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A Closer Look at Google Adwords

zaphle writes "This article describes an interesting experiment with the Google Adwords service; in an effort to fine-tune the price per word, a mirror site was set up, paying a different price per word. I turns out the second site had to pay more in order to reach a similar click-through rate. My questions to the slashdot community: are organizations like Google redefining the law of demand and answer? To what extent does this imply a competitive advantage for larger companies? Do we need an ethical framework to direct companies to make such algorithms open source?"

224 comments

  1. Huh? by antifoidulus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do we need an ethical framework to direct companies to make such algorithms open source?
    Correct me if I'm mistaken, but I keep on hearing that "open source" is about freedom. Since when is forcing someone to behave in a certain manner considered "freedom"?
    Google can do what google wants to do as long as it's within the limits of the law, you don't like it? Start your own damn company that is more ethical.

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total freedom save forcing people to respect others' freedom is considered by most to be the best form of freedom, rather than complete total freedom, also known as anarchy.

    2. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Google can do what google wants to do as long as it's within the limits of the law, you don't like it? Start your own damn company that is more ethical.

      More ethical than "do no evil"?

      Isn't that like:

      - Brighter than the sun
      - Faster than the speed of light
      - More powerfull that $DEITY
      etc.

    3. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So Google are now subtitled as "do no evil"? Wow are you in for a shock.

    4. Re:Huh? by Glen+Ponda · · Score: 1, Funny

      Since when is forcing someone to behave in a certain manner considered "freedom"?

      Do you believe you live in a free market? Have you seen the size of the SEC rule book? Are you a troll?

    5. Re:Huh? by commodoresloat · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Since when is forcing someone to behave in a certain manner considered "freedom"? Google can do what google wants to do as long as it's within the limits of the law

      The law, of course, is about forcing someone to behave in a certain manner; there is always a tradeoff between the decrease in freedom in telling someone what to do and the payoff which may be an increase in freedom. The law restricts your freedom to lock me in a closet without my consent because that leads to a net increase in freedom for me and anyone else you might think about locking up.

      Open source licenses like GPL are intended to force people to behave a certain way (decreasing someone's freedom) because its net benefit enhances everyone's freedom. Now, requiring open source in an industry by law is a little different than a license like the GPL -- it's debatable whether the increase in freedom is worth the cost in any particular situation; personally I would not be in favor of mandating open source across the board, though I probably would support mandating open source in public sector agencies for example. But it is overly simplistic to simply take the perspective that you do, that restricting people's behavior with regard to software development, or anything else, is automatically "anti-freedom."

    6. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evil is a Christian concept. A true morality suitable for all economic activities can't depend on that.

    7. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Google wants to get away with anything it does, it should stop proclaiming itself to "not be evil"

    8. Re:Huh? by shmlco · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And speaking of ethics, it's been shown that there are plenty of people out there with none. Should the exact details of the algorithm be public, I have no doubt that hordes of Search Engine Marketers and Optimizers would use that knowledge to game the system.

      There are times when secrecy has its benefits...

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    9. Re:Huh? by halleluja · · Score: 1
      Your remark w.r.t. freedom is insightful. I do not see *any* statement in the original question regarding force etc., rather some brainstorming and sharp questions.

      So the questions might not fit your Google ideal, freedom is also about the right of criticism.

    10. Re:Huh? by assert(0) · · Score: 1, Interesting

      > Correct me if I'm mistaken, but I keep on hearing that "open source" is about freedom. What's google got to do with "Open Source"?

      --
      (founded 95,000,000 yrs ago, very space opera)
    11. Re:Huh? by deetsay · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Correct me if I'm mistaken, but I keep on hearing that "open source" is about freedom.
      Correction: "Open source" is buzzword meaning a various bunch of licences that corporations use, that are usually watered down versions of "free software".

      Anyway, I also don't see how Google would be more "ethical" if they made their AdWords algorithm/program "free software" or "open source" or anything. A big community of developers looking at it could find the algorithm's faults and be able enhance it for everyone's benefit, but if it's already good enough for Google, then why give it out to others, who would just use it for competing AdWords services? Maybe the poster means that the algorithm should just be made "viewable" to people, while retaining all the rights to using it... The way to implement that would probably be a patent... Are you sure it's not already patented?
      --
      "The looser the waistband, the deeper the quicksand", or so I have read.
    12. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have been using google adwords for affiliate programs and the ppc is little bit high. we should look for a system that has low ppc. my blogs Tech News and Discount noteboks revieew

    13. Re:Huh? by Ortega-Starfire · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Someone here has obviously never read ANY pre-Christian history...

      --
      ---- Liquid was a patriot ----
    14. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when is forcing someone to behave in a certain manner considered "freedom"?
      Doesn't that match G.W. Bush's definition quite well?

    15. Re:Huh? by vague+disclaimer · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Do you believe you live in a free market? Have you seen the size of the SEC rule book? Are you a troll?

      Is this a rhetorical question?

    16. Re:Huh? by michelcultivo · · Score: 1

      The market is the very best place to known if you are going win or lost the battle, let the users choose what method is the best and stop influencing the user's decision.

    17. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There are times when secrecy has its benefits...

      Yes. When Google does it, it's right. If anyone else does it, "Security by obscurity sucks!!!1!1"

      Talk about hypocrisy...

      PS: Don't even bother replying that this isn't about security. If that's the first thing that comes to your mind, you missed the point, and you'll probably never find it.
    18. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The law restricts your freedom to lock me in a closet without my consent because that leads to a net increase in freedom for me and anyone else you might think about locking up.
      How does being locked in a closet increase your freedom?

    19. Re:Huh? by shmlco · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Talk about hypocrisy.."

      As you don't know my stance regarding security and open source, you can't call me a hypocrite. That said, I believe that there are times to be open, and times to be obscure. Neither one is automatically the correct solution for each and every situation.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    20. Re:Huh? by hackstraw · · Score: 0, Troll

      The law, of course, is about forcing someone to behave in a certain manner

      In the US at least, the law is to control poor people and minorities through fear and incarceration and parole and probation. Unfortunately, sometimes others find themselves wrapped up in the system as well, but typically with enough money anybody can get off of any charge. I guess it could be characterized as forcing someone to behave in a certain manner, but the getting caught and punished part seems completely separate.

      On a more optimistic look, we do have some laws, especially with businesses/corps that control them in terms like employment standards and environmental regulations. However, little else is done to force business or corporations to behave in a certain manner.

    21. Re:Huh? by shoffsta · · Score: 0

      Nobody questioned whether Google "could" do something. By now they probably "could" do just about anything. The real question is, what they "should" do.

    22. Re:Huh? by c_forq · · Score: 1

      I think you mean sin.

      --
      Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
    23. Re:Huh? by mrklin · · Score: 1
      If Microsoft says what you said about Windows source code, how would you feel?

      "And speaking of ethics, it's been shown that there are plenty of people out there with none. Should the exact details of the source code be public, I have no doubt that hordes of hackers and virus writers would use that knowledge to corrupt the system.

      There are times when secrecy has its benefits..."

      It is unfortunate that whatever Google does gets a free pass on Slashdot.

    24. Re:Huh? by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      Do no evil? that means they sould be: lawful good, lawful neutral, neutral good, true neutral, chaotic good, chaotic neutral. So since they seem to be bordering the neutral boundary with their "closed source" become "good chaotic" and release your source. ;-)

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    25. Re:Huh? by Glen+Ponda · · Score: 1

      >Do you believe you live in a free market? Have you
      > seen the size of the SEC rule book? Are you a
      > troll?

      Is this a rhetorical question?

      Which question?

    26. Re:Huh? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      There are times when secrecy has its benefits...

      I'd agree in a way, but consider things like encryption. Good encryption is about only keeping the most minimal amount of information hidden yet still making it incredibly difficult to game the system. So, just like page ranking was designed in part to avoid gaming the system, so too should the adwords algorithm.

      At some point, of course, you can't avoid people gaming the system. Perhaps with an open algorithm, however, they could have the whole academic community take part in tweaking it to make it not worth most people's while.

      Oh, and no, I'm not pro forcing the opening of the algorithm. If all their exporting is functionality, then there isn't a basis upon which to demand seeing code.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    27. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was so happy to see that the first comment from this article was so well put. Folks I know you love the GPL and Linux and... BUT GET REAL. Not everything needs to be open source! Open source is NOT the answer to every single "problem".

      Google used to be everyones favorite company because they were small and provided an excellent service. Now they are big and provide an excellent service so everyone wants to dump on them.

      Just because a company has made money does not make them evil nor does it mean they did it in an unethical way.

    28. Re:Huh? by shmlco · · Score: 1

      Actually, should MS ever open up its source I have no doubt that hordes of hackers and virus writers would immediately do just that.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    29. Re:Huh? by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Perhaps with an open algorithm, however, they could have the whole academic community take part in tweaking it to make it not worth most people's while.

      I can't decide which is cuter, nor more amusing: your idealism, or your naivete'.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    30. Re:Huh? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      the GPL does not force anyone to do anything. The GPL gives EVERYONE the oppurtunity to do something they could not normally do as long as they follow certain rules while doing it.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    31. Re:Huh? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      to be Chaotic Good you would have to release MICROSOFT'S source, relesing your own is limited to good neutral and lawful good

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    32. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      to be Chaotic Good you would have to release MICROSOFT'S source

      No - to expose others to Microsoft's code would most definitely be evil.

    33. Re:Huh? by dswan69 · · Score: 1

      The law is of course always right and should be obeyed to the letter.

    34. Re:Huh? by zaphle · · Score: 1

      Indeed, viewable is what I ment. The term "Open Source" tends to attract attention and spice up discussion though...

      I guess I just couldn't help myself :-)

      Anyway, my point was merely this:
      As people pointed out elsewhere, Google is after all a company trying to make profit and it's their full right. But as all companies, over time, they will build alliances with other companies. Will they use the same pageranking system for their allies, even though it could be more profitable to keep an eye closed and give them a better price? Do you feel they have the right to do that? Is that honest towards non-allied customers? Should they do that, I feel that they should at least inform you about it. By making their algorithm viewable.

      I'm not saying they do this already nor that I think they ever will. But we just have to take their word for it. I think they are trustworthy - for now. Who knows what they will look like in 10 years time? It wouldn't be the first company starting out with a good product and getting ill because of shifts in management, having to keep up the stock price or whatever. "Yes but then we just turn to a different ad provider", sure, but you won't -know- what they've become if there is no openness. As long as the community can observe a company's actions, they have a harder time becoming evil.

      Is it feasable to make such algorithms viewable? This would imply making the rankings viewable too, for people might want to mimick the algorithm locally in order to check if it is indeed the viewable algorithm that is in use. This may be utopia - or better, it probably is. There surely would be the downside of companies trying to abuse the algorithm. Google could counter this by adjusting the terms of use.

      I'm aware that I don't have all the answers here. But I think it's an interesting issue. I wonder how Google would respond to it.

      --
      And what if there's nothing behind the door until it is being opened?
    35. Re:Huh? by doperu · · Score: 0

      I think price is depend on google page rank

    36. Re:Huh? by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      You think Open Source is orderly??? 0.o

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
  2. Google is looking for the right price all right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Google is looking for the price where marginal revenue equals marginal cost....because google is becoming monopoly on search info, make profit, regardless of yahoo and msn's stats.

    1. Re:Google is looking for the right price all right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't model adwords with marginal revenue vs. marginal cost.

    2. Re:Google is looking for the right price all right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Google does obtain a monopoly on search (while leveraging the copywritten material of others), and is also in the market for startups (especially startups that do not hold VC debt), it isn't difficult to imagine an anti trust scenario or two (and Google will see the investigators coming ahead of time).

