By
Stefanie Olsen
Tuesday, November 23 2004 10:31 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/personaltech/0,,39202285,00.htm
Google filed a lawsuit against an Internet
operation that it claims systematically clicked on text ads to defraud
its advertising network.
The case, filed Nov. 15 in the Superior Court of Santa Clara
County in California, is among the first civil lawsuits to relate to click fraud.
The lawsuit charges that Texas-based Auctions Expert International
signed up to display Google's targeted text advertising on its Web
site, and then fraudulently clicked on the ads to profit from its
pay-per-click system.
"Because advertisers pay Google for each click on their
advertisements, Google strives to ensure that each click is generated
by a user legitimately interested in accessing the site being
advertised," according to the complaint.
"Defendants...flagrantly abused (Google's service) by artificially
and/or fraudulently generating ad clicks," the filing says. "These
clicks were worthless to advertisers, but generated significant and
unjust revenue for defendants."
Mountain View, Calif.-based Google did not say how much money was
lost, but the company is seeking compensatory and punitive damages to
be determined at trial.
As old as Internet advertising itself, click fraud is the practice
of inflating traffic to advertisements or Web sites for profit. It has
proliferated as Google, Overture Services and others have built
multibillion-dollar, pay-per-click ad services that pair sponsored
listings with related search results. With each click of a sponsored
text link, they collect fees from advertisers, and then often share
that revenue with publishing partners that display those ads.
The fraud is perpetrated in both automated and human ways. The most
common method is the use of online robots, or "bots," programmed to
click on advertisers' links that are displayed on Web sites or listed
in search queries. A growing alternative employs low-cost workers who
are hired in China, India and other countries to click on text links
and other ads. A third form of fraud takes place when employees of
companies click on rivals' ads to deplete their marketing budgets and
skew search results.
According to Google's complaint, Auctions Expert erected its Web
site and signed up for its Adsense programs with the sole intention of
generating false clicks and collecting advertiser fees.
Click fraud is an elephant in the room of the search-advertising
market, the fastest-growing sector of online advertising. While no one
is certain of how much money is generated fraudulently, some executives
in the industry estimate losses account for 5 percent to 20 percent of
total sales. Some suspect the problem is growing, too, as Google,
Overture and others syndicate their ads to small or international
publishers that can be hard to police.
Unlike advertising in traditional media such as billboards and print
publications, "cost per click" Internet ads displayed with specific
keyword searches have been promoted as a definitive way for companies
to gauge their exposure to potential customers. As a result, U.S. sales
from advertiser-paid search results are expected to grow 25 percent
this year to US$3.2 billion, up from US$2.5 billion in 2003, according to
research firm eMarketer. From 2002 to 2003, the market rose by 175
percent.
Google spokesman Steve Langdon confirmed the lawsuit and said the
company is vigilant in protecting its advertisers and the integrity of
its programs.
"We have sophisticated technology that detects and eliminates
fraud," Langdon said. "This lawsuit against Auctions Expert
demonstrates the success of our antifraud system and that we will take
legal action when appropriate."
Still, at least one marketing executive said the lawsuit is proof
that Google's fraud detection technology is not as foolproof as it
would like advertisers to believe.
"We know Google doesn't need to seek funds," said Jessie
Stricchiola, president of Alchemist Media, a search-engine marketing
firm based in Los Angeles.
"This is a politically strategic move in the industry to show that
Google's protecting its advertisers. But that could be a distraction
from the glaring truth that its high-end technology doesn't protect
advertisers as much as it should," Stricchiola said.
Earlier this year, Google's service was at the center of a criminal case related to click fraud. A California man created a software program
that he claimed could let spammers bilk Google out of millions of
dollars in fraudulent clicks. Authorities said he was arrested while
trying to blackmail Google for US$150,000 to hand over the program. He
was indicted by a California jury last June.
The current suit names Auctions Expert International and its owners
Sergio Morfin and Alexei Leonov as perpetrators of click fraud and of
breach of contract with Google Adsense Online's terms of service.
However, Google said in the suit that it does not know the true
identities of the defendants. It said it will amend the suit once their
identities are known.
Auctions Expert's Web site was inaccessible Monday.
David Kramer, a partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati who
represents Google, said the suit should be a warning shot to other
rogue operators.
"It sends a message to people participating in Google's advertising
network that just because it's online, it doesn't make it OK to commit
fraud," Kramer said.