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GOTO.COM Tracking URLs

Protecting You From Inappropriate Clicks

         

Mike_Mackin

2:26 am on Nov 29, 2000 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



[goto.com...]

Protecting You From Inappropriate Clicks .............

Time will tell.

bill

2:51 am on Nov 29, 2000 (gmt 0)

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



So what they are suggesting here is that you add
?source=goto
to the end of your listings so that you can tell the click came from a GoTo link. However, at the bottom of the page they are saying that this method won't work with the Click-Tracking Software and Services? Did I understand that correctly?

chiyo

6:53 am on Nov 29, 2000 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Bill,

I'm pretty sure that the two statements were independent. That they were saying if you are just looking at referrals, then clicks due to the GoTo database will appear as clicks from the partner (eg AV) in your raw access logs instead of GoTo.

It all depends on what URL the partners uses. I guess if the extension after the ? is used in their partners display, then you cna count every apperance of the go to extra string as a GoTo database click?

Bit technological for me, but i guess uts how their partners parse the GoTo URL's.

bill

2:00 am on Nov 30, 2000 (gmt 0)

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



Thanks Chiyo. It sounds logical enough, just add ?source=goto to your links in your GoTo account, and then you can easily track all your GoTo hits. However, I'm kind of wary about doing this if it will mess up links from affiliate sites. Has anyone tried this?

tedster

4:09 am on Nov 30, 2000 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I may test it -- it does sound like a good idea.

However (there's always a however, right) I've seen evidence as recently as last spring that other SEs spider GoTo and use those results. If that still happens, the modified URL could spread around like a virus!

It's good to see the security conscious statement. I emailed GoTo last week to ask about IP spoofing and competitive clicking, the issue raise on another thread [webmasterworld.com]. Didn't get an answer (didn't expect one, actually, just wanted to raise the issue) but this is as timely as if I did get a response.

tedster

8:36 pm on Dec 10, 2000 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have had some good e-mail exchanges with several people at GoTo on the IP spoofing issue, as well as other types of spurious clicks. Here's a section from one of the emails which they gave me permission to share here.

Goto has mechanisms in place to prevent advertisers from being [wrongly] charged. The mechanisms are proprietary and patent pending. We do not say much about them because we feel providing this information would give would be abusers an unnecessary leg up.

What I will say is that the methods border on artificial intelligence. They are as savvy about query density, IP density, URL density, advertiser density as any human being observing the click stream. So, too many clicks along the above listed dimensions (and other dimensions that we won't disclose) serve as trigger points to monitoring software which then prevents abusive clicks from being billed.

In summary, we put a lot of time, thought and effort into advertiser security. The security comes in layers, from the outside (routers) to the inside (observing click stream behavior patterns). We have checkpoints all along the way.

Nick Dalton
GoTo.com
clientservices

bill

1:11 am on Jan 29, 2001 (gmt 0)

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



Just to follow up...how did your tests using ?source=goto at the end of your links go? GoTo mentioned this tracking method again in a recent newsletter.

tedster

5:10 am on Jan 29, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



We haven't tried it yet.

I still like the idea, but it just hasn't been a high enough priority -- current clients feel comfortable with their investment in GoTo and have no suspicions about any funky clicks.

I will be setting up GoTo campaign for a new client in three or four weeks, and probably will try it then.

Brett_Tabke

11:49 am on Feb 28, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I would love to read the internals some time on Goto's click protection system. I can see preventing mass click action, but it seems like there will always be a few that get through.

Has anyone been trying the ?goto trick?

Billythekid

6:54 am on Mar 18, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've had it on one page and it does work. I get goto with msn, altavista. But strangly, my general traffic went to about ten hits a day from several hundred two days after I restarted my inactive GOTO account. (I gave them money and added some new listings, it had dwindled to $.01 and I had the email warning for about a week.) I tried the url trick the same day I reactivated. I had good position on Altavista which was the biggest source of traffic for me but no longer. It is probably coincidence but I am seriously spooked.