      Think of it as a compliment to the SBC backbone plan.

  3. An ethical framework for advertising? by ReformedExCon · · Score: 0, Troll

    Who cares what people are paying to advertise?

    --
    Jesus saved me from my past. He can save you as well.
    1. Re:An ethical framework for advertising? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Well, this was not really about how much they are paying. It was a simple experiment to see how things worked.

      The first implicication from this, is that google puts out the ads to various groups. IOW, it does not go to everybody. More importantly, they have somehow prioritized their groups. Pay more, and we send it to better groups. I would guess that it really matters once there is competition for a word, but they did not say what happened to the original ad. I wonder if google is getting more info about ppl who buy.

      This experiment should have been done several times to find out. All of this (the above, the experiment) is more of a WAG than anything else.

      But it also shows, that with google, you get what you pay for. There is no ethics consideration needed.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    2. Re:An ethical framework for advertising? by gronofer · · Score: 2, Informative

      The conclusion was that you don't get what you pay for. If you pay 0.10 you do about as well as if you pay 1.00. But if you pay 1.00 and then reduce it to 0.40, you do far worse then if you had always payed 0.10.

    3. Re:An ethical framework for advertising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I need saving from your past?

      Because he apparently was a criminal and now probably believes that everyone else is also a criminal unless they start listening to the same imaginary friend.

  4. but.. by Galston · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The text just seems larger!?!

  5. Why they can get away with it by hug_the_penguin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google IMO has the best advert service because it's unintrusive and they're ads you want to see because they're context sensitive. To me that makes it more likely you'll be interested in what the ad's selling and you'll want to get it more because the ad doesn't piss you off. Because of this, google can charge whatever they like and most people will pay it.

    --
    ~HTP~ Hug that tux ;)
    1. Re:Why they can get away with it by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      I'm seeing more and more sites taken over by adwords.
      Light content with at least2 or 3 blocks of adwords around (the usually single link)
      Its no wonder they have a higher click through.

      I only notice they are adverts because the text hits the frame border (I use larger fonts so see clipping)

      I won't say they are annoying because its better than flashing popups and the like, but its certainly feeling likee better of 2 evils.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:Why they can get away with it by KiloByte · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have yet to see a Google ad that is relevant to what I would like to see. And, I'm afraid that they already wasted their chance.

      So... what ads
      http://adblock.mozdev.org/
      are
      zone "googlesyndication.com" {type master;allow-query {any;};file "/etc/bind/db.blackhole";};
      you
      apt-get install adzapper
      talking
      http://www.customizegoogle.com/
      about?

      I don't ever pay for random software -- I buy only things I need to (because @#$%^& customers won't switch to usable systems), and I sometimes help with Free Software projects (donating code, not money). For non-software related things, the banking system in Poland is so abysmal that purchasing material things online is simply out of the question; also, I have a strong negative response to ads -- I make conscious decisions to boycott products that are advertised in an annoying way.

      Losing the clicks from the rest of the company I happen to admin the servers for is just collateral damage.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    3. Re:Why they can get away with it by avenj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I find them far more annoying... many years of web browsing have trained my brain to filter out flashy (or even just graphical) ads and look to the text for real content.

      Google's ads are far more difficult to tune out, hence their wide success.

    4. Re:Why they can get away with it by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see a Google ad that is relevant to what I would like to see.

      They don't try to show you ads that are relevant to what you want to see. They show you ads that are in the same context as the page you're reading (or try to). Thereby increasing the chances that you will be interested in the ad.

      And, I'm afraid that they already wasted their chance.

      Well, since you "don't ever pay for random software," "buy only things I need," and "purchasing material things online is simply out of the question," then actually they are GLAD you are filtering their advertisements, since it reduces their cost of advertising.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  6. Forgot some experiments... by luvirini · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Like making a site with the $ .05/word.. and few others.. the total cost and time to do that should be quit low as said in the artickle. anyone using adwords to generate sales should definitely try to find the best results by doing those types of doubleblind tests.

    1. Re:Forgot some experiments... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      On the contrary, Cringley has utterly misinterpreted these results and they actually prove that you should not do these tests.

      If Google does anything with AdWords the obvious thing to do is examine the BIDS for AdWords that it receives and figure out a VALUE for each AdWord.

      By setting up a rival site and BIDDING AGAINST HIMSELF this guy drove up the VALUE of his AdWords.

      How is this not obvious? Google just coded the free market.

    2. Re:Forgot some experiments... by astralbat · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't make any sense.
      You would still expect higher bids to result in higher positioning and therefore resulting in more click throughs. The article is stating the opposite effect under certain situations where you dramatically decrease your price per word.

    3. Re:Forgot some experiments... by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I may be mistaken, but I also believe that he may have tripped a dupe content type filter. If he created another website with completely duplicate content, and then created an adwords account with completely duplicate ads, google could interpret that as attempting to game the adwords.

      It may appear that he is trying to own the advertising space to the right by paying for the same ads at differnt levels, effectively owning all positions. Google does not want that to happen as it will allow those with larger budgets to effectively take all first result page slots.

      TFA doesn't give timeframe from launch to bid change, so it is possible that at the same time he changed his bid, google penalized the new adWords account for running parallel to his original one.

    4. Re:Forgot some experiments... by MemeRot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's a pretty good theory. Also a proven track record probably figures into their algorithm somewhere. So when one account had generated a lot of click thrus for a long time, and one was brand new (and overpaying) they probably looked at the new account with suspicion. If the new account is willing to throw money away with $1 per click, google will be glad to help them. But if they pick a more moderate amount, they probably stop getting the "I've got money to burn" special treatment. I think if the experiment continued for a long time the results would trend towards each other, minus whatever dupe penalty the second account gets. And of course page rank may also factor in somehow, and again with the proven track record of the first page, it's probably got many more links to it than the new site.

      By the way - wasn't this guy doing this to experiment with different ads and offers? There's always the chance with Cringely that he's just completely wrong in saying that the two sites were identical. The whole point of the experiment was to make them not identical.

  7. Honorable Sir, by EmoryBrighton · · Score: 4, Funny
    To be honest, I just checked, and while there are 1,030,000 Google results for "Cringely," there are no ads at all on the results page, indicating -- as many have long suspected -- that I have no commercial value whatsoever.
    No Way! I'd pay for you NOT to write!
    --
    Rule 2: Writing a spec is like writing code for a brain to execute.
  8. Google scares me, this I know! by mister_llah · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've said it before, I'll say it again. Google is a company. They are out to make a profit.

    Companies grow from profit, Google has grown a lot. To maintain growth percentages (which as you become gi-normous like Google, becomes harder to do) ... you need to branch out and you may also do things that may be questionable.

    I think that paid search priority is somewhat ethically questionable, but I am not at all surprised.

    Given that Google has been taking efforts to make themselves appear even more friendly to the open source community (those huge contributions awhile back) ... I think with enough contact/interest from people in the community that Google may become interested in sharing these algorithms (good public relations never hurt) ...

    Who knows, though?

    ===

    However, Google doing things that are questionable and quite publically, in my opinion, spin a dangerous message for the future. They may be progressing into a more pervasive position than Microsoft in the years to come, with increased power comes increased corruption.

    Scary stuff!

    --
    MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
    http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
    1. Re:Google scares me, this I know! by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Then start your own non-profit search engine company.

      Seriously, why do people here think they should be allowed to do anything they want, but others should not be afforded the same liberties? Google is a company made up of people that are exercising their freedom to create a company. You don't like it? Start a competitor that isn't evil. Can't do that? Well then cry me a river about your freedoms, you don't have to use google, and they don't owe you a god damned thing.

    2. Re: Google scares me, this I know! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Google scares me! This I know,
      for ibiblio tells me so.
      Little ads to It belong;
      My site is weak but It is strong.

  9. Cringely answers own question by NathanBFH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cringely, near the end of his article, drones on and on about how he has "no idea what the heck is happening here." But, in fact, he very clearly states what is going on at the beginning of the article:

    Google places you higher in the rankings of of paid search results based partly on your volume of click-throughs because, again as Cringely very claearly pointed out, the more people click the more money Google makes.

    Why then, Cringely, is it so hard to understand that since the first site has been opperating for what I assume to be months or even years, it would more easily place at the top of the paid search results than the brand new experimental site you created?

    Your experiment proves what you already knew: popular click throughs means higher placement for less money. What don't you get?

    1. Re:Cringely answers own question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.
      Let's say the new site was created and the ads that are $1 now sit on page 1. So, they are the first ones seen. They generate a lot of revenue because they are on the first page. Once they get dropped to $0.40 they get bumped to page 3 let's say. So, people don't go to page 3 as much. So the link isn't hit as much. Thus, not as much revenue. Also being that it's a new site, it's not linked, referenced, etc by anyone. So, it's ranking is even less (I'm pretty sure the ads would be doing some relevance on search string to page ranking as well). So what's there not to understand? Seems like the test is not really well thought out.

      All the while, his old site is still at the same place, making the same money because it's been established for a year and what not.

    2. Re:Cringely answers own question by pmc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The point is that the test site (at $1 per click) had similar ad word performance with the original site. When the adwords cost is dropped by a factor of two the effectiveness of the ad drops by an order of magnitude. Which seems a little weird.

      There are two possible explanations here. The first is that by a pure fluke the tester managed to pick the adwords cost/click that exactly compensated for the newness of the site (as the performance of the test site and the adwords site was the same) and that when the price was reduced the ad went into a twilight zone of uselessness. The second is that google, as part of the algorithm to place adwords, punishes people who reduce their adwords cost/click.

      I think the first is pretty unlikely.

      The test that needs done is to start a third trial site at $0.40 and look at that - if it shows similar effectiveness as the $1 test site and $0.10 original site, then that would demonstrate reasonably convincingly that Google punishes people who reduce their adwords cost/click.

    3. Re:Cringely answers own question by TallMatthew · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There's another possibility ... depending on the search term used, the placement of the ad in relation to other ads bound to the same search term might have shoved it to the second page of search results.

      My experience has been unless you're somewhere near the top of the adwords list on the first page (and you pay more per hit obviously), your hits will plummet precipitously, not necessarily because Google is spiking the algorithm, but because people who conduct searches get what they want in the first few listings and don't see your ad.

    4. Re:Cringely answers own question by Davorama · · Score: 1

      He drones on because at the time (a couple of months ago) the analisys was just starting and he wanted to stir up some activity in his inbox. The results of come out in the weeks following and really should have been linked in the original post but oh well, you can find them easilly enough.

      http://www.pbs.org/cringely/archive/

      --

      Davo -- Free speech, free software, AND free beer.

    5. Re:Cringely answers own question by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      Since Google *wants* to fill every advertising position, my guess is that decreasing your pay-per-click has more to do with how much others have bid than with some scheme to punnish cost reducers. Example, if you were paying $1, and for your experiment you dropped that to $0.50, but 10 other advertisers were each paying $0.75, then you're going to drop pretty drastically in the ranks since there's now 10 other people paying more than you.

      Without knowing how much your competing advertisers are bidding, you can't make a lot of inference about unfair ranking practices as there'll always be that unknown.

    6. Re:Cringely answers own question by milette · · Score: 1

      At the time Google changed their AdWords pricing model, I had over 20,000 words running in a new, and relatively low-spending account (A few thousand $ per month.)

      Overnight, tens of thousands of words that I had previously been able to bid $.05 per click and with high enough CTRs that they stayed running INSTANTLY were disabled and demanding anywhere between $.10 to $5.00 per click!

      Suddenly, the business went from profitable, to a total LOSS.

      As an experiment, I tried the following:

      First, I took a list of 1,000 keywords and uploaded them to the new account -- out of the 1,000, at least 915 of the keywords were demanding MORE than $.05 per click to be activated.

