Forum Moderators: open
Am I missing something or does this seem somewhat unreasonable? What relevant info could there be on our logs that they cannot get from their logs? And what does this say about Yahoo's ability to detect click fraud if they cannot do it without the advertiser's logs?
I think click fraud may be a bit more complex these days, but when I did that it showed that our account was depleted in about 2 hours per day for 2 days, both on a weekend on 2 keywords, instead of 30 days and thousands of keywords.
The worst part of this was that my account was drained, and that the credit went to the following month. So I had about 5 days of use in month one, and then click fraud, then about 3 weeks of zero budget/traffic, then double the budget the next month once the credit was applied.
You raise a very good question, so I'd like to jump in here and provide some clarification. Yahoo! Search Marketing's Click Protection System that was designed to detect a range of invalid clicks so that we can attempt to prevent our advertisers from being charged for these invalid clicks. That said, advertisers often have valuable information on their individual server logs which can assist in the detection of invalid clicks. For example, information about the amount of time a user spends on your site and the number of pages within your site that are navigated is valuable to our click protection efforts. This type of information is proprietary to each advertiser, which is why we encourage our advertisers to share that information with us to help identify invalid clicks.
I hope this addresses your concern. If you have any additional questions specific to your case, please feel free to stickymail me anytime.
- YahooSarah
1) Yahoo reports 500 clicks on a term
2) Your logs show 520 clicks on that term
3) You identify 40 potentially fraudulent clicks
Did they already account for the 40 fraud clicks and only ding your campaign for 480 clicks? Maybe 460 clicks? Daily reporting is not always the same as what is actually billed, in the end.
Did their system already remove the 40 fraudulent clicks from your billing and your log files are reflecting extra page reloads/re-requests?
Without the log files or log file snippets, there's simply no way to reconcile the accounting.
And, werty:
click fraud may be a bit more complex these days
LOL! I believe that's an award-winning understatement. ;)
I've done these a number of times and let's just say it's been worthwhile. You have to be tough with Yahoo and Google.
Where's the harm in that?
Frankly, it would give me a lot more confidence in their ability to detect and account for fraudulent clicks.
why _not_ tell the advertisers which clicks they detected
Or if they feel that is just feeding the fraud operators more info on their systems. Then how about feeding a apache module /script to ban known bad clicks in the "clickstream" from even reaching my servers. If they know for a fact a visitor is attempting to defraud me they should be obligated to inform me that so I can save bandwidth sales team time etc.
As for elaborate fraud schemes, I dont know how many catalogs we have sent out to various countries with 0 sales but its in the thousands. And 90% arrived to our site via ppc... It doesnt take algo to see this relationship.
If Ford can be compelled to inform customers about a safety problem and forced to issue recall notices for products that rarely exceed $30,000 in value, and if California can compel credit bureaus to notify customers when data may have been compromised even if the customer has only a few dollars at risk, then it would seem that legislation is around the corner to compel PPC vendors to disclose the cost of fraudulent clicks to their advertisers who often spend tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars with them each year.
It shouldn't be a 'hidden' cost of doing business with them.
whoever is approving websites at yahoo is obviously completely incompetent.
Or just greedy. Over / Yahoo has been losing prime traffic for a couple of years. They have replaced it with a broad interpretation of your keywords and adding type-in domains with nothing but paid listings into their search network.
It will get worse as they completely lose MSN.