Internet Explorer 7 Nuking Clickbank Affiliate Links
14. Mar 2007 | 24 Comments
Any Clickbank Affliates noticed their sales dropping lately? Well I’m certain that IE7 is the major problem. I tested out 5 hoplinks via IE7 earlier today & noticed this:

There’s two main reasons why the links are getting blocked by IE7.
- If the site contains no privacy policy
- Clickbank.net is a default blocked cookie in IE7

The biggest problem with this is that this option is turned on by DEFAULT so chances are anyone using Internet Explorer 7 will nuke the cookie & you’ll not get credit for the sale. I’m sure the merchants are laughing all the way to the bank now that you’re spending all this PPC cash to send them sales for FREE.
Last week on one of my more mainstream sites 1,452 people out of 5,274 were using IE7.
That’s a whopping 27%
This means that you’re losing 27% of any current clickbank sales.
Now I can hardly see Microsoft actioning anything & removing Clickbank from their list of blocked sites, so the pressure is on clickbank to either move their hoplinks off the .net domain to something else & use a 301 redirect so that affiliates don’t have to change all their hoplinks manually or risk losing their entire affiliate community because they’re pissed at losing over 25% of their current revenue to the Merchant.
24 Comments on "Internet Explorer 7 Nuking Clickbank Affiliate Links"
Chris
14. Mar 2007, 6:57 pm
Holy crap! That’s some ugly stuff happening. I hope CB gets off its butt to fix the problem.
Dominic
14. Mar 2007, 7:32 pm
I just checked this in my IE7 and it is empty.
Do you use any anti-spyware that might add all those sites? I’ve heard of one anti-spyware product that wipes affiliate cookies, but can’t remember what it is called.
Dominic
14. Mar 2007, 8:26 pm
I guess the lesson here is to not promote anti-spyware no matter how much it pays out or how well it converts
max
15. Mar 2007, 2:28 am
I don’t see this in my internet settings either but this isn’t the first time I’ve read about it. My sales have dropped in the last few weeks so I’m not quite sure what’s going on. Thanks for pointing this out Stuart.
Roland
15. Mar 2007, 3:31 am
That’s a big thing this one. Let’s see what clickbank do, but they must act quickly, because the time is passing, and the affiliates are loosing money day after day, and some of them, that loosed money can be money thousand dollars, wich is very scary!
Michael Coley
15. Mar 2007, 6:33 am
I wonder if it has anything to do with the massive volume of SPAM sent out by Clickbank affiliates? I receive more SPAM that goes through Clickbank than any other CPA Network.
If you lie down with dogs…
Dave
15. Mar 2007, 10:48 am
There are a couple of things here…
1. Most IE7 installs right now are happening on top of IE6 most likely. When you upgrade, IE7 inherits the security policy of IE6.
2. I just did a clean install of IE7 on a computer. Then I clicked on a CB hoplink — the cookie was set and the affiliate carried over to the checkout page.
IE7 implemented a zone trust model similar to many other products like ZoneAlarm.
There is no conspiracy against CB, Adsense, CJ or another network as was reported in other blog posts.
Dillinger
15. Mar 2007, 10:58 am
I just checked my IE7 settings and it´s also empty.Maybe it´s what Dominic says, some anti-spyware program that added them there.
Christoph
16. Mar 2007, 1:23 am
If you have Microsoft Defender or OneCare installed it can add those entries. I think Norton is another one that populates the IE settings.
If it is at work, your employer might have an Active Directory Group Policy defined with those settings.
Christoph
lyndonmaxewell
17. Mar 2007, 6:57 am
That’s a sly one. I guess many people still doesn’t know about this yet. Someone need to get the word out to them!
Garrie
18. Mar 2007, 9:59 am
You need to RESEARCH before you start posting false information.
Let me give you the real, researched information.
1. In IE 7, there are not any urls listed by default. You are using a THIRD PARTY security application, like SpyBot, to have the URLs inserted. ie IT’S NOT MICROSOFT YOU USED A PROGRAM TO DO IT.
2. CB sets first party cookies. IE 7 ONLY blocks 3rd party cookies w/out a compact privacy policy by default. ie ClickBank cookies set just fine by default.
Broc
18. Mar 2007, 11:45 am
how would clickbank go about taking care of this little problem?
Geordie
25. Mar 2007, 4:46 am
It’s Spybot Search & Destroy. The guy that runs it is in Germany good luck for Clickbank getting him to remove the cookie from their database… I blogged the screenshot from Spybot here: http://blog.revenuewire.com/?p=5
scott
31. Mar 2007, 3:26 am
Wow. I would have never known that without this post.
Dude, I just found your blog yesterday. I’m not kissing your ass or anything, but this is by far the most useful internet marketing blog I’ve found on the internet.
Huge props man, keep it up.
john anthony
03. Apr 2007, 1:47 am
do you have any updates on this CB problem since you first wrote it? i’m about 1.5 months into CB so i can’t tell if it’s affecting our sales b/c i have nothing to compare it to.