      Then, I took the exact same list, and pasted into a friend's long-standing and high-monthy-spend account (Over $10,000 per month). Over 900 of the keywords were ACCEPTED at $.05 per click.

      How can Google explain this? Certainly nothing on their site says that they give 'preferential' treatment to advertisers with either longer-active or higher-spending accounts. At least if they did that, we'd KNOW the game was rigged and could go elsewhere.

      Oh ya, and the bunk about buying keywords for as little as $.01 per click -- that's pretty much a fairy tale. Out of the 20,000 keywords I previously had running, only a handful were accepted at $.01 per click -- and the funny thing was that after they started getting traffic and clickthroughs, the price went UP for those too. :(

  10. Just a thought by mikkom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just a speculative thought because no one really know about googles algorithms.

    The result may be due to the original pages higher pagerank. I wouldn't be surprised if google would give higher position to "better" sites even in ads. In Googles context, higher pagerank means "better" site.

  11. Re:Cringley discussed this back in September by NathanBFH · · Score: 1

    I'd be interested in the replies from Google, but I can't find them on the link you provided? My eyes must be going bad, haha! Are they there and I just don't see them, or are they at another URL?

  12. Anti-google hooligan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    By not supporting everything google does, you are obviously anti-google! Prepare to be modded down into the flamebait abyss you belong in!

  13. Hmm... by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have an alternate explanation. I believe what existed before the guy's experiment was a more-or-less stable "ecology" around those particular keywords. There were probably a number of people paying a premium for a limited number of clicks for those keywords, well above the 10-cent level he was originally paying for. Google probably sorted the higher-paying advertisers onto the best pages and left the dime-a-click ones for others and everyone was more-or-less happy.

    Then when the experiment began, it disrupted things. The advertisers who were initially offering a premium found themselves with fewer clicks as their ads were placed on less advantageous pages, or when their ads were displaced entirely. They then changed their own behavior, perhaps by choosing different keywords and/or paying higher rates. This would have cascaded, causing other advertisers to change their behaviors.

    The end result would've been a shift in AdWords' performance with those keywords, one that wouldn't easily be reversible, and which could account for the poor performance when the experimenter reduced his bids for clicks.

    1. Re:Hmm... by xtracto · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, I think what he saw was just the result of the typical supply/demand theory. The demand/supply combination of that specific word stated an average value for it. He payed $0.10 for a steak of 15,000 hits per day.

      When he increased the price to $1.00 he also changed the demand, so of course all the "market" (for that specific word) was modified, until his demand changes where assimilated by the market. When he lowered again the price, the supply/demand was not the initial one, and that was the reason of the changes in the number of clicks. With the new combination, $0.40 per click was "worth" 1200 clicks.

      The only missing piece is (and was not clear for me from the article) if the original site clicks decreased after doing the price change.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    2. Re:Hmm... by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

      That would have resulted in a change in his original site's clickthroughs. Cringely says (less clearly than I would like..) that this did not happen.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    3. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes this seems right... but would he have not 'stolen' clicks from his origianl site to his new site, which it seemingly did not?

      So I'd guess these new clicks came from other advertising pages who would have noticed a big drop in their click through numbers, and upped the amount they are paying for ther advertisments - lowing the value of his inital amount further.

  14. Advertising is a free market, not a dictatorship by gtoomey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I use Google adwords for various sites. Adwords seems to "reward" longstanding customers with lower rates like other businesses. I see the "minimum bid" changing all the time in relation to the mixture of bids for keywords

    If you ask google to justify every detail of their pricing, you may as well demand it of oil companies & every other business.

    If you don't like it, dont use it.

  15. I don't see anything wrong with this. by nettdata · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, I don't think Google is redefining the "law" of demand and answer... they are just better set up to take full advantage of it.

    And I don't see anything wrong with this.

    Sure, in some cases, larger companies have a competitive advantage when it comes to this.

    Mind you, larger companies also have a competitive advantage when they have a crap-load more money than smaller companies... they can hire a boat-load of top-knotch engineers, spend way more on advertising, etc. Does this mean it's unethical? No. That's the way it works.

    Of course, there could be Monopoly issues, but I doubt that they are of issue in this case.

    So, do we need an ethical framework? No. The smaller company needs a better negotiator to enter into the agreement and get the better rate and the service they want.

    --



    $0.02 (CDN)
    1. Re:I don't see anything wrong with this. by Funakoshi · · Score: 1

      Not a shot at the parent, just a note in general about competitive advantage...

      A competitive advantage is a result of a company implementing a value-creating strategy that is currently not being implemented by a competitor, or the result of implementing such a strategy more effectively than a competitor. Money is not a competitive advantage.

      Moreover, what companies should truly seek is a sustainable competitive advantage, which is one that cannot be (easily) duplicated by a competitor. This is a technology site, not a business theory site, but the reality is that the question posed regarding competitve advantage is a great example of someone using a business buzz word to create the illusion of business intellect. You cannot create either a competitve advantage, or, more importantly, a sustainable competitive advantage by using this technology(before responding to that statement, please keep in mind that, as far as I know, no one knows precisely how the algorithm works, and thus, cannot based a strategy around the technology).

    2. Re:I don't see anything wrong with this. by nettdata · · Score: 1

      So, would it be better to say that money better enables competitive advantages?

      Let's face it, two companies may be doing marketing, but the large multi-national with a $5 million global marketing budget will have a huge advantage over the home-based company with $5k.

      The end result is that the smaller company, due to lack of funds, cannot implement the same marketing strategy as the larger, well-funded company. Is this not a competitive advantage?

      Sure, the marketing itself is the advantage, but it is a direct result of budget.

      (not arguing, just looking for clarification and seeking enlightenment)

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
  16. Ignorance of the Law by Quirk · · Score: 1
    ...the law of demand and answer?

    Google on the law of demand and answer. It would seem the law of demand and answer doesn't register. Maybe it's outside the law, maybe an outrage. "I demand an answer", with an implied, or else I'll tell my Mom!

    Maybe it's the law of the hidden CIA prisons, but, surely, if it's the law, well then, as we demand so shall we receive an answer.

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen
  17. Why? by Chris+Bradshaw · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I don't see why this would be necessary... It's important to remember that the company paying to put their ads up is fully capable of seeing where their business is coming from (http referer:), even down to the very search terms used to find thier site, or the contrary... The ball is in the advertisers court to research and fine-tune their site, as well as cultivate a good relationship with Google in order to generate the best results. If we look at cable television for a comaprison of ad services, you have way more information at your disposal in the online marketplace than you do anywhere else, and the let's face it, the free market has and always will be a cut-throat arena where things are not always fair. As long as paid search terms stay out of the "true" search results, then "GAME ON" as far as I'm concerned.

    I'm assuming that the lawsuit posted earlier this week was what prompted this - which by the way, in my opinion is total nonsense and has a snowballs chance in hell of winning in court.

    --
    Get your Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool Here for FREE! - http://fedora.redhat.com
    1. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually using Anal-ytics they can monitor the purchase-rate of ads too, not just the click thru.

  18. Quality score by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    There is also this quality score factor that will seriously impact the bid. It appears that if your adwords is performing badly, youe min bid amount can increase many fold!

  19. Google Has become Advertising Platform by xoip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Long gone are the days of getting a simple answer from Google without advertising. As a search engine, it still does a very good job but, there are far too many people out there thinking that Google is the Only online advertising platform. This may have begun skew the results in favor of sites that have no real content other than a bunch of google ads. Google wins either way, click on the paid ads based on the search or ads loaded on the landing page of the search result. At some point, Google will loose it's lustre.

    1. Re:Google Has become Advertising Platform by hublan · · Score: 1

      At some point, Google will loose it's lustre.

      As long as we don't go back to the golden days of pop-unders, -overs, -outers and more flash extravaganza, who cares?

      Or is that really what you want? Didn't think so.

      --
      My spoon is too big.
  20. welll by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 1

    Google are doing whatever they want to in order to make a profit, even if that means messing around with the price per click like this. There is a reason that they are number one in the market place right now and by being in this position it enables them to set the prices they want to charge, it maybe not be ethical but it is profitable and that is all that matters in today's world of e-commerce. With businesses such as spyware and spamming still being huge

  21. Google has ethics: make money by tod_miller · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It works for all, it is capitalism at its best:

    Anyone can bid prices, but the costs you need vary based on how well your ads do.

    Useful pages that are well typed to keywords (lemonhead ads for a search for lemon chicken would have to pay more for instance) are good for us, which means good for google, because google want to make more money.

    Advertisers are stupid, they want to be top of EVERY SEARCH no matter how useful it is, and they want it cheap.

    Google says, the less relevant you are to the search, the higher the click through, the higher the cost.

    If you happen to convert your audience, and you now become more relevant, you prices go down.

    So if I start selling neckties to skaters, I might have to stump up a bit in the long run, but if I hit a craze, they would go down, until some chump makes his own neck ties and starts bidding above me.

    I think it is dumb to make this public, and the guy behind this has an ulterior motive anyway.

    Misleading ads change the equation, but what can you do.

    please type the word in this image: revamps
    random letters - if you are visually impaired, please email us at pater@slashdot.org

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
    1. Re:Google has ethics: make money by EmoryBrighton · · Score: 1

      Google has been beating market analyst's expectation with absurdly high numbers again and aging [1]. And I tell you what; the demand for ads is NOT increasing at the same speed that the profits are growing. The internet economy is still growing anemically. These days it seems that you are not measuring the rate at which Google is growing, but the rate at witch the Google growth is growing =D ! It's the fact that people are getting SCAMMED. Mod me down on this if you want, paying more isn't giving you more. Paying more put you at a higher bracket, now can make more money from you That is if the theory behind Cringey's friend is correct.

      Let's try this analogy: You are in New York, you decide to open up a business selling stilettos [2] but you are not getting many customers. You go to the local ad company and make a request for marketing. I'd like more women of ages 20 - 35 (or similar demographic) to be exposed to my store. Instead of giving you the price of each billboard/newspaper per month they say: You know kiddo, we have other shoe stores wanting to advertise for that same demographic, how about this: you choose a price, whatever you want for each customer that walks into your door with our ads. The more you pay, the more customers walk into your store. You give them the money, women flock to your store you are good.

      Now you decide to go and open a store with a different name on another side of town. You sell the same exact merchandise same requested demographic. You you're your brother for the same negotiation with the ad agency, except you pay TEN times more for each customer. You end up getting only 20% more customers for 1000% the price. So you say screw this, I'll pay the ad agency only 4x the money. Ad company looks at you: Ah, he was paying good money but decided to downgrade... We'll show him. And your new store gets 20% less customers although paying 400% more in ads. Are you getting your money worth for it? What if that was the Military paying for ads for recruitment? A company can only earn so much (I cant' remember on top of my head it's between 10 and 20 percent profit). Halliburton is being demonized for overcharging at max 5% over quota. What if Halliburton says: We'll deliver 20% more if you pay us 1000% ? The company would be eaten alive by media scrutiny. What is Halliburton charged 400% more to the feds than the state government? Well since the states have quotas while the feds can print their money they should be charged more... eh?

      This is not even an auction. Halliburton would burned at the stake for this behaviour. It has been said and let me repeat it, Google may strive to be non evil but IT CAN NOT. They are a public company and by definition they must work to earn more money. It's the law!

      But you say: I'm a consumer, I don't buy ads, why should this bother me? Ah but the more each company pays for ads the more they must earn... and you are their revenue.

      [1]a - http://www.webpronews.com/news/ebusinessnews/wpn-4 5-20050421GoogleBeatsAbsurdlyHighExpectations.html
      [1]b - http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,69291, 00.html
      [2] Women's high heel shoes. Women wearing these seem to exist in real life, not just movies. I'm still looking for hard proof.

