According to estimates by Augustine Fou, one of the leading experts in digital fraud, half of the $50 billion a year industry that generates digital advertising and online marketing are fraudulent ads. This means that each year there are $25 billion are invested in impressions and clicks on advertising that has actually never been seen by a human being.
How is possible?
The industry of fraudulent ads is based on the model of pay per click and pay per impressions that today dominates Internet advertising. Advertisers pay a certain amount per 1,000 ad impressions (the times that it has been shown to users) or they pay per clicks that have been made on the ad. To take advantage of the system, scammers create fake websites networks (whose sole contents are advertisements), which are visited by bots, i.e., by automated programs that simulate visits and clicks with no real user behind it.
The creator of the fake website receives a certain amount of money depending on the agreements it has with the distribution network of digital advertising. For example, a network of 1,000 fake pages each with 10 fraudulent advertisements and a simulated traffic of a million hits a month can generate up to $2.4 million per month. The costs of maintaining the network are so small that 99% of this amount corresponds to net profit.
How I can prevent fraudulent ads?
Fraud in digital advertising is still not well persecuted, but that does not mean you should resign yourself to paying for false impressions and clicks on your ads. As a marketer, we recommend the follow three anti-fraud tips:
Photo by Canva and Flickr