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ViewBotting: How Bad Bots Affect Publishers?

view-bot

View Botting Explained

Viewbotting is the fraudulent practice of using invalid traffic (like bots) to artificially inflate viewership figures on various video-sharing platforms. This manipulation is designed to deceive advertisers, platforms, and the public about the genuine popularity or reach of a particular video or content creator.

Viewbotting occurs across platforms like YouTube, Twitch, Facebook, and others – affecting any service with a publicly displayed view count.

View bots work by mimicking the behavior of actual human viewers. They can be programmed to:

View Bots can be DIY or Outsourced. This remains a cat-and-mouse game. Each advance in bot realism will demand matching detection methods from platforms.

 

Types of View Bots

Here’s a table outlining the types of view bots, along with their key features and implications:

Type of View Bot Description How They Work Implications
Live Stream Bots The most basic type, these bots are designed to simply open a live stream repeatedly, inflating viewer numbers. They usually operate via scripts or services, often utilizing proxies to hide their origin. They create the illusion of popularity but don’t generally interact for increased realism.
Chat Bots Designed to simulate engagement and make viewer numbers seem more legitimate. They leave comments (often generic and repetitive) or respond to pre-programmed cues in a stream’s chat. These make botting harder to detect at a glance, but savvy viewers can spot patterns or nonsensical comments.
Engagement Groups While not always traditional “bots,” these are organized groups of people who agree to boost each other’s metrics. This involves watching streams, leaving comments, or engaging in other activity on command, often in exchange for similar actions on their own content. These are notoriously hard to detect, as the behavior blends in more easily with genuine viewer activity.
Follow Bots These are programmed to follow channels or inflate follower counts on social media platforms. They often utilize fake accounts created in bulk. While less directly linked to live views, they create a false sense of popularity that can attract genuine followers.

Why is ViewBotting on the rise?

The reasons behind view botting often highlight a systemic problem, where genuine hard work feels less likely to succeed in an artificially popularity-driven system. Even though severe penalties can be rare, damage to reputation among genuine viewers is almost inevitable when botting is exposed. This can destroy long-term growth prospects.

We’ve analyzed below some of the primary reasons:

1. The Lure of Quick “Success”

2. Potential for Increased Revenue

3. Accessibility & The Illusion of “Low Risk”

Why is ViewBotting Used?

Content creators, streamers, and influencers might use view bots for various reasons:

How ViewBotting Works

To appear as multiple viewers, bots often route their traffic through proxy servers or utilize networks of infected computers. This makes it harder to trace the view inflation back to a single source.

Advanced Bot Behavior

More sophisticated view bots go beyond simply boosting view counts:

How Bots Are Deployed

Implications for Publishers

How ViewBotting Affects Publishers

Diluted Ad Impressions:

Skewed Metrics:

Erosion of Trust:

Reputational Damage:

Examples of ViewBotting

Social Media Followers:

Twitch Raid Bots:

Music Streaming Manipulation:

ViewBotting Risks

Botted chats and fake engagement’s often easy to spot, and viewers are generally savvy. The discovery of botting severely erodes genuine community and trust. For publishers, viewbotting brings a tonne of risks like:

Revenue Clawbacks

Content Removal

Bans

Legal Issues

Here’s how you know someone’s ViewBotting

Unfortunately, there’s no foolproof way to definitively know if someone is viewbotting, but there are strong indicators. Here’s your checklist of what to look out for:

Suspicious Numbers and Patterns

Chat Analysis

Account & Channel Analysis

Services like Social Blade can analyze historical data and look for anomalies that might suggest view botting. Twitch and others have “Report” features to flag suspicious activity. While not conclusive, it helps platforms gather data.

These signs strongly suggest botting, but it’s not always guaranteed. There can be legitimate explanations for some oddities.

Protecting Yourself Against ViewBotting

Platforms are actively fighting viewbotting, but as publishers, you can take steps to protect your ad revenues:

Solid Solutions for ViewBotting

MonetizeMore’s Traffic Cop can address the view botting issues we’ve discussed above.

How Traffic Cop Provides a Solution

  1. IVT Data for Exclusion: Traffic Cop proactively identifies bot traffic and suspicious behavior patterns. This data streamlines the creation of exclusion lists across ad platforms, ensuring your ads reach your genuine target audience, not bots.
  2. Active Blocking: The solution goes beyond mere identification, actively blocking invalid traffic. This protects your ad budget in real-time, stopping bots from costing you money or generating unusable fake leads.
  3. Iterative Improvement: Traffic Cop’s continuous analysis of site visitor data lets you refine your targeting over time. The more data it has, the more effectively it can exclude non-human traffic, improving campaign performance with each iteration.

Key Benefits for Publishers

Interested in a free trial? Access it here!

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