      --
      Rule 2: Writing a spec is like writing code for a brain to execute.
    2. Re:Google has ethics: make money by EmoryBrighton · · Score: 1

      Bah, it's 5 AM... Errata: 1 - You you're your brother for.. -> You send in your brother for 2 - now can make more money from you -> now Google can make more money from you

      --
      Rule 2: Writing a spec is like writing code for a brain to execute.
    3. Re:Google has ethics: make money by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1
      There is a flaw in your analogy. You didn't build a new store across town, you built it right next door to your original one. Not only that, but the city has laws against shop owners building their locations too close to each other.

      It is entirely possible that this man was penalized for running duplicate ads for duplicate products concurrently. Google states that this IS NOT allowed. If they allowed this strategy, a business with deep enough pockets could bid their ads at differnt price teirs to effectively own every ad slot on the first page. This is not something google wants to allow.

      Cringley doesn't recognize this, nor does he recognize the site age factor. There are ALOT of undefined aspects here. Did the tester register the new domain name as himself? Would a simple automated whois lookup discover that both sites belonged to the same man? If so, google may have become suspicious of the activity.

      This experiment is flawed. In order to test the bidding algo, you need to have identical ads and landing pages so that only one variable changes, the bids. From an automated systems perspective, that appears suspiciously like ad spam. Why does no one recognize this. This may have occured because google was attempting to keep their product legit. A couple of scenarios for you:

      • Google is trying to protect your investment. If you were advertising a product on adWords and began to do very well, how would you feel if a competitor came along, cut and pasted your ads into their own and then began to overbid you? You would be screaming at the top of your lungs that google needed to do something to stop that behavior. In an attempt to prevent this from happening they penalize anyone who behaves this way.
      • They are protecting the integrity of their model Google doesn't want someone to come in and purchase all the advertising space for a set of keywords. To prevent a "monopoly" type situation, each advertiser is allowed to bid for one slot. Now the bidding, and quite likely other undefined elements, detirmines how high that slot is. If you begin to create separate accounts so that you can appear to be different advertisers, but in reality are the same company - you have just gamed the system. If this happens, google loses credibility, marketshare, and most importantly money. It is in their best interest to prevent this from happening. Trying to stick to the "Do no evil" policy as close as they can , and also not piss off a potential revenue source, they penalize you for your behavior instead of banning you outright.


      BTW, I'm no Google fanboi. I recognze that they are moving into a position where a watchful eye is close to becoming a neccesity. I'm just not to quick to jump to a "Google is scamming you" position based on a test that is fundamentally flawed.
    4. Re:Google has ethics: make money by tod_miller · · Score: 1

      Oh man, you made no sense. I think your brain got stuck on the idea of 20-35 y/o women being exposed.

      Seriously, no sense.

      --
      #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  22. Too much inference, old bean! by mister_llah · · Score: 1

    I said nothing but that it is ethically questionable. I don't recall saying that they should be stopped, nor do I remember crying about freedoms being infringed.

    I was pointing out the fact they are a company, it seems obvious to you or me, however, some people seem to think they are the second coming.

    ===

    They are not breaking the law, doing what they are doing, while I wouldn't do it and think that it is only a sign of future problems... if they want to do it, that's their business (pun not intended)...

    Cheers!

    --
    MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
    http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
  23. Adwords by softplus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Adwords does placement on more than just the cost-per-click. This fact is spelled out all over their website, try something like https://adwords.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?a nswer=10215&topic=114 :

    "We want to ensure that your keywords get a fair chance to run and that we do all we can to properly gauge their performance. We use a Quality Score to do this. Each keyword is given a Quality Score based on data specific to your account, including your keyword's clickthrough rate (CTR), relevance of ad text, historical keyword performance, the quality of your ad's landing page, and other relevancy factors.

    Quality Score = keyword's CTR + relevance of your ad text + historical keyword performance + other relevancy factors

    Your keyword's Quality Score and maximum CPC (at the keyword or Ad Group level) determine your ad's rank on Google search and content sites. (For the top positions above Google search results, however, we use your keyword's actual CPC.) Remember that improving the relevance of your ad text and keywords will increase your keyword's Quality Score and reduce the price you pay when someone clicks on your ad."

    If you start a new campaign, it is no wonder that Google will not be able to give you the same placement as with a campaign that has run for years. It's new, it's unknown, the visitors / clicks are unknown, heck - even the cost-per-click value is jumping around. It looks weird to the system, it gets placed lower or even removed from some of the results.

    What happens in the end: those who target properly (right keywords) and have a good ad copy get lots of clicks, those clicks end up making your placement better (while paying the same amount of money). The users are voting for your ad (whether they buy or not is partially unknown to Google -- "partially" because you can track it through Google if you want to).

    A new factor coming into play is the landing page - the page that the ad takes you to. According to their blog ( http://adwords.blogspot.com/ ) they are now evaluating the quality of the landing page. So if you search for "children" and click on the "Get children at ebay" ad, and the page they link to does not offer "children", then sooner or later (heh, hard to guess, it depends on the amount of automatisation behind the checks) Google will either remove the ad or move it down, while the advertiser is still paying the same amount per click.

    Is that evil? Is that being greedy? or is that just watching out for the "user experience"?

  24. I wonder.... by squoozer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    .... if this guy didn't trip over a duplicate content filter. I would be very surprised if Google didn't check to make sure it wasn't being fed the same content from multiple sources. From Googles point of view checking for duplicates is a good thing. They don't want their natural listings (or ad listings I imagine) to be filled with hundreds of copies of exactly the same site.

    I would have been more interested to see the results of a test that modified the wording of ads and how that affects placement.

    Finally, I wish I was getting 15000 click throughs a day. Sigh.

    --
    I used to have a better sig but it broke.
    1. Re:I wonder.... by softplus · · Score: 2, Informative

      The duplicate content filter is for search results. It IS against Googles TOS to submit multiple ad units to the same keyword with the same site behind it, however if you have two sites you can gladly compete for adwords placement with yourself :-)

    2. Re:I wonder.... by grimJester · · Score: 1

      They don't want their natural listings (or ad listings I imagine) to be filled with hundreds of copies of exactly the same site.

      A new copy of an old site may well be a scam or a phishing site. _If_ the guy tripped a dupe filter, that means Google just let it slide as long as he paid 10x what the original site paid.

    3. Re:I wonder.... by squoozer · · Score: 1

      That would make sense. While Google were making enough money off him they a willing to turn a blind eye. Perhaps, though, the duplicate filter is expensive to run and a huge drop in what he was willing to pay was enough to trigger it to run. My guess is stepping away from the average is the quickest way to get Google to black list you. I know one of the sites I run swithed from php to jsp and the number of clicks went through the floor. I put this down to google getting scared that the site had been taken over by undesirables. It's back to what it was and more now though.

      --
      I used to have a better sig but it broke.
    4. Re:I wonder.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Can I ask a stupid question since I don't understand AdWords fully.

      If this guy is paying $0.10 per AdWord and is getting 15,000 click-throughs per day ... correct me if I'm wrong, but he's paying $1,500 per day to Google for advertising? $500,000 per year?

      What do you do if you get 15,000 click-throughs per day but only 15 sales because of it?

    5. Re:I wonder.... by CommanderData · · Score: 1

      If this guy is paying $0.10 per AdWord and is getting 15,000 click-throughs per day ... correct me if I'm wrong, but he's paying $1,500 per day to Google for advertising? $500,000 per year?

      What do you do if you get 15,000 click-throughs per day but only 15 sales because of it?

      1) Price your item higher than $100
      2) ????
      3) Profit!
      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
  25. Re:Sadly its all true: An insiders view of Google by SpecBear · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I skimmed this and thought, "Hmm, this looks like the kind of text that would be generated by a script." A couple of minutes of searching (via Google, ironically enough) turned up the Automatic Complaint Generator.

    Sigh. Remember when trolling was an art form, when people would put time, effort, and (dare I say it?) heart into inciting flame wars, even when posting as Anonymous Cowards. The kids these days are just phoning it in, and that saddens this oldtimer's heart.

  26. I welcome relevant ads by core+plexus · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I know there's a lot of google-haters, but I have to say...

    I was thrilled with the ad-block extensions of Firefox, and welcomed the relevant ads from google. I'll admit, I have actually clicked on, and even (shocked) bought a few things.

    I hate desperate ads, like those on TV and everywhere else. Advertisers realise that they are failing.

    When/if google starts flash, popups, then start to complain.

    Tired of online retailers charging extra to ship products to Alaska?

  27. Re:Sadly its all true: An insiders view of Google by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    Internet users need to learn how good discursive writing works. Look at the above, for example. Vast, barren paragraphs neglecting to make any specific points, and not actually arguing the nebulous ideas it does present (and repeat, and repeat, and repeat). Has discursive writing been taken out of the curriculum?

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  28. Re:Sadly its all true: An insiders view of Google by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    Well, that certainly explains the poor form on display. Would it really be so hard to write a script which wrote good complaining?

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  29. Re:Cringley discussed this back in September by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amazing. I wonder why that URL wasn't in the submission... oh wait.

  30. Re:Cringley discussed this back in September by 1u3hr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Karma-whoring made easy. Post the same link as in the summary, and get modded "informative".

  31. Im sorry by grungefade · · Score: 0

    Im sorry but it pisses me off knowing google controls many aspects that are dishonest. How much money is google making to fraud clicks? These questions go unanswered. There are many situations out there where people are running bogus sites and putting up ads. They get paid for bogus clicks along with Google. Google knows this. And until people become more aware and start monitoring the relationship of visits and clicks from google ads, google is going to take advantage of the situation as long as it can.

    This is only speaking from an experienced point of view. Ive managed many Adwords along with much programing and server monitoring. There is many inconsistencies that are never brought to advertisers attention. But advertisers have no choice but to pay. Their company and business rely on those ads.

  32. Something that I only realised the other day.. by Idimmu+Xul · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Google not only knows what you like, thanks to the things you search for, but it also knows who your friends are, and what they like thanks to relationships formed through GMail invites and Orkut which could come in very handy when it comes to targetted advertising in the Christmas season (and any other gift buying season).

    And I'd be quite appreciative of that as I've no idea what to get my Dad this year, and a few casually placed Google Adwords undermining my own thought process wouldn't go a miss!

    --
    The problem with slashdot is that most of its users were bullied and stuffed into lockers as kids!
  33. Article is just wrong by Proto23 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First of all if he gets 15000 @ 0.15 clicks per day he is paying $1500,- a day in advertising that is $547.500 per year in advertising alone. His friend must be an internet miljonair! I somehow doubt that such a large operation would execute the test as described in the article. I think the figures are a bit inflated to make it a better story. Furthermore I use Google Adwords for my company (http://www.tiouw.com/). I spend around $5000 a year on Google. As everyone who has ever worked with AdWords knows is that when you change your ad, it changes your click through rate. Changing URL's, text, anything has a direct result. It takes some time before the system gets used to the changes and then you are back on track. I expect that if the company in the article would have run for some time with the new settings it would generate more and more hits. Finally, tests have shown that people do not click on the no.1 position, but prefer no. 2 or 3.

    1. Re:Article is just wrong by pH7.0 · · Score: 0

      "..15000 @ 0.15 clicks per day he is paying $1500,- a day in advertising that is $547.500 per year.."

      It was an experiment. Since he finish it in 36 days , it was an $50,000 experiment.

  34. Vote with your dollars, not your brand of ethics by Heembo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    are organizations like Google redefining the law of demand and answer?

    You mean supply and demand, the cornerstone of capitalism? More like - Google is redefining the rules of advertising and IT for the entire world.

