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Home NEWS To show how easy it is for plagiarized news sites to get ad revenue, I
made my own
NEWS


TO SHOW HOW EASY IT IS FOR PLAGIARIZED NEWS SITES TO GET AD REVENUE, I MADE MY
OWN

by admin2 admin2 May 17, 2020
May 17, 2020 8 views


The homepage of the “Tribune Times Today.” All the news that’s fit to copy.

Megan Graham

Last month, a story I’d written had just gone live. I Bioreports Newsed a few
keywords into Google search to pull it up so I could grab the link.

That was when I noticed a publication called the “bioreports Post” had also just
published a story with the exact same headline. 

When I clicked the link, I noticed that it was my story in its entirety. And it
had ads all over it. 

This website, the “bioreports Post,” was running ads on a story they stole from
..

These phony “news” sites with realistic names and stolen stories aren’t new —
they’ve been ripping off publishers and taking advertiser dollars for years.

But as the pandemic hits the publishing industry and news sites like Conde
Nast, Vice and Vox cut pay and lay off more employees, the issue feels more
pressing than ever. 

Many advertisers don’t want to advertise on publishers’ coronavirus stories out
of fear they’ll face negative brand connotation for being alongside that
content. Yet, through the muddy supply chain of digital media, many are ending
up on that content anyway. Only here, it’s stolen.

A two-year study by the Incorporated Society of British Advertisers and PwC
articulated with new clarity how the digital media ecosystem hemorrhages cash on
its way to publishers. It tracked 15 UK advertisers, including Disney and
Unilever, and found that half a brand’s digital marketing spend is absorbed by
middlemen before reaching a publisher. Worse, it found that about one-third of
the supply chain fees advertisers pay cannot be traced, meaning that it’s
impossible for advertisers to know exactly where their money is going.

It all underscores the fact that the ad tech space is so convoluted, it’s easy
to make money from .imate advertisers just by setting up a web page. That means
there’s significant incentive to create sites with not just with low-quality
clickbait or A.I.-generated nonsense, but sites filled with outright plagiarized
content.

I was curious how bad the problem was. So I did an experiment to see if I could
make a site using stories from . and get ad tech partners to agree to show ads
on it. 

It was shockingly easy.


SETTING UP A WEBSITE 

I’m by no means a coding whiz, but this part was straightforward.

I bought a domain through GoDaddy and set up a managed Wordpress site, then set
up an SSL certificate so I would have a secure website, which would prevent the
site from triggering security warnings on browsers like Google’s Chrome. I
downloaded a theme that made my site look somewhat like a news website, made a
favicon (the little image that shows up in Google search and in your browser
tab) and gave myself a name: The “Tribune Times Today.”

The homepage of the “Tribune Times Today.” All the news that’s fit to copy.

Megan Graham

To populate my site with content, I first copied and pasted text from . stories
manually. Then I learned how to speed the process with scrapers — simple
software plug-ins you can download on Wordpress and can scrape stories using RSS
feeds or individual links. A lot of fraudulent news sites will also scrape
images from stories, but I avoided that for legal reasons. Instead, I stuck with
stock images I was allowed to use on the site, or my own images from industry
events I had saved on my phone. 

I spent a couple hours on a Sunday afternoon tweaking the site, setting up
fancy-looking widgets to show my “top stories” or a carousel display of stories
and pulling stories until I had more than 50 posts.

Then I was ready to find some advertisers.


FINDING ADVERTISERS 

Websites often work with ad tech partners to get ads placed on their site.

To start, publishers usually go through a fairly simple process of sharing their
website URL, contact info and sometimes traffic figures or revenue. From there,
the company will often give the publisher a piece of code, which the publisher
sticks on their web site. This lets the ad partner make sure the person trying
to sell ads actually has access to the site, and isn’t trying to sell ads on a
site that isn’t theirs.

I applied to nearly three dozen of these companies, and some approved me right
away. These firms mostly sold “popunder” ads, which pop up a new link in a
browser tab when you click something. They’re one of the worst forms of online
advertising, not to mention annoying and intrusive for the user. 

