• Stop being a LURKER - join our dealer community and get involved. Sign up and start a conversation.

Well Facebook Is Over. 80% Fake Clicks From Bots For Advertisments.

kcar

Boss
Jun 14, 2011
427
33
First Name
B
Startup Claims 80% Of Its Facebook Ad Clicks Are Coming From Bots | TechCrunch

[h=1]Startup Claims 80% Of Its Facebook Ad Clicks Are Coming From Bots[/h]
“A couple months ago, when we were preparing to launch the new Limited Run, we started to experiment with Facebook ads. Unfortunately, while testing their ad system, we noticed some very strange things. Facebook was charging us for clicks, yet we could only verify about 20% of them actually showing up on our site. At first, we thought it was our analytics service. We tried signing up for a handful of other big name companies, and still, we couldn’t verify more than 15-20% of clicks. So we did what any good developers would do. We built our own analytic software. Here’s what we found: on about 80% of the clicks Facebook was charging us for, JavaScript wasn’t on. And if the person clicking the ad doesn’t have JavaScript, it’s very difficult for an analytics service to verify the click.
What’s important here is that in all of our years of experience, only about 1-2% of people coming to us have JavaScript disabled, not 80% like these clicks coming from Facebook. So we did what any good developers would do. We built a page logger. Any time a page was loaded, we’d keep track of it. You know what we found? The 80% of clicks we were paying for were from bots. That’s correct. Bots were loading pages and driving up our advertising costs.”

 
I read the entire article (clicked through) including the comments. Very interesting, though it seems that many of the major advertisers (that verify their clicks) have not seen this problem. I certainly could not understand Facebook using bots to drive up their revenue, as that would be financial suicide if they were caught. I can understand (and have been a victim of) a competitor using a firm that employs bots to drive up your advertising costs, or to try and drive down SEO ("Google bowling" is one example).