    To what extent does this imply a competitive advantage for larger companies?

    Well, just like the superbowl, only companies with big bucks can get prime time advertising real estate.

    Do we need an ethical framework to direct companies to make such algorithms open source?"

    Keep your ethics and morality out of my consumer choices. If I dont like how google does business, I will stop buying from them. I live on Kauai, and I turned my girlfriends dying massage business into a thriving business (www.kauaioutcallmassage.com) spending only 20$/month over the last 2 years. Google has been incredible for my family, please don't rain on or change my parade with Google!

    --
    Horns are really just a broken halo.
  35. Too expensive by trollable · · Score: 2, Insightful

    To be honest, I just checked, and while there are 1,030,000 Google results for "Cringely," there are no ads at all on the results page, indicating -- as many have long suspected -- that I have no commercial value whatsoever.

    Minimum price for 'cringely': $0.42
    Too expensive for me..

    BTW, the article is quite bad. All the important information is missing like the positions, CTR, minimum prices and CPC. OTOH, the algo is probably quite complex and it seems the higher bidder is not the winner.

  36. Re:Cringley discussed this back in September by Gollum · · Score: 2

    No, duh?!

    That's the exact same link that the original poster provided.

    Yes, an article from September is hardly "news".

    Move along, nothing to see here.

  37. Just follow the money... by JanMark · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think Google puts a stiff penalty on lowering your price-per-click. I am sure most advertisers will (sooner of later) try is they can lower their rice-per-click. Google's algorithm will start to give them bad ratings immediately and most will be back to the old price in no time. The few that accept the hit in click troughs, will cost Google some money, but the ones that go back to the higher price will more than make up for that. Just do the math...

    --
    -- (:> jms cs.vu.nl (_) --"---
  38. Google haters? by mister_llah · · Score: 1

    You'll see all of them around 1, 0, and -1.

    For some reason... there is a tendency for anything that isn't directly supporting Google to get modded down.

    This includes relevant points.

    ===

    So for the most part, unless you have something against Google to say, you're pretty much 'preaching to the converted'...

    Cheers!

    --
    MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
    http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
  39. A less nefarious explanation by sstidman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not to burst anybody's tin-foil bubble, but there's possibly another less nefarious explanation to what is going on. As we know, Google wants to keep their Adword algorithm secret. It's quite possible that Google realized long ago that folks could map out their algorithm by simply playing with the input parameters just like Cringely's friend was doing. In order to prevent the inevitable reverse engineering of the algorithm, they might have put in some code to randomize the effectiveness of the results when Google has detected that someone is changing the parameters. If that guy wants to see if Google is really punishing him for lowering his price, he should try setting the price back to $1 and see if things go back to what they were before. I'll bet they won't.

    Of course, another possibility is that they have a bug in their code. I've heard that some programmers actually make mistakes sometimes.

    --
    Send/track messages to 100K people: www.xPressAlert.com
    1. Re:A less nefarious explanation by pH7.0 · · Score: 0

      google already answered that:

      http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20051013. html
      So I ran their conclusions by Jeff Huber at Google, who is in charge of engineering for AdWords. I asked a simple question: Is that what you were doing?

      "In short, no," said Jeff.

      We are not intentionally introducing "noise factors" or any other perturbations in the style the proposed theory suggests to affect near-term or long-term revenues.

      I know it's not quite as exciting, but our model is pretty simple. We want our users to have the most relevant possible content, so we work really hard on an on-going basis to optimize end-user perceived quality. We want our advertisers to have a great return on their investment spent with us...

    2. Re:A less nefarious explanation by sstidman · · Score: 1

      Dude...great find!! Very interesting that the researchers came to the same suspicion as myself. You missed what to me is the most relevant point, though:

      I think I understand the experiment's spirit and intent, but the implementation could also have run into our double-serving policy where multiple ads are attempting to target the same terms and serving the same or highly similar (re-named) content.

      So there you have it. They appear to be able to tell if someone is abusing their double-serving policy. It seems likely that this somehow factored into what was witnessed by Cringely's friend.

      --
      Send/track messages to 100K people: www.xPressAlert.com
  40. Try a third answer. by shmlco · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Try a third answer. Many factors make up the price a click and and ad placement, including the AGE OF THE SITE. Newer sites, and ads, have been simply found to be less relevant that more established sites and ads. The only way to compensate (to a certain degree) is to pay more.

    So start a new site with zero page rank and it will have to pay more to get the same placement, if it can do so at all. Older sites will pay less because they've been around longer, and their ads will have shown themselves to actually have been relevant.

    It boils down to a simple axiom: Google rewards relevance.

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    1. Re:Try a third answer. by MrNougat · · Score: 1

      I agree wholly.

      Unfortunately, the author of the article only says, "A bit more experimenting showed a similar effect and he was never again able to match the success of his original site ..." I'm guessing that means the tester upped his per word back to $1.00, but wasn't able to get back to 15,000 hits.

      Provided that's true, the intervening 1,200 hit days would have dropped the relevance score, which would have dropped the placement and made the hits/day after going back to the $1 price not quite get to 15,000.

      I imagine that over a longer period of time, all of this would have smoothed out. And the fact that there was "a bit more experimenting" that is not detailed in the article at all is really sloppy reporting, especially when the author claims to "no idea what the heck is happening."

      It's just another conspiracy theory, methinks.

      --
      Web 2.0 == Giant Blogspam Circle Jerk
    2. Re:Try a third answer. by zaphle · · Score: 1

      It boils down to a simple axiom: Google rewards relevance

      First of all, relevance is not something the owner of the site creates, it's what google provides, so this doesn't make sense. You actually mean: this is how Google establishes relevance.

      Now, suppose I want to launch some product competing with existing products, only with better properties (i.e. electric car). How does Google reward that? In order for me to launch this product, I would need to pay a huge amount of money.

      I understand that Google needs to come up with some algorithm to be able to find relevant sites, however, if this algorithm is closed source, you basically don't know what it is you're eating. On the other hand, if Google opens up this source, it is in a way giving away one of their trade secrets, so I can understand to some extent that they don't. I have no answer to this one myself, I just thought this was an interesting matter.

      --
      And what if there's nothing behind the door until it is being opened?
    3. Re:Try a third answer. by aug24 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think you're right. In fact the grandparent appears to have misread the articles slightly, as Cringely never states that the new site got the same or even similar performance to the old one (although he goes on to describe a drop from 15,000 to 1,200 clicks when the adwords price was dropped).

      So it makes perfect sense to suggest that the algorithm is:

      Established site @ 10c -> 15,000 clicks
      New site @ 1$ -> prolly about 15,000 clicks because the high price counteracts the newness
      New site @ 40c -> 1,200 clicks

      None of which requires any penalty for change of adword price, only for newness. Unless we know how much 'up' a dollar a word will buy for a brand new site vs an established site, we have no reason to call foul.

      In other words: unless he leaves the experiment running (or risks changing his old site), we have insufficient data to conclude that Google is evil.

      Justin.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    4. Re:Try a third answer. by pmc · · Score: 1

      New site @ 1$ -> prolly about 15,000 clicks because the high price counteracts the newness

      The point I was making is that it unlikely (but possible) that the site owner happened to pick the adword cost/click that counteracted the pagerank boost the old site got.

      I even suggested how to test for it. Here's another one: setup two identical sites, advertise one with $0.25 and one with $1.00 per click for some suitable adword. See what the click rates are. Then change both to $0.50, and see what the click rates are. The only difference in the sites would be the adwords history. That would tell you if there was a mechanism for penalising people who drop their click prices.

    5. Re:Try a third answer. by aug24 · · Score: 1

      I think we are in violent agreement ;-)

      If you read carefully though, Cringely doesn't even state the click rates were even. So there's not even enough data to support his own conclusion.

      Incidentally, I would suggest even your test won't prove it, unless the two sites got the same click-throughs at different rates, because we know (well, we think) that google puts well-clicked-on sites higher, and there will be a feedback between high price and high click rate that creates higher apparent relevance. This will then skew the results when the prices are equalised.

      Tricky stuff this, isn't it! ;-)

      J.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    6. Re:Try a third answer. by shmlco · · Score: 1
      Google provides relevance RANKING, something else entirely.

      As such, I meant what I said. Create relevant, popular content, and Google with reward you with a higher page rank. Create relevant advertising pointing to said site, and Google will reward you with higher ad placements and with a reduced cost per click.

      Try gaming the system, creating content that doesn't match the keywords, ads that don't match the content, or any of a number of other things, and Google will most definitely NOT reward you.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    7. Re:Try a third answer. by yakovlev · · Score: 1
      Incidentally, I would suggest even your test won't prove it, unless the two sites got the same click-throughs at different rates, because we know (well, we think) that google puts well-clicked-on sites higher, and there will be a feedback between high price and high click rate that creates higher apparent relevance. This will then skew the results when the prices are equalised.
      Actually, this will be a good way to test if price change is one of their criteria. If price change is NOT a criteria, then the site that was originally advertised for $1.00 should continue to get more clicks at $.50 than the site that was originally advertised for $.10, due to the higher initial click-thru rate.

      If price change IS a significant criteria, then the site that was originally $.10 should get significantly more clicks at $.50 than the site originally advertised for $1.00, since the initially cheaper site will see a price increase, whereas the initially more expensive site will see a price decrease.

      Interesting test, and well worth performing, if I were an adwords user.

  41. Punishes? WTF? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    It's *ADVERTISING*... The more you pay the more you get... Did anyone really ever believe any different? The more you pay the bigger the incentive Google has to stick *your* advert on someone's page and on the more popular pages at that. Now say DOH! and slap your forehead.

    "Punishes" ...

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Punishes? WTF? by pmc · · Score: 1

      The whole point of the article is that Google does not work on "the more you pay the more you get". When the test site was at $0.40 it was getting less than the site at $0.10. Now, it is just barely possible that this is purely related to pagerank, but it is unlikely. I have also suggested a test to determine is it is pagerank that is causing the difference.

  42. Re:Advertising is a free market, not a dictatorshi by EmoryBrighton · · Score: 1
    If you ask google to justify every detail of their pricing, you may as well demand it of oil companies & every other business.
    But in the oil industry, the price goes up and down and every customer pays the same ammount. The difference ammount here is stratospheric AND it varies with each customer. While not illegal this does not justify a claim of "NOT EVIL"
    --
    Rule 2: Writing a spec is like writing code for a brain to execute.
  43. Advertising mechanisms by radu124 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This just shows that a newcomer company that is pouring a bucket of money into advertising can be about the same as successfull as an established one that does not. But once the newcomer decreases the ammount of advertising it starts sinking rapidly.

    From my point of view this is just normal, not some EVIL doing of Google.

  44. The Google Business Model by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Because of this, google can charge whatever they like and most people will pay it.
    They'll also get ripped off.

    Here's a common story:

    "I put Google AdSense on my website. I earned about $140.00, and Google was just getting ready to send me a check. Then, out of nowhere, Google sent me an email telling me I'd generated 'invalid clicks' and that my AdSense account was terminated, and all of my profits would be returned to the advertisers."

    Hundreds, if not thousands, of AdSense displayers just like me have faced this fate. But here's the question to AdWords advertisers. Have you ever seen a "refund" on your AdWords account due to some AdSense advertiser generating "invalid clicks" for your ad? I never did. Google confiscates the money from the AdSense displayer, but does not return the money to the related AdWords advertisers! That is to say, Google keeps the money that the AdWords advertisers paid to display their ads; and also keeps the money that they were supposed to pay out to the AdSense webmasters for displaying those ads.