Others seemed eager to work with me but wanted to see how much traffic I had, or
said I didn’t have enough traffic or existing revenue to meet their thresholds.
Some said I didn’t meet their requirements for content. Conversant, for
instance, didn’t approve me because I applied using my Gmail address and because
I didn’t have enough traffic.

Ad tech partners Media.net and Infolinks took a bit longer to approve me, but
they both did.

My denial email from Sovrn.

Megan Graham

One firm, Sovrn, initially declined the site because it didn’t meet its standard
for original content. But within 24 hours they sent another email saying I was
approved.

My approval email from Sovrn.

Megan Graham

Google took days to give me an answer, but eventually answered that since I had
“scraped content” on my site, I wasn’t eligible for Adsense.

I asked the three companies that approved me how they vet sites. 

Sovrn said it is “the first, and remains one of the few exchanges to achieve a
TAG Platinum certification,” and says its site approval process is “stricter
than most.” The company said each site that applies to its platform goes through
a four-step review process involving “proprietary checks, third-party tools such
as IAS and buyer-level settings and filters.” 

Despite that, the Tribune Times Today — populated entirely with “stolen” news
articles — got through those steps. 

“Even with what we believe is the strongest site approval process in the
industry, it is still possible that some bad actors can slip through,” Sovrn
acknowledged. “That’s why we continuously monitor our exchange, and perform
weekly audits—and removals—of sites that violate our controls.”

Infolinks CEO Bob Regular said a domain goes through human review to ensure some
basic criteria, like making sure it’s not violent, pornographic, dangerous or
pertaining to other explicit adult content. If it passes that level, there’s an
automated process that submits the site to other advertising companies to see if
they want to advertise on my site, and it’s up to them to approve it one by one.
He said the company also submits each publisher to third-party fraud providers
for review. 

Media.net said its compliance team immediately assess sites for “clear terms of
services violations” like pornography, hate speech or violence and that they’re
instantly blocked from its network. If not, sites can “go live on a provisional
basis.” That’s when the company typically discovers less obvious violations,
including copyright infringement, and flags bad actors. It said this typically
occurs between 30-60 days. 

The company said it doesn’t immediately ban bad actors because it found that
they simply try to get around it by submitting a ton of slightly different sites
that also violate Media.net’s terms of service. By letting sites slip by at
first, then banning them before they get a payout, Media.net “disincentivizes
bad actors from reattempting to join our network.”

But these three media partners aren’t the end of it. They work with other
partners as “resellers.” 

By looking at some technical information the partners sent me to add to my
“ads.txt” file, I saw I was authorizing the ad space on Tribune Times Today to
be sold by not just the three ad tech companies who approved me but also its
partners, such as AppNexus, GumGum, OpenX, Rubicon Project and Google. That
doesn’t mean they had approved the site; They would have had to approve the
domain based on their own criteria, and I didn’t run the experiment long enough
to see if they would do so.

Rubicon Project, for instance, said once a partner had approved me, that partner
would send domains to Rubicon, which would then take a number of steps,
including looking at industry associations like TAG to see if there had been
reported plagiarism on the site, working with anti-fraud partners to make sure
it’s not fraudulent or spot-checking inventory itself.

Google said that just because a particular exchange works with Google in general
does not mean they will send ad requests for every single publisher that is on
their platform as a reseller; it also said that just because it’s listed on
ads.txt doesn’t mean it’s monetizing a certain site. (Google said it had no
evidence of any ads placed via our platforms on the website created, including
through AdManager, and I didn’t see any Google ads when I briefly switched on
advertising). 

“We have strict policies that prohibit bad actors from monetizing content that
is stolen from other sites,” a Google spokeswoman said. “Our ad tech partners
must abide by these policies as well. Our enforcement systems and teams work to
detect and block these illicit web pages before they can sell ad space. If we
find a site or partner violates our policies, we take immediate action.”

But I’d slipped through the cracks once, and I wondered which cracks I’d slip
through again when it came to the resellers verifying the “Tribune Times Today”
domain. 

The Tribune Times Today’s ads.txt file.

Megan Graham

I didn’t want to be taking ad revenue from .imate advertisers, so I only briefly
activated advertisements from the partners to see what surfaced and to take a
few screenshots. I saw ads come through in for companies including Kohl’s,
Wayfair, Overstock and Chewy.

