Thursday, 30 June 2005
Google Sued Over "click fraud" in Web Ads |
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Click Defense Inc. has sued Google Inc., charging the Web search giant of failing to protect users of its advertising program from "click fraud," costing them at least USD 5 million. Click Defense Inc. filed its lawsuit, which also seeks class action status, on June 24 in U.S. District Court in San Jose, California. Click fraud is not "fraud" as defined under the law. Rather, it is an industry term used to describe the deliberate clicking on Web search ads by users with no plans to do business with the advertiser. Rival companies might employ people or machines to do this because the advertiser has to pay the Web search provider for each click.
Users of Google's popular Web search advertising program pay a set amount -- varying from pennies to well over USD 1 -- for each click, though in rare instances, the payment is as much as USD 95. Click fraud can run up thousands of dollars in advertiser costs or benefit a Web site operator that gets a cut of advertising revenue from Internet search providers. "We believe the suit is without merit and we will defend ourselves against it vigorously," a Google spokesman said.
Google, which had first-quarter net revenue of USD 1.3 billion, makes virtually all of its money from search ads. The company, whose stock earlier this week briefly topped USD 300 after debuting at USD 85 in August, has previously said that click fraud is not material to its results and that it has technology and teams working to prevent it. Google and its top rival, Yahoo Inc., have declined to say what percentage of clicks would fall under click fraud. The figure most cited by independent firms that track the practice is around 20 percent.
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