    Google is making a killing on displayed advertisements for a lot of keywords and phrases, without paying out a penny to those who are displaying the ads on their pages. They're arbitrarily cancelling AdSense displayers' accounts for unspecified reasons, and if you try to determine why, you wind up in formletter hell. "Do No Evil," my arse.

    I've been on both sides of the fence. I advertised through AdWords, I displayed AdSense ads on my site. And Google decided to kill my AdSense account while I was on vacation, for "invalid clicks," and despite emails requesting details, they wouldn't bother to explain what that meant.

    I immediately pulled the AdSense ads from my sites and replaced them with Yahoo Publisher ads. Good news on that front, Yahoo is actually sending me checks. And I can guarantee you that I'll never again spend a penny on any Google service, be it AdWords or any other fee-based product they come up with.
    --
    "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
    1. Re:The Google Business Model by broeman · · Score: 1
      --

      (yes this can be compared with sex)
    2. Re:The Google Business Model by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder if it's any coincidence that if you search for a phrase in Google's "you had invalid clicks so we aren't going to pay you" letter (that phrase being "that invalid clicks have been generated on") in Google, you get 545 results, but if you perform the same search at MSN, you get 832 results.

      Things that make you go "hmm." MSN is rarely if ever better than Google at search results.

      --
      "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
    3. Re:The Google Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you have a problem with Google, follow them up with your local Trading Standards, or take them to the Small Claims Court.

      In the UK, this become increasingly easier to do - http://tradingstandards.gov.uk/ (free, quick and easy) and http://www.hmcourts-service.gov.uk/ (£30 for a small claim which you will get back if you win).

      If Google won't tell you what they cancelled your payment, then I am sure that they are legally required to give you your money.

    4. Re:The Google Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The same story happends to me. Google doesn't give any reason, even they don't reply to my mails.

      But it is interesting how google advertise their services with fastclick.com!

      If they don't use their ads service is because their service isn't as good as they defend.

    5. Re:The Google Business Model by pH7.0 · · Score: 0

      Are you suggest google will do something funny for $140??

      I know google do send out a lot of checks for amount larger than that.

      Like Cringely already pointed out: "...for most AdWords users who are probably making plenty of money from their campaigns otherwise -- as we now know from Nash -- they wouldn't be doing it at all."

      In reality "invalid clicks" is a real problem for google. I can't tell what happened to your site. May be a friend being too helpful? Or enemy...

      Paul

    6. Re:The Google Business Model by h_benderson · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If Google can detect fraudulent clicks, they should also be able to a) filter them out and pay you for the non-fraudulent ones and b) tell you when and by what IP each fraudulent click has been committed.

      Since they refuse to do this, I am lead to believe that Google is cheating on purpose. So much for our world saviour. Bastards.

    7. Re:The Google Business Model by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Hundreds, if not thousands, of AdSense displayers just like me have faced this fate.

      Hmm.

      Let's take a high estimate of 100,000 AdSense publishers having this happen. That'd be $14 million if the average lost is $140. Most of the people I've seen complain note numbers somewhere between $30 and $200, so it's probably a high estimate too.

      $14 million. For a company worth $120+ billion. They probably spend more than that on staplers.

    8. Re:The Google Business Model by MrDoh1 · · Score: 1

      And this makes it right, or at least less wrong how exactly?

      --
      I am Homer of Borg. Resistance is Fut.. Mmmmmmmm, Donuts!
    9. Re:The Google Business Model by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      It makes it unlikely that it's a deliberate thing.

    10. Re:The Google Business Model by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      So Google banning people and accusing them of click fraud is ok if they do it by accident?

    11. Re:The Google Business Model by musicmaster · · Score: 1

      > If Google can detect fraudulent clicks, they should also be able to
      > b) tell you when and by what IP each fraudulent click has been committed.

      No, they should not. Every strategy can be beaten. Including Google's strategy to find fraudulent clicks. So they intentionally keep this secret.

      But of course some of the rejected tricks are known:
        - Google is quite clear that texts like "click on my Google adds to sponsor my site" are not allowed
        - if most clicks come from one or a few IP addresses the case is clear.
        - with Google Analytics they can follow what happens with the click. If from your site 1 in 1000 clicks results in an order while other sites get 1 in 10 there is something fishy going on on your side.
        - with Google being the main source of visitors for many sites they know your user demography. If you get visitors from the whole world but most of your clicks come from New York they may know enough.

    12. Re:The Google Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You little clue.

      $120 billion is their stock worth. Not their generated revenue, and not their profits. Stock worth is not very correlated to revenue/profit really.

      Their quarterly profit estimate was $650 million a little while back off of $1 billion in revenue (so minus salaries, equipment costs, network traffic, etc. etc.). $14 million would be 2% of that, but that percentage is meaningless because there is no context to the $14 million (esp. wrt time) versus a quarter (1/4 of a year) revenue number.

      Further, you don't know how many people who claim to be scammed were scammers or actually scammed, or the timeframe for all the claims (spoken or not). You don't know if this number is high or not. Neither do I.

      But if *any other company* was screwing people out of $14 million over, say, the past 2 years since Adwords likely became prominent, their practices should be investigated. To date, I haven't heard much on that end. What concerns me is that I'm not sure why, if you suspect that a company is screwing people out of millions, you are giving them any sort of pass whatsoever. Seems a double-standard because you "like" Google or have been brainwashed by their "do no evil" ex-mantra.

    13. Re:The Google Business Model by pyrrhonist · · Score: 1
      Things that make you go "hmm." MSN is rarely if ever better than Google at search results.

      But is the discrepancy because Google doesn't want you to read about invalid click issues, or because Microsoft is spreading FUD about one of their competitors?

      or both?

      *head explodes*

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    14. Re:The Google Business Model by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      I'm just saying they're obviously not doing it for the money.

    15. Re:The Google Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't be so sure they are not doing it for the money. As a victim of this as well (account canceled 3 times! reenabled 2 time, still pending on 3rd reenable though I don't care any more).

      back to point...just because google is a billion dollar business (mostly inflated stock value) doesn't mean they don't count their millions or that 14 million is insignificant to the performance and survival of the adwords team.

      I love google's products but now that I know I am not alone with this problem I will no longer support goggle's business functions. Someone said it best earlier, if google can detect them then they can block or refuse to pay for them. I'd add to that given google's policy it would be very easy to 'attack' your competitors google adwords account by generating 'inappropriate' click traffic on their web site...just a thought:)

  45. PageRank or Adwords ? by PigadiaBay · · Score: 1

    I recently made a simple web page for my family's business. It's a small hotel, with 8 rooms and we were looking for a way to fill up the available rooms during the medium-season months (May-June). I was thinking about using Google's AdWords to promote the site to people looking for rooms in my specific area. On the other hand, I could just try to increase the page's PageRank without paying a dime (which is probably happening with this post on Slashdot ;-) but the search results might not be targeted to an "interested" audience... If we were to use AdWords, we wouldn't spend more than $30 per month. Would AdWords be better for such a case or should I just play with the PageRank?

    --
    Pigadia Bay Hotel ~ Karpathos, Greece ~ http://www.karpathos.net/pigadiabay
    1. Re:PageRank or Adwords ? by gronofer · · Score: 1

      I don't know if links in slashdot postings help with pagerank, but here's how you do one - http://www.karpathos.net/pigadiabay.

    2. Re:PageRank or Adwords ? by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

      First off I'd start asking for advice (and posting borderline adverts) on SEO messageboards, rather than asking on unrelated boards, especially ones populated chiefly by people who think SEOers are scumbags.

      (Disclaimer: there were SEO elements to my last job - I stayed strictly white-hat, but will still agree that most SEOers (outside of those who simply "design a site properly"), as fucking scumbags who will quite happily piss in the communal well for their own selfish gain.)

      Secondly, if you want your site to succeed improve your pagerank and advertise. You're like a runner asking "should I try to run faster or bother doing up my shoelaces?". Do both, or you aren't doing a proper job...

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    3. Re:PageRank or Adwords ? by PigadiaBay · · Score: 1

      Well both would be great but one involves time/effort, the other money... if I only get marginally more page visits using both methods, than using only one, why bother spending time AND money? So I guess that's my real question: how much better would both be, compared to AdWords or PageRank individually?

      --
      Pigadia Bay Hotel ~ Karpathos, Greece ~ http://www.karpathos.net/pigadiabay
    4. Re:PageRank or Adwords ? by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

      In my experience you'll get more instant return using Adwords, but it can be expensive to chase too many keywords, and it only gets more expensive.

      Seeking natural listings is much harder, but ultimately cheaper. And as long as you've got a good webmaster who's prepared to stay up-to-date on the subject, it doesn't really get more expensive as time goes on.

      So, short-term expensive boost, or longer (but free) slog? Personally I'd be tempted to start an Adwords campaign and follow it up with some serious SEOing of your site. The only trouble is, once you start an AW campaign it'll be very hard to give up those lovely reliable site hits, so you may find yourself suckered into carrying on with it, and suffering the rising expense.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
  46. Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Since when is forcing someone to behave in a certain manner considered "freedom"?

    When you believe that "government is the people", or that the voting process somehow removes the element of force from the definition of government.

  47. Do we need an ethical framework? by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    For companies, ethics usually conflicts with maximizing profits for shareholders so, no.

    If you want an ethical framework, you have to practice what you preach.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  48. Re:Phoning in my complaint about SpecBear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Great sense of humour, moderators).

    I realize that everyone is entitled to his opinion, and I respect this. I also hope that you will all respect mine as you read this letter. Perhaps before going on, I should describe Mr. Nept to you. Nept is rude, scummy, and morally repugnant. Furthermore, he yearns to take rights away from individuals on the basis of prejudice, myth, irrational belief, inaccurate information, and outright falsehood. Is there a chance that he isn't incorrigible, pertinacious, and incontinent? From what I've seen, I doubt it. Anyway, that's it for this letter. Let Mr. Nept read it and weep.

  49. not again by Bizzeh · · Score: 0

    not another "this is unfair, you HAVE to open source your code", this is fucking stupid, the only reason people want googles code OSS is so they can steal it and use it for themselfs

  50. WTF? by briancarnell · · Score: 1

    "My questions to the slashdot community: are organizations like Google redefining the law of demand and answer?"

    Anyone have any idea what the "law of demand and answer" is? Wow, a completely nonsensical slashdot summary -- must be Thursday.

  51. new service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  52. Re:Sadly its all true: An insiders view of Google by skeptictank · · Score: 1

    And here I was thinking it was Paul Allens next speech to the board of directors.

  53. Open Source Abuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you have companies such as Msoft who will willfully use open souce code in their products to their advantage but lock their stuff down with a team of lawyers and huge cash reserves to fight people off, it is not the any benefit to have Goggle's algo. open source. They would be cuttng their own wrist so to speak. I do enjoy open source, but don't feel EVERYTHING needs to be open source. Especially in such a competetive arena where companies (again such as Msoft) are buying other compaines to leverage themselves to take Google down. And to the comment, "To what extent does this imply a competitive advantage for larger companies? Do we need an ethical framework to direct companies to make such algorithms open source?", I am not sure I understand this correctly. Is it asking should there be some ethical board to look at a way company makes money and determine how much they should make? For a brick and mortar establishment, is it really realistic to say to the owners, "we see you are making good money here on your customers. Turn over your books so we can see your costs and profit margins so we can see how you are doing this." Because for an online operation, it would be basically saying the same thing. "Turn over your code so we can see how you determine how you charge people"
    I think that is just wrong. (If I am understanding the article correctly)

  54. Try a fourth answer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try a fourth answer. Google is perfect in your eyes and always will be. You couldn't imagine a world without Google and wouldn't think anything they did was bad even if you saw a videotape of Google employees machine-gunning orphaned babies.

    It boils down to a simple axiom: It's currently popular to love Google, and you are doing the popular thing by defending them no matter what.

