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December 31, 2015, 02:35:50 PM |
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I'm always interested in ways to drive traffic to web pages, so I've been looking at Bitcoin faucets. I joined one, and the rate of income generation is desperately low, so I suspect this will be a short lived project. Some of the ads were quite interesting, and they were targetted, so I guess they use Google to rotate the ads. Now my question is - how do they calculate the payments? There used to be 4 methods of payment
1. Pay per impression ( you paid every time your ad was sent to a web page) 2. Pay per view (you were paid when your ad was sent to a viewable page) 3. Pay per click (you were only paid when the viewer clicked on your ad) 4. Pay per 2nd click (after clicking on your ad, the viewer had to click on a link on your site)
Also, there used to be filtering software that checked to see that multiple clicks were no coming from the same IP address.
My initial impression is that method 1 is the only one used, and it doesn't matter if the page is on a background window, and therefore it is not viewable. Clicking on an advert doesn't seem to make any difference to the payment total, but reloading the page does. Am I correct in these assumptions?
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