No tengo mucha idea de publicidad en webs, pero vi un artículo sobre un soft llamado CACA(sic) en http://jimworld.com/gazette/issue-201/1053114704.html
| QUOTE ("Jimworld Gazette") |
Essentially, CACA is a bot, which will "hit" any page (or all of them) of your Web site, pretending on each hit to be a different user. It uses an army of proxy servers to hide behind, so that each time it hits your site, it has a different IP number. For all intents and purposes, it looks like a different user each time it visits your web server. Part of its goal is to simulate traffic, stuffing your log files and artificially inflating reports to online tracking services (such as Alexa). This makes you appear to be busy as Hell. People ask all the time, "How do these brand new PPC search engines hit the ground running with so much traffic?". This may be part of the answer -- they're pretending to have lots of visitors, when in reality, the majority of their visitors are faceless bots that will never buy anything from your site.. The second aspect of this system, is that it will click on various links on the pages of your Web site. The program's author tells you how to set it up to click your banners, your affiliate links, and your PPC sponsor links. Each hit looks unique, is nearly impossible to detect as fraud, and has the sole purpose of generating a click. Advertisers on the Internet, promoting via banner ad or PPC ad, think they are paying for legitimate traffic -- traffic from a real user that will visit the Web site and perhaps buy something. CACA essentially drains advertiser accounts dry, without ever sending a single visitor. In the end, the advertiser pays a fortune, the PPC makes money on the clicks (but will lose the advertiser due to the lack of ROI), and the CACA user rakes in the commissions. http://www.clickingagent.com/softcaca.html |
| QUOTE ("yofo") |
cúal es el fin de estos programas?, yo no kiero otro hitbot ni nada que pueda ocasionar clics falsos en tgp y demas cosas |
| QUOTE ("zuper") |
yo tengo desde hace 2 meses un "artista" de estos, que me visita dia y noche cada 3 minutos.... no se si es un amigo del cliente |
| QUOTE ("edel") |
Me ha comentado que podría tratarse de gente intentando desestrañar la clave de acceso a la web con un programa especializado. ¿Que sabeis vosotro de eso? |