Google dismisses click fraud report

By Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service |  Internet, advertising, click fraud 2 comments

Google is taking issue with a report that says click fraud hit a record high in the fourth quarter.

On Wednesday, Click Forensics said the incidence of click fraud rose to 17.1 percent in the fourth quarter, the highest rate since the company began tracking this problem in April 2006. Click Forensics provides services to monitor ad campaigns for click fraud.

Google questions the report's validity. "These estimates continue to count clicks Google does not charge to advertisers as fraudulent, so they are not actually click fraud estimates," a Google spokeswoman said via e-mail when asked for comment about the report.

"Furthermore, their estimates have never reflected the invalid click rates we see at Google, which we have previously stated have remained in the range of less than 10 percent of all clicks every quarter since we launched AdWords in 2002," she said.

Click fraud is a highly sensitive issue for Google, which generates most of its revenue from the type of online advertising affected by this problem. Click fraud happens when someone clicks on a pay-per-click (PPC) ad with malicious intent or by mistake.

For example, a competitor may click on a rival's PPC ads in order to drive up their ad spending. Also, a publisher may click on PPC ads on its site to trigger more commissions. Click fraud also includes nonmalicious activity that nonetheless yields a click of little or no value to the advertiser, such as when someone clicks on an ad by mistake or two consecutive times.

Google and Click Forensics have often locked horns in the past over the rate of click fraud. Google has accused Click Forensics of being inept in its methodology and misleading in its results in order to make the problem seem bigger than it is. Meanwhile, Click Forensics has charged that Google has purposefully trivialized click fraud and mischaracterized it as a minor problem.

In October, in a case of strange bedfellows, Google began publicly cooperating with Click Forensics by agreeing to accept the electronically generated click-quality reports generated by the Click Forensics FACTr service. However, it's evident the companies still have significant disagreements regarding the issue of click fraud incidence.

Search advertising is the largest online ad format, generating about 40 percent of all online ad spending, and Google is by far the largest provider of this type of ad, with industry estimates that it nabs more than 70 percent of search ad spending.

Click Forensics generates its quarterly click-fraud incidence report using its Click Fraud Index, which gathers data from more than 4,500 online advertisers and agencies that use ad services from all major search engines.

2 comments

    Anonymous 1 year ago
    I don't know whether this click fraud has affected others or not but in my opinion Google takes strong action of fraud clicks with both of their services Adsense and PPC campaign. If someone on Adsense has done fraud-clicks, their AdSense a/c is blocked forever and with PPC campaign as well there can be huge number of fraud clicks but Google tackles them nicely and if you feel that Google has charged you for some clicks which were fraud, you can file a complaint to Google. Their campaign does work well for advertisers that's why they're holding up 70% of the market.Las Vegas real estate
    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Please shot down the site "http://www.joshmadecash.com/?s=VC_Pop14" and other similar ones advertising for the above Subject wording! They only take innocent people's money without even saying THANKS. It is hard to believe that GOOGLE is mixed up in these...??The fee is only $2USD to join but multiplying this with 100K people trying NOW, IN THE RECESSION their LAST CHANCE to survival, it gets to MILLIONS. So, please block and report this site and any similar fake ones to the proper authorities. They are using GOOGLE's name to rip off desperate people.I would appreciate a replay...Dan

      Add a comment

      Post a comment using one of these accounts
      Or join now
      At least 6 characters

      Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
      Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
      The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

      ITworld LIVE

      InternetWhite Papers & Webcasts

      White Paper

      Smarter Commerce is redefining value chain visibility

      Smarter Commerce is redefining the value chain in the age of the customer. It starts with putting the customer at the center of your operations - which of itself is not a new idea - however, truly operationalizing this strategy is not easy.

      White Paper

      IBM Synchronizes its Commerce 2.0 Strategy with 'Smarter Commerce' Initiative

      On March 14, IBM announced "Smarter Commerce", a strategic initiative that addresses the surging market for Commerce 2.0 solutions that take advantage of the convergence of a number of disruptive software and hardware technologies.

      See more White Papers | Webcasts

      Ask a question

      Ask a Question