Billythekid

4:49 am on Apr 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, traffic is back and great. I have been putting the tracking code on all of my urls and it works. Most importantly though I can still see ip's of the people clicking and with the goto source at the end of the url I can send it to Goto as proof that someone is clicking to abuse. Havn't had the need yet but will if it comes up.

tedster

5:53 pm on Apr 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Thanks for your update Billy. I just set up a new client with GoTo and we're using the click tracking url for all their search terms. So far so good, but it's only a few days.

I can already see that some of these terms are very competitive in bidding, so we do have some concern about competitive clicks and will be watching the account closely. I appreciate GoTo's help on this tracking idea.

Brett_Tabke

8:10 am on Apr 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



That was my question too Tedster. Had a client two months ago that was paying above $1 for some clicks (against my recommendations of course), and I know he spent alot on bogus clicks from competitors. Those higher end keywords in the $1-$6 range really attract the competition clickers.

tedster

8:25 am on Apr 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I'll let you know what I discover.

These terms are in the 50 cent area, not the buck or more stratosphere. But they're going up really fast, and it's hard to maintain a top three right now. I'm going to watch it like a hawk, especially in the beginning.

2_much

11:58 pm on Apr 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Everytime we've tried bidding for any keyword that's over $1 we get attacked, sooo many bogus clicks. GoTo claims to be implementing measures against this, but somehow it doesn't seem to add up for us.
I want to try using GoTo again, but want to be sure it's not going to be a waste.
I'd appreciate it if you kept us updated Billy & Tedster.
Thanks!

skipper

5:17 am on Apr 17, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Every time I bid for a good position on Goto I get traffic, but not the sales I would expect from that traffic. Something is wrong there.

I had a ratio of clicks to sales pretty well figured out (based on 6 months of data) before I bought into Goto and the other pay for clicks SEs. Now that ratio is way off. The increased traffic does not bring the sales that I would have expected if I had the same amount of traffic without the PPCs.

Bogus clicks on these pay for clicks engines -- I think -- is a problem that has not been fully explored or talked about among us.

There are all sorts of ways bogus clickers hired by or employed by competitors can run up clicks on your bidded listing. Even a one-person operation can do that with little trouble or effort.

I know Goto is concerned about this, as are all the other PPCs, but I don't have much confidence they can really protect against it, regardless of what they say.

Bottom line -- test it out I guess: Each website is different in what each expects from the traffic they get re ratio of traffic to sales, but for me, this did not pay when I went to high positions.

In bidding high: I got traffic, did not get sales in proportion to that increased traffic.

Not worth the cost.

2_much

6:50 am on Apr 17, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Skipper I had the exact same issues and concerns. Our experiences mirror each other considerably.

However, I've come to accept that GoTo is here to stay and what I am trying to focus on is how to benefit from their system.

Ways that I am planning on capitalizing from them is by bidding or less popular KW phrases, using them to gauge the effectiveness of headlines, titles and descriptions, etc. GoTo can be a very effective source of user data.

skipper

5:58 pm on Apr 17, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree 2_much. That's what I have decided to do. I will say Goto has the most complete, easy-to-use system of any SE I have ever used. And its bid tool and KW tool, and the way they are integrated into the bid system, is a dream.

And you are right, they are here to stay. If it were not for the potential for bogus clicks, they are ideal in many ways, because you can get KWs from them that you can't get at the majors whose robots and human editors are often downright flaky in what is chosen to display for certain KWs, and what will not be displayed.

But there is something still not right about the proportion of sales to clicks.

2_much

6:31 pm on Apr 17, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



One thing that I will be utilizing GoTo for is to test the usability of my site by tweaking considerably.
You're right, GoTo is ideal in many ways, it's guaranteed traffic, when you choose to have it, so you can try something, bid at the top, gauge results, tweak, and repeat the process.
This should also help to learn more about user behavior and demographics, ie. to understand my visitors better.
If, once I tweak enough, I'm still having problems, then the only answer would be "bogus clicks".
GoTo is great about working with their advertisers. Their entire systems works by keeping their advertisers happy, so I imagine something can be worked out with them to correct the problem of bogus clicks on an individual, case by case basis. I do know they're allocating significant resources to enhancing their fraud protection technology, so I'm guessing we'll see improvements in the future.