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Beating zango and cookie overwriting
Correct me if im wrong but sponsors could easily solve this little problem by not allowing cookies to be overwritten for say half an hour.. i think thats a fair time period..
If there was ever a thread that should be bumped its this one.. send this message to your sponsors and bump the shit out of this thread.. If all sponsors did this it would take alot of value out of zango's traffic and others who piggyback on the hard work of webmasters |
black vagina findah?
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i have a few other solutions planned as well stay tuned , if theres anything you think would also help please post away
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I Luv you smokey
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Bump for goodness
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Smokey, if sponsors stopped using cookies and instead "wrote" the affiliate ID onto every page as it loads (PHP can do it, and cgi can do it even faster), it would assure that the code would carry all the way to the end.
They can also use things like php session info to carry it forward. They can also log and look at things like "suddenly appearing affiliate codes" on the signup page that don't have any other click matched to them. There are any number of things to do, but before they can happen, the sponsors have to want to make it happen. Honestly, there is no money in it for the sponsors, and in fact some of them that are buying clicks over their affiliates would like lose by paying out the big per signup rates the brag about endlessly. |
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Great thread, Smokey :)! |
double post...
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Good idea in theory. But I think it would be exploited somehow.
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Like some f the problems arent pages being written but pages being popped overtop of other pages.. so if you click my bangrbos ref code link a popup pops a few seconds later with the same page , overwriting the original cookie |
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the way they would get around it would leave them open for some big lawsuits ( i.e. changing content ) |
I spoke to CCBILL on this and it's not as easy as you would think. But we do need more involvement from them on this.
Read this and comment. http://www.gofuckyourself.com/showthread.php?t=665658 |
Smokey, if BB put your code on every page, and as the person clicked through in that browser, your code would be on it.
Now, if the surfer used the new window popped up, well, yeah, then you would be fucked. However, if BB did a little velocity checking, they would see the same surfer getting a new cookie within seconds of the previous one... that would be enough. Most programs don't check how old the previous cookie was before re-writing... it they did, they might find some interesting data. If the tour on average takes 5 minutes to do, then the original cookie should be good for 5 minutes. |
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However, it is worth looking at people with exceptionally GOOD conversion rates (they might be doing substitutions or overwrites only at the join page, example) or people who have a significantlly larger number of refering URL than normal, or people who have huge amounts of traffic with NO refering URL. Especially important if someone is generating signups with the traffic apparently coming from domains they do not own. Alex |
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example. if you went to google right now typed in bangbros , and found 2 links with ref codes.. if you clicked the first one it sets a cookie with your ref code , if you close the window , and then go back to google click a dif ref code and signup , that person gets the credit, zango takes advantage of this and pops up an alternate ref link when someone visits your ref link thus creating a new cookie.. if the cookie was set so it couldnt be overwritten for say half an hour it would make this practise worthless as both links would be promoting the original ref code |
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i see what your saying :thumbsup |
should also note you dont want to set the cookie to long or sponsors run the risk of people "cookie dropping" , as i noticed this earlier this year on a few big tgp's ( i.e. the tgp had hundreds of hidden frames to set cookies for various sponsors )
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This is done on MOST if not ALL affiliate programs. Please don't tell me some affiliate programs rely on cookies alone. You would lose a small % of people that don't allow cookies. |
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it doesnt matter if its zango atm... there are a lot of other black hat stuff that can be down to change aff codes on the fly regardless of cookies...
and i am quite sure that people are already doing this... |
bump............
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You are right, I am sure it is done... but it all gets back to tracking what your affiliates are actually doing and spotting the patterns. |
Smokey, you mentioned the problem yourself...
Allowing 30 minute permanent cookies would mean that TGPs for example could put hundreds of hidden frames or image links on their pages which load link codes, tagging the surfer and then the links on the galleries would nolonger actually make the gallery owner any money since the permanent cookie will block the new ones coming in.. The idea in general, due to how zango works, is good though, simply by using a very short term permanent cookie of around 15-30 seconds. I'll be looking into that. |
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this would force sponsors to steal from their own affiliates instead of paying someone else to do it, then if they get caught they can be sued directly ( not to say they cant be sued directly as it is , but its a little bit fuzzier anyways ) |
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true but tgp's are already doing that , it doesnt need to be 30 mins lets say a little longer than 30 seconds though ( well dont say the real number publicly but perhaps something like 5 mins ) Glad to hear you guys are onboard with finding a solution :thumbsup |
bump to get rid of the crap :)
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Good thread.
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might even be interesting if you did something like switched to perm cookies for a set period of time just to track and find affiliates that only make sales on recently rewritten cookies , this way those affiliates would be isolated , like if nats simply did this for a day certain affiliates that were gainig sales by rewriting their cookies would get zero sales thus be readily apparent
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bump 4 me
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It's amazing to watch. |
Bump 4 u
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Will see if there is a move away from steady affiliates to affiliates who are rapidly improving. I will name names if I have the proof. |
Paul, you may also want to look for different affiliates from the same city / country that show referals from the same domains, or that have all suddenly started selling. YOu may find that they spread it out over many accounts as well to try to blend into the background noise.
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a possible (but not a likely solution) is determining what triggers Zango to pop their ads
its most likely the domain or ip of the link being visited without going too deep, could sponsors create a special "landing" domain / ip combination using simple aliases that zango pays no attention to? or this might be somewhat inefficient and impractical, but an in house session database that stores IPs and OS/browser information for unique hits... that way if another ad pops over or someone comes back it just matches the IP and other details to give credit to the correct affiliate (of course a sale or two could slip through the cracks with dynamic ips... but its not THAT likely since you're matching machine specific data to the IP) this would probably require a few extra workhorse boxes to distribute this load w/o effecting load times that much... but sponsors might find this worth it to them to gain new interest & trust from affiliates |
It'd be nice...It'd be interesting to see whether longer cookies affected review sites too...
Personally I'm thinking the sponsors can see which users are zango and which arent...They probably don't care as long as the sales keep flowing. |
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