In a statement, Overstock said that as an advertiser it is negatively impacted
by this fraud and does “everything in [its] power to prevent it.”  

“To combat these kinds of fraudulent efforts, we partner with reputable ad-tech
providers and are constantly auditing our ad placements to ensure they are
appearing on .imate sites,” Overstock said. “However, even with those
precautions, a fraudster occasionally slips through the cracks. In the rare
event that this happens, we work with our partners to swiftly investigate and
resolve the incident.”

The other companies declined to comment or didn’t respond to a request for
comment. 

Chewy ad on “Tribune Times Today.”

Megan Graham


IF I WERE A BAD GUY…

I only put a few hours of work into this site, but I don’t do this for a
living. 

Real bad actors can get a lot farther than this with only a little more work.
For instance, they can set up a site with actual original content, get approved,
and only then start scraping content. Or, they can easily buy an existing
website that’s already monetizing with adtech partners, and just flood it with
plagiarized content. They can buy fake traffic to conduct traffic arbitrage, a
fancy way of saying that they pay less for traffic than they gain from the ad
impressions. They can set up more automated means to keep scraping huge amounts
of automated content to keep the website looking fresh.

Joshua Lowcock, who’s global brand safety officer at UM, a media agency that’s
part of Interpublic, said he’s run a similar experiment and found that a number
of ad tech partners were similarly lax about their approvals.             

Like me, he didn’t make too much of an effort to appear super sophisticated. 

“We weren’t acting like a motivated bad actor,” he said. “If anyone had done
basic due diligence, we would have been caught out.”

He added that sites can act as .imate news publishers for months, gain social
media followers then start publishing completely fake stories. 

Andreas Ramos, who teaches digital marketing at INSEEC and California Science
and Technology University, says the size of fraud like this is “staggering.”

He said some scammers set up tens of thousands of websites at once with a few
keystrokes. 

“It’s a money machine,” he said.

It’s easy to find examples. One afternoon, I spent a few minutes trying to find
other sites that had copied . stories in full without credit. In a matter of
minutes I found “The Washington Time,” “FR24News.com,” “Bioreports.net,”
“AfricaZilla,” and “USA News Hub.” All of them were showing ads through various
partners, including Google and Criteo. There are so many more of these sites
that I don’t have enough time in the day to report them, as much as I would like
to. 

Criteo, which had also been showing ads on the “bioreports Post” (my very first
example) said it had seen my tweets about the site and discovered the inventory
had come through another platform, and requested those sites be added to a
blacklist. 

“We constantly monitor our supply network to prevent such infractions as the
ones found by you. In the event we find a partner is not adhering to our
policies, we will terminate the relationship immediately,” said a company
spokesperson.

As of Thursday, FR24News.com, USA News Hub and AfricaZilla were each showing
Google ads on stolen content from . and other publications, and each listed
Google as a direct seller on their ads.txt files.

Google said Friday it had demonetized USA News Hub and said it’s investigating
the other two sites.

Google recently announced it would be requiring all advertisers to go through an
identity verification process to ensure they are who they say they are. Some
argue they should be doing the same for publishers.

“There should be that same requirement on the publisher side, a proof of
identity and demonstration that you’re .imate,” Lowcock said. “And then up and
down the digital supply chain, people should do spot checks to make sure that
work is being done.” 

Google ads appear on a FR24News story copied from ..

Megan Graham

Bob Hoffman, a former advertising executive who has written numerous books about
the industry, said the advertising ecosystem has never been 100% pure, but
what’s being seen now is a new level. 

“The extent to which it’s happening now is way beyond anything I think we’ve
ever seen before, where tens of billions of dollars are being stolen from
advertisers,” he said. “If you’re a crook, this is like Christmas Day. And there
are no consequences… If somebody finds you out, so what? You put up another
phony site, or you put up a thousand other phony sites. The so-called ad tech
fraud detection systems seem to be extremely ineffective.” 

He said one solution is for advertisers buying directly from publishers. 

“So much of the fraud would disappear,” he said. “All the middlemen would
evaporate. Yes, you’d pay a little more, but you’d know what you’re getting, if
you bought directly from quality publishers.” 

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