    Google = Microsoft circa 1995 = IBM circa 1985 = Grok's High-Tech Wheels circa 4200 B.C.

    1. Re:Try a fourth answer. by NathanBFH · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for the other posters in this thread, but I for one have no trouble believing both: 1) that Google is a profit driven enterprise out for it's best interests and 2) The adwords algorithm factors the age of the site into it's determination of rank.



      In fact, Google confirms this themselves when it describes the page-rank algorithm. It's not inconcievable that it would apply to the paid rankings algorithm as well. Nothing dastardly (assuming optimizing profit in and of itself can be considered dastardly) is going on here.

    2. Re:Try a fourth answer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose it's easier to dismiss anyone who isn't directly critical of Google as a fanboy rather than come up with any solid evidence to support criticism of Google. Good call.

  55. Not all information given by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The thing about your ad going up and down based on its click through rate is in the documentation on adwords. Or it was when I was looking at it a while ago. That's standard operating procedure for ANY ad network--optimize ad placement for revenue. No-brainer there. I did that sort of things years ago in my ad network.

    As for the reduction in click throughs after lowering the price. Not enough information was provided to really understand this, but:

    If he's advertising two identical sites, did he use two identical ads? If so, it's perfectly logical that click through rate would be reduced on at least one of them--which would penalize that ad to get even fewer click throughs.

    Lowering it from $1 to $0.40 would likely drastically move it's placement so wouldn't we expect it to hugely lower the click through numbers? I'm not sure why that should be surprising.

    Also, since his original ad had a significant history--and apparently a successful one--we could certainly expect it to be getting special placement by adwords. His new ad, though, did not have that history, and so moving it up and down drastically more based on price is to be expected.

  56. Re:Advertising is a free market, not a dictatorshi by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But in the oil industry, the price goes up and down and every customer pays the same ammount

    But that's just simply not true. Big refineries pay less than small ones. Big distributors pay less than small ones. Smart retailers that commit to longer-term contracts pay less than those living more hand-to-mouth. Prices paid at every level of the oil (and every other commodity) market and distribution chain fluxuate wildly, and the long-term viability and business flow of each player can impact what they pay. Just like Google rewards long-time customers, long-lived established (and relevent) sites, etc.

    While not illegal this does not justify a claim of "NOT EVIL"

    How is evaluating your customers and striking deals that seem appropriate, according to your own interests, evil? It's not like Google (or search, or advertising in general) is some natural resource or government service that Google is on the hook to spread around evenly in some utopian socialist model... they're a private sector company deliverying a service in a way, and according to methods that they have established. If you think it's Eeeeevil for them to evaluate their customers, looking at the big picture, then all you have to do is spend your money somewhere else. They have competition: Overture, MS, Yahoo, etc.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  57. Something missing in this "experiment"... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

    A proper control.

    Sure, there's the $.10/word control of the original site...but it's not really a control because it ran ads long before the experiment started, which means it can't really be compared to the dummy sites given Google's vast number of factors used in listing.

    When you run a $1/word site and drop it to $.40, you really need two more contols to measure the change: a second $1/word, and another that was kept at $.40. The only way to know for certain what the performance should have been at $.40/word is to have a control at that level.

    --
    120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
  58. wrong reasoning by pszczolek · · Score: 1

    The two "identical" sites are actually different - the first one has been in AdWords for a long time, and probably has a bonus, because people have clicked its ads a lot. So there is nothing unethical.

  59. redefining the law of demand and answer? by windowpain · · Score: 1

    What is the "law of demand and answer"? I've never heard this term before. What language is this from?

    --
    Insert witty sig here.
  60. It shouldn't by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    To take the seat from google, is actually fairly easy. It can be done in as little time as a year or two. You simply have to come up with a superior product, or take away one of several other advantages (that part is far easier than anybody realizes).Google is not a monopoly and can not aquire one via network services. To be fair, google can still aquire a monopoly via other products, but not via a network service.

    taking away MS's power is a very different matter. MS holds it power via monopoly. That monopoly is powered from their OS and office. At this time, take away one, and their entire empire will crumble (they are working hard via xbox to prevent that from happening). But to take one away is very difficult and slow.

    Consider Linux taking on the desktop. It is happening, but it is slow. But the fact that Novell and Redhat are growing on the desktop says that it is happening. But MS is fighting it everywhere. In addition, Sun's new attitude towards linux actually hurts that (they are trying to bring back the *nix wars and place them against linux; they did not learn their lessons).

    finally, MS's attitude towards losing out to OASIS in mass. is most interesting. MS has realized that if they lose their lock on their closed docs, then they lose it all. Considering how easily this thing got politicized shows how easy politicians are bought, as well as how much money MS has. It makes me wonder, why did MS allow Mass. to carry on against MS during the trial.

    No, the company to fear is MS. It is taking a long time to topple them. Google is above board and can be quickly toppled.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:It shouldn't by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      The only comment I'd make is that MS didn't recently realize that owning the standard was king, they most likely knew it all along (or figured it out sometime around the DOS/IBM deal. Most of the damning evidence from the anti-trust trial was executive statements expressing fear that they would loose ownership of several standards in the Internet era and so they were killing the obvious usurper while they pulled together an internet strategy.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  61. What!? Pay more to get more?! by n-baxley · · Score: 1

    That's outrageous!

    Get over it, big companies, (or anyone who is willing to pay more per word) are going to get shown more frequently. That's just basic economics. I'm sorry to burst the Open Source Free love bubble, but money does still have a role in many everyday transactions.

    I guess you'll just have to accept that.

  62. Trade secrets by tepples · · Score: 1

    All the important information is missing like the positions, CTR, minimum prices and CPC.

    That's because Google AdSense and AdWords customers are under contract not to disclose them to any third party.

  63. Rice? ;-) by tepples · · Score: 1

    I am sure most advertisers will (sooner of later) try is they can lower their rice-per-click.

    "Rice per click"? What does The Hunger Site have to do with anything?

  64. Open Source by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do we need an ethical framework to direct companies to make such algorithms open source?

    Since a corporation's primary charter is to make money for it's owners, revealing information like this could be considered unethical under current norms. This is why we have the concepts of patents and other IP. A patent is a contract betwwen the government and the patent holder in which the patent holder is granted a limited term monopoly on an invention in exchange for publishing the details of the implementation of the invention. The strength of the patent system determines how willing the corporation will be to publish the details of their invention.

    The main alternative to patents is trade secrets where (like in the case of the Coca-Cola formula) the corporation decides that that it is not in it's best interest to publish it's invention.

    This is the framework we have now. An ethical framework that would result in a company publishing all of it's inventions without any compensation would be a very different society and much more collective than what we have now. Whether such a thing would work is not well supported by history.

  65. Simple algorithm - Just like drugs by dilute · · Score: 1

    You gotta buy more to get more kick, but if you cut back the increased dosage you go into withdrawal.

  66. Deeply flawed experiment by G4from128k · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This experiment is deeply flawed because he compared Adword performance of a new site to that of an existing successful site. This flaw biases the results in two ways. First, it assumes that Google's ranking system isn't biased by click-through history -- that Google doesn't up-rank a site with 12 months 15,000 click-throughs per day versus one with only 1 month of 15,000 click-throughs per day. This seems very very unlikely. If I were Google I would always up-rank incumbents that had a good history of click-throughs (and payments). Second, it assumes that people don't remember site names (that the existing successful site has no brand value). I know that I often refind casually interesting sites (those not worth remembering or book marking) by rerunning a search that found that site the first time. How many of that existing site's 15,000 click-throughs are repeat customers who recognize the site's name?

    The better experiment would create two or more new sites and test adword on an even footing of history with both Google and searchers.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  67. your sigline by way2trivial · · Score: 1

    http://www.madd.org/stats/1298 sez less than 17k killed in 2004 due to alcohol related deathe

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_war#Casualtie s says 58,226 were killed in action or classified as missing in action.

    can you 'splain the difference?

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    1. Re:your sigline by way2trivial · · Score: 1
      --
      every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    2. Re:your sigline by patiodragon · · Score: 1

      It would seem reasonable to assume the poster was talking about apples versus apples. You give 2 numbers: One for a SINGLE YEAR and then one for MANY YEARS. That would be the difference.

      cheers,
      KB

    3. Re:your sigline by way2trivial · · Score: 1

      parse it- what does
      "a year than all" mean in that sentence.

      I did make a mistake, the sigline referes to all #'s SINCE (therefore not including) Vietnam
      but it is a comparison of many years vs' per year.

      the # is still wrong however (see my response lateral to your reply) as if you include all military deaths (other than age) it's still not higher (mostly due to accidents)

      --
      every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  68. This is NOT the whole story! by pH7.0 · · Score: 1, Informative

    This is not the whole story! That Sept 22 article was old. People should read the follow up articles from October before comment?

    http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20051006. html
    http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20051013. html

  69. Another forgotten experiment... by patiodragon · · Score: 1

    Try doing a test with more than 2 data points. That frog-guy doesn't even make me raise my eyebrows.

  70. Funny stuff, Cringely by DrSbaitso · · Score: 1

    One of my readers makes his living selling goods over the Internet, and his sole means of obtaining customers is through Google AdWords. His business is robust for a one-man operation and he makes a good living. Knowing the actual numbers, I would say he makes a VERY good living, which shows the effectiveness of Google and AdWords as an advertising medium.
    ...
    "It's like Vegas," said my friend. "They want you to lose. Try to game the system and they cut off one of your legs."

    If they "want him to lose", why has he decided to "bet his life" so to speak on making a living from Google? There are other ways to make a buck in the world...

    --
    beware the jabberwock, my son! the jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
  71. hear, hear! by SpectralDesign · · Score: 1

    Ads?!? What Ads?!?

    I use Firefox with NoScript, FlashBlock, and pop-up blocking enabled, and I rarely see any ads on the web... those that do show up on my screen I have a knack for completely ignoring... I couldn't tell you the last time I actually noticed an ad, though they must be there from time to time (or any time I do a Google search and it shows sponsored ads, which I may see subliminally, but not conciously, so they don't really count.)

    Am I missing out on targeted ads? Well, the last time an ad encouracged me to buy something (targeted ad or other) was.. uhm... never. The biggest industry (well, perhaps with the exception of military contracting) in the 1st world (advertising) does nothing to effect me except raise the prices on pretty much anything I have to spend money on... I'd rather have my taxes hiked by 50% and put all the people in the industry on welfare and live a life free of advertising...

    --
    Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
  72. Werner Heisenberg by JehCt · · Score: 1

    Did these people ever hear of Wener Heisenberg?

    The new site and the old site must have competed against each other in the bidding if they ran at the same time. New Site probably lowered Old Site's click-through rate, so old site's rankings dropped, causing a downward spiral of lower click-through and lower ranking. Long ago the site rankings may have gone up in a virtuous circle of higher click-through and higher position - at a time when there was less competition. Just because it happened once, doesn't mean it can happen again the same way.

    Old site didn't have the history of new site, so it wouldn't rank the same. The system is complicated, and just because some people don't understand it, doesn't mean that Google is being EVIL.

    Google has explained the ranking algorithm. It is historical Click Through Rate (CTR) times Bid times 1,000, equals effective Cost Per Mil (CPM), thousand impressions. Google ranks ads by effective CPM, end of story. For new ads that have no history, Google assumes a low-side CTR.

    The lesson: If you want to test Google Adwords, tinker with a few keywords or a few ads at a time, in case you get unexpected results, to avoid hosing your entire campaign.

    Second lesson: Use the Google conversion tracker. For each keyword, set Bid = Conversion Rate * desired Cost Per Action (desired CPA = what you are willing to pay to get a conversion). That works real well.

