How to Avoid Being Banned From
AdSense
If you trawl through the AdSense
message board you can’t help but come across tales of woe from
AdSense publishers that have had their account banned by Google.
Below is a list of ways people have been banned from AdSense and
information on how to avoid it happening to you.
Don’t click on your own ads
The obvious one but still people do it. Google has the IP
address of the computer/s that you’ve used to create and check
your AdSense account. If it sees that this IP address clicks one
of your ads you’re in trouble.
Don’t do it. It’s theft not from Google but from the AdWords
advertisers.
If you want to go to a site advertised by one of your ads don’t
click on it look at the URL of the advertising site at the
bottom of the ad and type it into your browser.
If you click on one accidentally (which does happen) you’re
probably be ok but it’s worth dropping a quick email to Google
with an explanation and apology
Don’t log in to AdSense from
a shared computer.
As I said above Google keeps a record of every machine IP
address used to look at your account. If you check your stats on
a machine then someone else clicks on your ads from the same
machine Google sees this as click fraud. Worth bearing in mind
when thinking of checking your stats from somewhere like an
Internet Café.
Don’t log in to AdSense from work.
Apart from getting in trouble with the company that employs you
there’s also a further real risk. Most companies use a proxy
server to access the Internet. A proxy server with ONE IP
ADDRESS. Therefore you checking your ads from work means this
proxy IP address being recorded by Google as one that you use.
Problem is if there are 1000 people in your company it is the
same IP address for them too. Google can’t differentiate between
you and the other 999 employees in your company. If one of these
999 clicks on one of your ads it’s ban time.
Don’t get into a ‘I’ll click your ads if you click mine’
agreement with another Webmaster.
As above Google will have your IP address and that of every
AdSense publisher. If they see these IP addresses consistently
clicking on each other ads it’s goodbye for both of you.
Don’t tell friends and family.
Telling friends and family about your money making websites can
lead to problems. Even if you tell them not to click on your ads
there’s always the chance that Auntie Maud will think it’s a
good idea to make some extra money for her favourite nephew. 100
clicks later from the same visitor and your account is screaming
‘Click Fraud’.
Receiving clicks from Illegal traffic
Check the AdSense TOS for sources of traffic that aren’t allowed
by Google. These include methods like Traffic exchange, PTC
advertising, Auto surf etc.
Do monitor your visitor and AdSense figures
Check your account at least once a day. If you see a massive
spike coupled with a massive increase in Page CTR investigate
using your visitor stats website. If you see it’s all come from
the same IP address you could have been the victim of a
malicious attack – inform Google via email and offer them access
to your logs.
|