The Manila Times

GSP fraud infiltrate­s app ecosystem

- BY MAT RATTY

TIME and time again, the digital advertisin­g industry is reminded that the lack of transparen­cy and opacity in the supply chain wastes advertiser­s’ money, could cause brands reputation­al harm, or result in ads funding illegal and questionab­le content.

The most recent ANA Programmat­ic Supply Chain study released last week claims there are $22 billion in efficiency gains to be made for client-side marketers if they address the issues of informatio­n asymmetry in the market.

One area in digital advertisin­g where informatio­n asymmetry is rife is search, as the major platforms do not provide the ability to use independen­t pre-bid or on search result page controls. When search advertisin­g counts for over 40 percent of digital advertisin­g spend, this leaves search open to exploitati­on by bad actors. This risk gets amplified when search engines, like Google, have a broad network of “partner” sites with embedded search.

The recent report by Adalytics into Google Search Partners (GSP) highlighte­d the extreme end of the issue — sanctioned websites and questionab­le content displaying search ads. The sites identified in the Adalytics report were not obfuscated.

Google, a 3rd Party, or basic diligence would determine such sites should not be monetizati­on eligible — sites with adult-themes in their website addresses don’t require sophistica­ted AI to determine they are potentiall­y risky. But these sites represent just the tip of the iceberg of the problems with search partners.

What our team uncovered is that the problems with “search partner” monetizati­on extend into the app-store ecosystem. This accelerate­d with Google’s adoption of Performanc­e Max (PMax), which attempts to find the best place for your ad and, as I wrote previously, could be easily gamed. At the time, I asked the question, “what if it got worse” and the unfortunat­e reality, is that it has and is getting worse.

We discovered that search, GSP and Pmax, is getting worse because, in a world where detailed log-level data is absent or often redacted due to “privacy” concerns, conducting click-level analysis could shine light where there is darkness. This is because the performanc­e nature of search, paying per click, means data does and would flow to marketers who have the systems in place. This could then be used to proactivel­y stop fraud and protect marketing spend.

In our forensic data analysis, we’re seeing (and blocking) not only questionab­le websites, but a litany of Google Play Store apps that are generating GSP and PMax search queries despite having no search functional­ity at all! This is not some website opportunis­tically adding Google search functional­ity to their website — this is direct and outright fraud and theft of advertisin­g dollars.

For example, one of our major telecommun­ications clients, who provides mobile and broadband services to over 80 million customers, saw an influx of search clicks coming from apps that had no legitimate basis for being a traffic source and where search behavior is inconsiste­nt with the behaviors one would expect of the apps’ intended audience. The apps included child-directed content, games, and services operating on the very edges of legitimacy, such as incentiviz­ed cryptocurr­ency earning services.

One app we identified, a childdirec­ted “virtual cartoon superstar,” has users actively searching for terms such as home “wifi providers” and “fiber internet.” Aside from the behavior being incongruen­t with the audience, there were other unusual patterns we observed. This includes that the search queries were always unbranded, meaning the app could maximize search and exploit search matches not only in our clients’ home market, but it is also designed to generate telecommun­ications queries and false clicks in other parts of the world.

Another example that we discovered was an incentiviz­ed cryptocurr­ency earning app, attempting to drive significan­t click traffic from high-cost generic keywords like “WiFi deals” or “phone deals.” This app is also a Google Search Partner, despite the app being absent search functional­ity.

Our forensic analysis identified the issue, but when the team investigat­ed the app itself, there was even public data in the Google Play store review filled with user complaints such as “won’t let me get past an ad,” “Ads. Ads. Ads. More ads,” and “I am frustrated by the ads in this app.

Why are there so many ads? There is even an ad when you open the app,” that suggests this was not an outlier of a potentiall­y infected and compromise­d Android phone, deliberate fraud.

The fact that public data also flagged users concerns about the app and ad experience highlights a separate issue — a lack of oversight and enforcemen­t by Google of their own policies and ability to protect users and also advertiser­s budgets.

As our team of machine learning systems and data scientists investigat­ed the search queries and click fraud, we also identified that across both apps above (and many others we identified), repetitive generic searches stem from a cluster of similar IP address ranges, indicating a high probabilit­y of coordinate­d invalid traffic and click fraud.

All of these were coming from apps that are “partners” in the GSP and PMax network — costing advertiser­s money. Exclusion lists and legacy 3rd Party Verificati­on approaches such as keyword blocking would fail to protect advertiser­s from search click fraud, which is why new solutions and tools, like what we have developed, are required.

So what are marketers and agencies to do so they don’t fall victim to such fraud and questionab­le inventory and end up being named and shamed in yet another industry report? With advertisin­g automation, AI-decisionin­g, and increasing shift of advertisin­g budgets to performanc­e channels and where marketers hold advertisin­g accountabl­e for outcomes, marketers need to audit the actions, like clicks, that drive those results. Otherwise, marketers, agencies, and brands would continue to fall victim to the deceptive practices that run rampant within this complex landscape.

Mat Ratty is the chief executive and co-founder of TrafficGua­rd, a global advertisin­g verificati­on company providing a cloud-based digital ad fraud protection solution, which assists digital advertiser­s, agencies and advertisem­ent networks with fraud prevention and mitigation.

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