, you are kicked out!

So, what can I think about Google now?

Asking why I am kicked out, ... no useful answer.

I am looking for an alternative ads for my sites. However, ALL links from this site to such questions are "not found" pages. I wonder if I am on a Google home page, than I would understand many of the answers I found here. At least a whois gave me that impression too.

david_uk

8:11 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Of course, other factors could come into play, too, such as your account history, how much revenue you're earning for AdSense, and whether your category or type of content has a greater statistical likelihood of generating invalid--and not necessarily fraudulent--clicks. (Note that I said "could": we don't know for sure, because Google isn't telling.)

And people wonder why there is paranoia here! I think the root of the problem is that people feel they can be booted by a bot with no appeal. If it's true or not nobody knows. Nobody is asking for G to come up with information - just have a clear policy that allowed publishers an appeal against a decision that may have been taken by a bot between the account being suspended and terminated.

Also, as I believe Macro pointed out, Google has the right to terminate the agreement at any time, for any reason--just as the publisher does. That's something publishers should keep in mind when relying on AdSense for their monthly income or even their pocket money.

That's a fair enough point. But I don't think it does Adsense any favours to have jittery, paranoid publishers. We simply need to know that if we are the innocent victim of some fraud, they would allow us the chance to appeal. If G made this clear, then all these threads would dissapear.

eddy22

8:15 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Adsense is a wonderful gift to us.
But we are also in contant fear.

Not only are we afraid of invalid clicks happening, we also fear clicking on our own sites by mistake.

I have stopped my family members from using the PC :(

I am hopeful and sure adsense will soon find a way to help protect innocent & small publishers from invalid clicks. I request someone from adsense to heed our requests & post through these forums.

thnks,
eddy

europeforvisitors

8:34 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)



We simply need to know that if we are the innocent victim of some fraud, they would allow us the chance to appeal. If G made this clear, then all these threads would dissapear.

Google isn't a court of law, and guilt or innocence may not matter if there are good business reasons for ending the relationship with a publisher. For example, in some cases a publisher may not be generating enough revenue to justify Google's expense in investigating questionable clicks or monitoring a site that has violated the TOS in some other way. As for appealing Google's decision to disable an account, that's easy enough: just e-mail AdSense Support. We've seen several reports here of publishers being reinstated after convincing the AdSense team that they and their sites were legit.

eddy22

9:03 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



True.

But jealous maniacs who click on adsense to boot out sites are not just attacking the publisher. They are attacking the advts by google. They are trying to spoil the wonderul adsense program and this should be google's concern.

Once there is a policy of nullyfying such clicks, and letting honest publishers continue, such attacks would stop. Such a 'defence' would be welcome.
We hope it comes soon.

thank u,
eddy

jonnyQ

9:29 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks evrybody for bringing up an ideas how to properly resolve solutions with google. I tried to appeal this "problem" with google, I sent a generic e-mail and they replied thgat they reviewd my account and found some illegal clicks. Than I sent another e-mail describing in detail that I have not seen any increase in traffic, not CTR or impressions were high. So far no e-mail back.

I did run a legitimate business with google. Never clicked on any ads nor told my co-workers, friends about my site just to protect not only myself but also publishers. As one of users here gomer did contact google about a similar problem and google actually thanked him.

Well, I didn't contact google, I just assumed it was a fault on their side, but apprently if I had contacted them I would be ok.

I had google adsense for almost a year and I did comply with evry rule they have. Except there was not a word about how to proceed in a situation of high clicks. Or if you find a suspicious activity in your account, now what. I mean there are people who do not read forums such as these ones here, they just try to do a ligitimate business with google and they might get removed because of a high clicks or something else in their account. I think there should be a detailed disclusure of liabilities which may occur if you use their adsense. There should be a rule which states, you should report any suspicious activity to google at any time. Or othervide your account will be removed. If that existed, no doubt I am sending tons of messages to google about this, not only protecting myself but as well advertisers. But such rule does not exist, and if you are new publisher and have no idea what to do, well I guess you may end up in my place.

As well to RonNa, I think I know a alternative way for you. I contacted this company, but so far no e-mail reposnse, but hopefully I will talk to them soon. Their system runs little bit differently but it is same PPC publisher. I ma not sure if I can post here a url for this, but if I can please let me know and I will do so.

flyerguy

12:23 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



This is a seemingly endless topic which hasn't really contributed to any positive development of my knowledge on Adsense.

Look at like this: What is business's number one source of loss? Employee theft. Untold bucks are spent on internal security for corporations, protecting the profits from their own people.

It shouldn't be shocking that a corporation with as much money as Google should have an extremely elaborate internal security methodology, to protect their profits from naughty Adsense webmasters who are technically-minded and know a lot of dirty tricks.

I wake up each morning with no doubt in my mind that my Adsense stats will continue on their amazing upwards flow. I am confident of this because I run a clean site, know my ABCs, and pay attention to constructive threads on message boards like these. What is the point of trying to game a system that runs so great?

The answer is: spammers who are not intelligent enough to actually legitimately employ Adsense to their benefit, but come up with ideas like 'hey, maybe I can go to every internet cafe in my city and click my ads', and then come to forums like these to post messages and fish for ideas on the next dumb idea.

If you have been kicked it's because, guess what, it's about 99.5% likely your tricks to fool a mega dollar company have failed.

For the other .5%, I have yet to hear any evidence backing up the claims that it 'wasn't you'.

dt1961

12:39 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Spot on flyerguy

gustavoa

1:24 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, I've been reading some really emotional posts that don't necessarily bring real value to the discussion.

After so many reading about this subject, my current thoughts are simple and clear:
1. As google, I am trying to run a business;
2. As a business, I need to have clear view of the contracts involved in order to have the most accurate business plan possible;
3. Google doesn't have a clear contract as it neither provide clear definitions of what is considered abusive nor gives you the right to appeal based on evidences;
4. For me, and for now, I am not including adsense in any business plan. I suggest you do the same, look for an alternative.

Regards, Gustavo

larryhatch

1:41 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



" For example, in some cases a publisher may not be generating enough revenue .."

THAT is what concerns me. I have never monetised my site.

Suppose I do, and only earn 75 cents a day? Will I be booted out for that?
If so, will it happen sooner rather than later? - Larry

JuniorOptimizer

1:46 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



You just learned your website has at least $6,000 per month of earning potential. You don't need Google to exploit it.

The relationship with Google is one of the most high-handed in the history of business. You get no warning, no explanation, and no final payment regardless of the reason you were booted. Thanks, buddy.

There's no doubt competition would do wonders for this situation.

RonNa

2:52 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I second that!

Lets try something others than Adsense.
All the discussion showed only that Adsense isn't the yellow of the egg.

I try to find something similar, but haven't found it.

If somebody know something, I love to replace it.

Please send me off the board a message about a replacement. Any links here will be destroyed by the moderator, ...

How to find me? Try Google my name: "Ronald Wiplinger"!
(As search engine they are still good, ............ )

europeforvisitors

4:46 pm on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)



2. As a business, I need to have clear view of the contracts involved in order to have the most accurate business plan possible

The contract is pretty clear, IMHO: You can quit at any time for any reason, and so can they.

Some of us like the fact that Google doesn't lock us in a long-term or, worse yet, a long-term exclusive contract. Others prefer long-term commitments. To each his own.

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