Claudia Perlich “What Makes Us Human? A Tale of Advertising Fraud”
http://strataconf.com/stratany2013/public/schedule/detail/30868
We’ve all taken road trips, right? So imagine driving for 24 hours straight and passing a billboard every three seconds. Now imagine someone hijacks your car, blindfolds you and ties you down in the passenger seat, and you proceed on your road trip, oblivious to that onslaught of billboard messages zooming past. That, my friends, is a peek into a disturbing phenomenon of forced website visitation. Allow me to explain.
Back in Spring 2012, shortly after releasing a modification to one of our models for targeting prospects in display advertising, we began seeing a sudden increase in one of our early diagnostic metrics. Historically, an increase in this metric indicated better performance of our production models. “Great!” we all thought. But the metric continued to increase, and increase, and increase to the point where performance appeared to have doubled in just two weeks. Uh-oh. This looked too good to be true — and one thing you learn when dealing with data, it if looks too good to be true — it almost always is.
We decided to look under the hood and a couple of things started to look really strange: 1) the most predictive URL’s all had only recently appeared in our data, 2) they were equally predictive no matter whether we are advertising for a hotel chain, pizza, or running shoes and 3) the co-visitation patters between the sites seemed excessive and very unnatural. Apparently there was a new breed of websites that are simply passing traffic around, sometimes at alarming rates, in order to monetize that traffic in the real-time bidding exchanges. In fact, one web viewer was involved in over 30,000 auctions in a single day. That is the equivalent of one advertisement every three seconds for a twenty four hour period — loosely akin to the aforementioned road trip from hell. These users sometimes “do” this (unbeknownst to them, of course) for a week or more at a time. They are typically shepherd from a Chinese movie site, to a new mother’s site, to a fashion site, back to the new mother’s site, to an auto site and many other sites with various content types throughout the day. In many situations, these browsing patterns cannot be explained by human behavior, and they are seen across websites which were created solely for purpose of fabricating specious visits, selling traffic to websites, and take a large share of advertising budgets, indiscriminately racing blindfolded browsers through the web and (not) exposing them to invisible brand messages along the way. The straw that finally broke our camel’s back (and made us notice this) is that not only are browsers traversing these networks of artificial sites, they are also occasionally send to YOUR brand page, increasing their advertising value by order of magnitude for retargeting and generating even higher auction prices in the subsequent round.
No matter what attitude you may have towards the advertising world and the obvious amoral nature of this business, consider this: if a large proportion of users who are coming to your site not only had no intentions of being there and no awareness that this happened to them either, what good is any insight from your web analytics?