Organic SEO Blog

231-922-9460 • Contact UsFree SEO Site Audit

Monday, April 26, 2010

Cybercriminals Increase Internet Advertising Click Fraud
USA Today
Click fraud is on the rise, as cybergangs step up the use of infected PCs to divert advertising dollars into their hands.


 
 
In the first three months of this year, 17% to 29% of clicks to online ads were fraudulent, according to separate estimates by Click Forensics and Anchor Intelligence, leading suppliers of click fraud detection technology. That's up from 15% to 25% in fourth-quarter 2009.

Advertisers pay website owners every time someone clicks on one of their online ads. Fraudulent clicks can occur manually, by an unscrupulous website owner, or by someone looking to waste a rival's ad budget.

Most often, click fraud is the work of cybercriminals who put up websites carrying online ads and no other content. The criminals then retain the services of cybergangs in control of sprawling networks of infected PCs, called botnets, which are directed to repeatedly click on the ads. This triggers payments to the crooks who put up the Web page.

A high percentage of bogus clicks get filtered by search companies and advertisers, says Kevin Lee, CEO of search consultancy Didit.com.

Still, the rising tide of faked clicks suggests click-fraud scammers are skimming off millions of dollars annually, Anchor Intelligence CEO Ken Miller says. "There are more dollars available for the taking now," Miller says.

Advertisers in 2009 paid a record $14.2 billion for clicks to online ads, research firm IDC says. Google took in 55% of that ad revenue, Yahoo, 9% and Microsoft, 6%.

With so much at stake, the big search companies take the click-fraud problem very seriously, Lee says, because "If they don't catch the fraud, it erodes advertiser confidence."

Google lets advertisers monitor for patterns of fraudulent clicks. Advertisers can dial up "the exact number of clicks we are filtering out on each ad campaign," Google spokeswoman Rachel Nearnberg says.

Yet, preventing click fraud is proving as difficult to stamp out as e-mail spam. "Spam generates a few cents per thousand e-mails sent, but a click-fraud criminal may make several dollars per thousand fraudulent clicks," says Gunter Ollmann, research director at security firm Damballa.

Botnet-driven campaigns "generating a huge volume of clicks and huge fees" are becoming more common, says Paul Pellman, CEO of Click Forensics.

Most often, advertisers eat the losses. "Advertisers are paying much more than they should," says Marissa Gluck, managing partner of Radar Research. "It's theft, plain and simple."