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Old 05-21-2007, 09:06 AM  
RawAlex
So Fucking Banned
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: In a house.
Posts: 9,465
I particularly like this:

Quote:
In Netflix's 2007 Q1 earnings call, CFO Barry McCarthy noted that Netflix's recent "word-of-mouth subscriber growth was weak." There are multiple plausible explanations for that change, but advertising fraud is an important additional factor to consider: In the examples set out above, Netflix would mistakenly pay Look2me, Vomba, Web Nexus, and Zango even if a consumer in fact signed up thanks to a word-of-mouth recommendation rather than as a result of those vendors' advertising. With marketing costs already consuming more than 23% of Netflix's revenues, any reduction seems both overdue and welcome.

What will Netflix, Blockbuster, and other affiliate merchants do in response to these examples? One immediate action item is to sever their ties with the specific affiliates I have identified. Merchants could also demand repayment of any commissions previously paid out -- a challenging task with small affiliates, but probably possible for large affiliates like Experian's Roundads. (With Experian's $12 billion market capitalization, Experian's subsidiaries are far from judgment proof.)
How much money have companies like AFF spent to retain traffic they were getting for free?
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