Google finally cracks down on Arbitrage
20. May 2007 | 8 Comments
In a move that wasn’t really much of a surprise Google has finally taken action on Adsense Publishers that are using Arbitrage & MFA Sites to make money. Claiming that it’s an unfit business model.
Starting from June 1st many arbitrage publishers will have their accounts disabled & any remaining balance paid out. Even the big boys who are earning 70k/month are not safe. Some publishers have already had the dreaded email explaining that their accounts will be disabled as of June 1st.
So, If you are doing arbitrage & not had an email yet, now may be the time to stop if you want to keep your Adsense account. No-one is quite sure how Adsense are detecting publishers, even still which publishers they are targeting, but it could be a number of factors:
- Those advertising on .info domains
- Those with Adsense code on Landing Pages
- Those with a high overall CTR
- Publishers that are not converting well
After all, Adsense is all about providing value for the Advertiser. We’ve seen this in the past. If the Advertisers is not converting then they won’t use the content network. Simple.
So what does this mean for publishers?
Well it’s hard to say. Whilst I don’t doubt that the quality of the content network will increase greatly, there will be less advertisers & less inventory, therefore potential less earnings. That is until Adwords Advertisers start trusting the quality of the content network (which at the moment many are not advertising on).
Sources: Webmaster World, Jensense, Wickedfire, Shoemoney
Update: Check out the sources to read into this topic for yourself. Lots of conflicting stories. What we do know is that people ARE getting accounts disabled (not everyone), those people WERE doing arbitrage. Sending Adwords traffic to MFA sites with multiple 336×280 blocks of Adsense. What we don’t know is the criteria for the bans.
8 Comments on "Google finally cracks down on Arbitrage"
Brandon Hopkins
20. May 2007, 9:14 pm
Do they think this will actually help, or do they just need to say, “we’re fighting arbitrage every day”.
Gabber
21. May 2007, 4:34 am
My point.
Who wants to display ads to MFA sites anyway?
So I don’t think it will be too bad for adsensers.
Andrew Johnson
21. May 2007, 11:13 am
I think Shoemoney is probably one of the more credible sources here. This is not exactly breaking news either, its been happening for a while.
Many Adwords buyers use Google’s conversion tracking code. Between Adwords and Adsense that gives Google a ton of data on what traffic is “good” and what isn’t. For arbitragers driving lots of volume of low quality traffic, its pretty easy for Google to see the traffic is crap.
Peer Wandiger - Selbständig im Netz
22. May 2007, 8:02 am
In the US, there are other traffic-ressources like Yahoo, MSN, Digg and so on. But in germany there is only Google. Over 90% market share for Google means that AdSense arbitrage is dead in germany.
Scott Jankins
27. Jul 2007, 12:43 pm
This is all very true, I was making about $1500 a day doing google arbitrage for a few months and had a $28,000 check coming to me, and google closed my account and kept my money. I was out about $6K in advertising too. It sucked in a bad way
Do they think this will actually help, or do they just need to say, “we’re fighting arbitrage every day”.
My point.
Who wants to display ads to MFA sites anyway?
So I don’t think it will be too bad for adsensers.
I think Shoemoney is probably one of the more credible sources here. This is not exactly breaking news either, its been happening for a while.
Many Adwords buyers use Google’s conversion tracking code. Between Adwords and Adsense that gives Google a ton of data on what traffic is “good” and what isn’t. For arbitragers driving lots of volume of low quality traffic, its pretty easy for Google to see the traffic is crap.
In the US, there are other traffic-ressources like Yahoo, MSN, Digg and so on. But in germany there is only Google. Over 90% market share for Google means that AdSense arbitrage is dead in germany.
This is all very true, I was making about $1500 a day doing google arbitrage for a few months and had a $28,000 check coming to me, and google closed my account and kept my money. I was out about $6K in advertising too. It sucked in a bad way
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There is a lot of heresy going on about this. Watch this video by Shoemoney for the real story:
http://www.shoemoney.com/2007/05/19/adsense-arbitrage-just-the-facts/