  73. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  74. Best strategy: start out low? by moz25 · · Score: 1

    So the best strategy would then be to start low at $0.05 and then very gradually increase it to $0.10? On the other hand, the system could then give lower click-throughs to encourage the advertiser to keep raising the price.

  75. It's all about competition by SilicaiMan · · Score: 1

    Those questions are really absurd.

    Google managed to grab the lion's share of the online ad market by supplying non-obtrusive, relevant ads. People liked it, and used it. If you don't like it, don't use it. It's that simple.

    When (or if?) competition catches up with Google, then they (Google) will be forced to come up with something new or different. Again, if you still don't like it, or think it's unethical, then don't use it. This will put more pressure on Google to change (not that I, personally, see anything wrong with the current incarnation of Adwords).

  76. $15000 experiment? by moz25 · · Score: 1

    I understand from the article that the guy got approx. 15k clicks for $1 per click. That means that he paid $15k for that experiment, which seems quite unlikely to me.

    The article is a little shaky. It's not clear what happened with the first site: how were those click-throughs changed from day 1 to 2? Certainly, the "market" for that word isn't large enough to sustain two identical campaigns with two identical sites?

  77. see no evil by SpectralDesign · · Score: 1

    Well, I was born in the States, and grew up there... the past 2 years I've been living in Toronto because my wife and son are Canadian.

    So yes, I know well that of which you speak... I had a manic phase after losing a high-stress job, and can't tell you how much I spent other than saying it was my life-savings. It was an epiphany though... hearing that money can't buy you happiness just isn't as visceral as spending ~70,000 in two years on crap and winding up suicidal, manic, bi-polar and divorced...

    If I had it to do all over again, I'd have done the divorce part *first* and skipped the suicidal, manic, bi-polar part alltogether.... then I could at least have put a nice down-payment on a house. C'est la vie.

    --
    Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
  78. googled to death by zoobsolar · · Score: 1

    could someone aside from google get financed and do something "interesting"?

    :)

    I doubt google is in any way financing slashdot but I remember the days when slashdot featured the more arcane news than it does now. Though this post is not one of them, many of these google posts that I've seen on slashdot lately I saw days before they are slashdotted on other sites. Sure, "Slashdot: IT is what IT is" but I remember what it used to be too.. you know what I'm sayin'?

    My advise, please don't take this as a diss. Google seems great, as is Slashdot but some folks I think are just reposting google related news for their imaginary karma points or whatever you get on here when you post. Reposting easy to find info is easy slash karma. But does that make you slash-enlightened? probably not.

  79. Yes, they do reimburse for bad clicks by Bill+Dimm · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you ever seen a "refund" on your AdWords account due to some AdSense advertiser generating "invalid clicks" for your ad?

    Yes, I have. As per Google's documentation, you can click on the "My Account" tab and look for "Service Adjustment" in your billing summary. I have received some small refunds.

    1. Re:Yes, they do reimburse for bad clicks by michaelhood · · Score: 1

      I, too, have seen this. Service Adjustment [?] $-x.xx I don't know what their ToS is on revealing that, so you can draw your own assumptions about what the amount of that credit was based on the digits :)

  80. What's the Problem? by Manfre · · Score: 1

    This sounds like pure marketing. If some one is willing to pay more to get their name out there, then they get what they paid for. Correct me if I'm wrong, but most of the comment arguments go against good and completely ethical business practices. If you are selling a book, would you sell it to (a) some one willing to pay $10, or (b) some one willing to pay $15?

  81. No different than TV by smilerz · · Score: 1

    How is this fundamentally different than the premiums that networks charge for PrimeTime TV commercials? The cost of the Google ad placement is not the per-click charge but the aggregate of all click throughs over a period of time.

    If you have a business that only gets 100 clicks in a month you are going to have to pay $1/click to get the same exposure as someone that gets 1000 clicks a month and pays $.10/click. This is the exact same price for the real-estate. The primary difference between Google and TV is that Google is fairer - you only have to pay when your advertisement is successful in generating business.

    --
    My Blog
  82. the article is from September 22, 2005 by e40 · · Score: 1

    Hmmmmm, very timely. Since I started reading reddit, I rarely see anything new on slashdot.

  83. Shaved clicks. by PJ+Brunet · · Score: 1

    This has always been the case with click programs. If Google wants to preserve its reputation they should disclose as much as they can with better reporting--otherwise you'll see more and more paranoid webmasters. If they ever shaved clicks, sooner or later we would find out--sell your GOOG on that day.

  84. So why respond? by CFD339 · · Score: 1

    Seems to me the best way to discourage uninteresting content is to stop reading it and stop posting replies. Like this one, in fact, which does nothing for you but piss you off, nothing for me but waste my time, and nothing for the site but increase the response generated overall by an article neither of us is interested in. Ah well.

    --
    The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
    1. Re:So why respond? by zoobsolar · · Score: 1

      Piss me off? Wow! Those are harsh words. I wouldn't say I'm pissed off. Far from it, in fact. Ah well.

  85. Re:Phoning in my complaint about SpecBear by SpecBear · · Score: 1

    Argh! Do people even read before they mod? It's funny, people , laugh! I did.

  86. Re:Sadly its all true: An insiders view of Google by Morgalyn · · Score: 1

    Wow. That thing is fantastic! I am cracking up.

    Okay, let's do it. Let's call people to their highest and best, not accommodate them at their lowest and least. The first thing I want to bring up is that the complaint generator is like a magician who produces a dove in one hand, while the other hand is busy trying to manipulate public understanding of academicism. Did the complaint generator get dropped on its head when it was young, or did it take massive doses of drugs to believe that all it takes to solve our social woes are shotgun marriages, heavy-handed divorce laws, and a return to some mythical 1950s Shangri-la? The only clear answer to emerge from the conflicting, contradictory stances that it and its underlings take is that its orations are the opiate of the vitriolic. Ignorance is bliss. This may be why the complaint generator's surrogates are generally all smiles. And there you have it. The complaint generator's canards are bottomlessly bad.

    --
    You say you got a real solution
    Well, you know
    We'd all love to see the plan
    (The Beatles)
  87. My simple theory by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    The experiment was flawed. The existing site had a long established click-through rate and so was ranked highly on its click-through virtue. The mirror site did not have such a long history.

    This experiment would be more valid if the two sites had existed for the same amount of time.

  88. Re:I have open sores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    looks like you failed it for your dead buddy klerck.

  89. no kidding by No-op · · Score: 1

    Anyone who has gone through an SEC audit at their firm can tell you that the whole "laissez-faire" capitalism thing is deader than a doornail.

    That doesn't bother me, but to make dubious claims about "freedom in the market" is questionable at best.

    It doesn't help that the SEC rules are quite often more vague than a 4th grader making up rules to a game as they go along.

    --
    EOM
  90. Bad example - GPL doesn't fit here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Open source licenses like GPL are intended to force people to behave a certain way (decreasing someone's freedom) because its net benefit enhances everyone's freedom.

    The GPL in no way decreases someone's freedom. Without the GPL, you are stuck with plain old copyright. By accepting the terms of the GPL, you *increase* your freedom because it then gives you freedoms that would otherwise be prevented by law.

    1. Re:Bad example - GPL doesn't fit here by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      GPL is not being compared to "plain old copyright law" in that example; it is being compared to the absence of any legal restraint. GPL puts restrictions on how you may redistribute something.

    2. Re:Bad example - GPL doesn't fit here by Bluedove · · Score: 1

      GPL is not being compared to "plain old copyright law" in that example; it is being compared to the absence of any legal restraint.

      Well why don't we compare apples to little green men from Alpha Centauri, then?

      Using the GPL for comparison in the context of the absense of any other legal restraint is pointless - the GPL exists only within the context of copyright law's legal restraint. To use it in a comparison outside that context (copyright law) is moot at best and deceptive at worst.

      In the given example, it is copyright law that is the restriction and the GPL releases restrictions placed on us by copyright law. The GPL just doesn't release you from all existing antecedent restrictions.

    3. Re:Bad example - GPL doesn't fit here by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh please. Read the context of the discussion. The point I was responding to was the absurd argument that laws that restrict people's behavior are net reductions in freedom. There's no deception here; read the GPL yourself. It calls for restrictions on people's behavior. If you redistribute code, you must do so according to the terms of the GPL. Stop trying to distort the issue.

  91. Re:Phoning in my complaint about SpecBear by Nept · · Score: 1

    This is a letter I have planned on writing for some time, a letter that I claim is extremely important and one that indubitably must be heeded if we are to undo the damage caused by Moderators. The full truth of my conclusion I shall develop in the course of this letter but the conclusion's general outline is that I hate it when people get their facts wrong. For instance, whenever I hear some corporate fat cat make noises about how public opinion is a reliable indicator of what's true and what isn't, I can't help but think that Moderators's rodomontades can be subtle. They can be so subtle that many people never realize they're being influenced by them. That's why we must proactively notify humanity that I want to arraign Moderators at the tribunal of public opinion. That may seem simple enough, but Moderators says that those who disagree with it should be cast into the outer darkness, should be shunned, should starve. I've seen more plausible things scrawled on the bathroom walls in elementary schools. It is ridiculous that I have to be faced with numskulls whose unsophisticated biases are constantly treated with apathy. And if that seems like a modest claim, I disagree. It's the most radical claim of all. The take-away message of this letter is that I must protest Moderators's use of tyrannical lackwits to achieve its sex-crazed goals. Think about it. I don't want to have to write another letter a few years from now, in the wake of a society torn apart by Moderators's passive-aggressive agendas, reminding you that you were warned.

    (okay, I'm probably beating a dead-horse at this point =)

    --
    "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
  92. AdWords Experiment Flawed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One thing that wasn't considered in this experiment is the fact that Google frowns upon websites that have duplicate content. By doing so, the tester may have notced he was experiencing a lower page rank as well as fewer listings in organic listings. This could have caused the Google ad to be discounted and even viewed as a SPAM website (obviously a big no-no). While we cannot contest the power of Google, the system is much more intelligent than the everyman and will not reward people trying to receive more traffic by creating duplicate websites (even if a test).

  93. Like a woman by moz25 · · Score: 1

    It's not too different from how women are (from the male perspective): once she gets used to being bought expensive stuff, try dropping down to 40% of your old level and see if she won't think you're a cheap jerk.

    I guess that's why some male readers have trouble understanding this...

  94. You have been warned by sauge · · Score: 1

    Well, here is my story slightly on topic.

    I have a web site that I was hoping to help pay bandwidth on through Google Adwords.

    It was all working quite nicely for a few months until time came around for Google to pay the bill (they won't pay out until at least $100 is due you.)

    Then out of no where - they decided *I* was putting in unwarranted clicks or some BS like that and closed my account and zapped my check.

    Let see, taking in money to put your message in Ad Words, having other people display those ads for months on end on their sites, and then not bothering to pay people who display it on their sites... I think I have discovered Google's road to profit.

    Yes. I am bitter.

  95. Algorithm for Reducing AdWords YMMV Factor by DJ_Perl · · Score: 1

    I've proposed an algorithm to reduce AdWords' YMMV factor.

    Short version -- Google should use an algorithm similar to AdSense to automatically pick keywords most relevant to the advertiser's URL.

    You should have to pay less to bid on keywords that are relevant to your web site's content. It should be expensive to outbid Mr. Cringely on the keyword "Cringely".


    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License.

    --
    -- Subvert the dominant paradigm. Repeat as desired. http://ownlifeful.com/
  96. "rigging the internet" by PhateDesigns · · Score: 1

    Sounds to me a lot like an old article posted here (http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/01/20322 9) It seems that google is doing the same thing that BellSouth tried to do... In my mind, you shouldn't be able to give priority to one site over another