UltimateKirbyBoi
Certified Sorta Cool Guy
if it was a lot of different users, I'm pretty sure that they won't be affected.
It could go under the radar at that point. But if you have a video with say 50 views and it gets 20 ad clicks, then Youtube will see it fake and disable your account. Almost all large channels have partnerships though.But what if you didn't
Do you mean 50 clicks and 20 views?It could go under the radar at that point. But if you have a video with say 50 views and it gets 20 ad clicks, then Youtube will see it fake and disable your account. Almost all large channels have partnerships though.![]()
It does not matter. YT has a terrible click through rate. If it gets above 15%-20% of the views get ad clicks then they will investigate it and look at the ip addresses that it was clicked at.Do you mean 50 clicks and 20 views?
But if its not my IP address then my account won't get disabled will it?It does not matter. YT has a terrible click through rate. If it gets above 15%-20% of the views get ad clicks then they will investigate it and look at the ip addresses that it was clicked at.
It will. They don't care. They see that someone is clicking your ads repeatedly. If they pay you that money, then they are committing fraud on a national level, because advertisers would pay for fake clicks. For all they know you went to starbucks and clicked your own ads for an hour while drinking a vanilla frapachino.But if its not my IP address then my account won't get disabled will it?
And how does partnership protect me from click bombing?
And why doesn't YouTube do this?"There isn't something that prevents spam clicking when you get partnership, however there are extra measures in place by the companies that give you the ads to put on your videos that prevent you from gaining revenue for it so if someone does spam click it only gets you the same amount as one click and you won't lose your partnership." - Necessary Gaming on another thread
They don't want to be sued. Google would rather just not let you put ads on videos anymore, and maybe that might lose them $5, but that could protect them from a class action law suit by advertisers.And why doesn't YouTube do this?