The Dino
09. Apr 2007, 5:32 pm
It night be some antispyware but than it would be less %. So maybe default settings of some Browser but definitely the Spybot. ClickBank will need to contact those companies to be removed from the list otherwise they are loosing money.
googie
26. Apr 2007, 7:26 pm
Get off the list. You must be subscribed to some list that promotes Clickbank stuff. I have hundreds of email addresses and thousands of rmails daily, and very rarely I get any spam to do with Clickbank. The problem is on YOUR side, pal. Don’t blame Clickbank for YOUR subscription habits. BTW spamming CB products is the most stupid idea in the world because CB closes the spammers accounts in seconds. Go get off that maillist and you’ll forget about “clickbank spam”
Bilbo
16. May 2007, 7:16 am
I’m glad Clickbank is blocked. I’m sick of targeted advertising, sick of popups and sick of sly Internet marketers in general. If I go to an advertising-supported site, it should say so clearly up front, giving me the option to stay and accept the advertising or to go elsewhere and not accept the advertising.
Hooray for Spybot S&D, IE7, Firefox and anything else that blocks this crap.
mgrizz
04. Apr 2008, 6:19 am
I’ve been on CB about 4 weeks and have had 0 sales. Adwords is getting rich though. How can you find out if your not getting your sales credits?
samson
22. Nov 2008, 7:52 am
i’ve been promoting products from clickbank for about 4 wks. My account shows i have had 793 hops on my affiliate links during the period. yet no sale.
Is it likely that i’m not getting credit for the clicks? If so, what can i do to resolve the problem?
Holy crap! That’s some ugly stuff happening. I hope CB gets off its butt to fix the problem.
I just checked this in my IE7 and it is empty.
Do you use any anti-spyware that might add all those sites? I’ve heard of one anti-spyware product that wipes affiliate cookies, but can’t remember what it is called.
I guess the lesson here is to not promote anti-spyware no matter how much it pays out or how well it converts
I don’t see this in my internet settings either but this isn’t the first time I’ve read about it. My sales have dropped in the last few weeks so I’m not quite sure what’s going on. Thanks for pointing this out Stuart.
That’s a big thing this one. Let’s see what clickbank do, but they must act quickly, because the time is passing, and the affiliates are loosing money day after day, and some of them, that loosed money can be money thousand dollars, wich is very scary!
I wonder if it has anything to do with the massive volume of SPAM sent out by Clickbank affiliates? I receive more SPAM that goes through Clickbank than any other CPA Network.
If you lie down with dogs…
There are a couple of things here…
1. Most IE7 installs right now are happening on top of IE6 most likely. When you upgrade, IE7 inherits the security policy of IE6.
2. I just did a clean install of IE7 on a computer. Then I clicked on a CB hoplink — the cookie was set and the affiliate carried over to the checkout page.
IE7 implemented a zone trust model similar to many other products like ZoneAlarm.
There is no conspiracy against CB, Adsense, CJ or another network as was reported in other blog posts.
I just checked my IE7 settings and it´s also empty.Maybe it´s what Dominic says, some anti-spyware program that added them there.
If you have Microsoft Defender or OneCare installed it can add those entries. I think Norton is another one that populates the IE settings.
If it is at work, your employer might have an Active Directory Group Policy defined with those settings.
Christoph
That’s a sly one. I guess many people still doesn’t know about this yet. Someone need to get the word out to them!
You need to RESEARCH before you start posting false information.
Let me give you the real, researched information.
1. In IE 7, there are not any urls listed by default. You are using a THIRD PARTY security application, like SpyBot, to have the URLs inserted. ie IT’S NOT MICROSOFT YOU USED A PROGRAM TO DO IT.
2. CB sets first party cookies. IE 7 ONLY blocks 3rd party cookies w/out a compact privacy policy by default. ie ClickBank cookies set just fine by default.
how would clickbank go about taking care of this little problem?
It’s Spybot Search & Destroy. The guy that runs it is in Germany good luck for Clickbank getting him to remove the cookie from their database… I blogged the screenshot from Spybot here: http://blog.revenuewire.com/?p=5
Wow. I would have never known that without this post.
Dude, I just found your blog yesterday. I’m not kissing your ass or anything, but this is by far the most useful internet marketing blog I’ve found on the internet.
Huge props man, keep it up.
do you have any updates on this CB problem since you first wrote it? i’m about 1.5 months into CB so i can’t tell if it’s affecting our sales b/c i have nothing to compare it to.
It night be some antispyware but than it would be less %. So maybe default settings of some Browser but definitely the Spybot. ClickBank will need to contact those companies to be removed from the list otherwise they are loosing money.
Get off the list. You must be subscribed to some list that promotes Clickbank stuff. I have hundreds of email addresses and thousands of rmails daily, and very rarely I get any spam to do with Clickbank. The problem is on YOUR side, pal. Don’t blame Clickbank for YOUR subscription habits. BTW spamming CB products is the most stupid idea in the world because CB closes the spammers accounts in seconds. Go get off that maillist and you’ll forget about “clickbank spam”
I’m glad Clickbank is blocked. I’m sick of targeted advertising, sick of popups and sick of sly Internet marketers in general. If I go to an advertising-supported site, it should say so clearly up front, giving me the option to stay and accept the advertising or to go elsewhere and not accept the advertising.
Hooray for Spybot S&D, IE7, Firefox and anything else that blocks this crap.
I’ve been on CB about 4 weeks and have had 0 sales. Adwords is getting rich though. How can you find out if your not getting your sales credits?
i’ve been promoting products from clickbank for about 4 wks. My account shows i have had 793 hops on my affiliate links during the period. yet no sale.
Is it likely that i’m not getting credit for the clicks? If so, what can i do to resolve the problem?
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Hmm good point, this was on my work pc. I think it might have spywarebot installed….