Celebrities, businesses and even the U.S. State Department have
bought bogus Facebook likes, Twitter followers or YouTube viewers from
offshore "click farms," where workers tap, tap, tap the thumbs up
button, view videos or retweet comments to inflate social media numbers.
Since
Facebook launched almost 10 years ago, users have sought to expand
their social networks for financial gain, winning friends, bragging
rights and professional clout. And social media companies cite the
levels of engagement to tout their value.
But an Associated Press
examination has found a growing global marketplace for fake clicks,
which tech companies struggle to police. Online records, industry
studies and interviews show companies are capitalizing on the
opportunity to make millions of dollars by duping social media.
For
as little as a half cent each click, websites hawk everything from
LinkedIn connections to make members appear more employable to
Soundcloud plays to influence record label interest.
"Anytime
there's a monetary value added to clicks, there's going to be people
going to the dark side," said Mitul Gandhi, CEO of seoClarity, a Des
Plaines, Ill., social media marketing firm that weeds out phony online
engagements.
Italian security researchers and bloggers Andrea Stroppa and Carla De
Micheli estimated in 2013 that sales of fake Twitter followers have the
potential to bring in $40 million to $360 million to date, and that
fake Facebook activities bring in $200 million a year.
As a
result, many firms, whose values are based on credibility, have entire
teams doggedly pursuing the buyers and brokers of fake clicks. But each
time they crack down on one, another, more creative scheme emerges.
When
software engineers wrote computer programs, for example, to generate
lucrative fake clicks, tech giants fought back with software that
screens out "bot-generated" clicks and began regularly sweeping user
accounts.
YouTube wiped out billions of music industry video views
last December after auditors found some videos apparently had
exaggerated numbers of views. Its parent-company, Google, is also
constantly battling people who generate fake clicks on their ads.
And
Facebook, whose most recent quarterly report estimated as many as 14.1
million of its 1.18 billion active users are fraudulent accounts, does
frequent purges. That's particularly important for a company that was
built on the principle that users are real people.
Twitter's Jim
Prosser said there's no upside. "In the end, their accounts are
suspended, they're out the money and they lose the followers," he said.
LinkedIn
spokesman Doug Madey said buying connections "dilutes the member
experience," violates their user agreement and can also prompt account
closures.
Google and YouTube "take action against bad actors that seek to game our systems," said spokeswoman Andrea Faville.
Dhaka, Bangladesh, a city of 7 million in South Asia, is an international hub for click farms.
The
CEO of Dhaka-based social media promotion firm Unique IT World said he
has paid workers to manually click on clients' social media pages,
making it harder for Facebook, Google and others to catch them. "Those
accounts are not fake, they were genuine," Shaiful Islam said.
A
recent check on Facebook showed Dhaka was the most popular city for
many, including soccer star Leo Messi, who has 51 million likes;
Facebook's own security page, which has 7.7 million likes; and Google's
Facebook page, which has 15.2 million likes.
In 2013, the State Department, which has more than 400,000 likes and
was recently most popular in Cairo, said it would stop buying Facebook
fans after its inspector general criticized the agency for spending
$630,000 to boost the numbers.
In one case, its fan tally rose from about 10,000 to more than 2.5 million.
Sometimes there are plausible explanations for click increases.
For
example, Burger King's most popular city was, for a few weeks this
year, Karachi, Pakistan, after the chain opened several restaurants
there.
While the Federal Trade Commission and several state
attorney generals have cracked down on fake endorsements or reviews,
they have not weighed in on clicks.
Meanwhile, hundreds of online
businesses sell clicks and social media accounts from around the world.
BuyPlusFollowers
sells 250 Google+ shares for $12.95. InstagramEngine sells 1,000
followers for $12. AuthenticHits sells 1,000 SoundCloud plays for $9.
It's a lucrative business, said the president and CEO of WeSellLikes.com.
"The
businesses buy the Facebook likes because they're afraid that when
people go to their Facebook page and they only see 12 or 15 likes,
they're going to lose potential customers," he said. The company
official spoke on condition of anonymity, saying he recently moved his
company offshore to avoid litigation or cease-and-desist notices.
In
Indonesia, a social media-obsessed country with some of the largest
number of Facebook pages and Twitter users, click farms proliferate.
Ali
Hanafiah, 40, offers 1,000 Twitter followers for $10 and 1 million for
$600. He owns his own server, and pays $1 per month per Internet
Protocol address, which he uses to generate thousands of social media
accounts.
Those accounts, he said, "enable us to create many fake followers."
During
an interview at a downtown Jakarta cafe, Hanafiah — wearing a Nike cap,
blue jeans and a white T-shirt — said large social networks can boost a
business' public profile.
"Today, we are living in a tight competition world that is forcing people to compete with many tricks," he said.
Tony
Harris, who does social media marketing for major Hollywood movie
firms, said he would love to be able to give his clients massive numbers
of Twitter followers and Facebook fans, but buying them from random
strangers is not very effective or ethical.
"The illusion of a massive following is often just that," he said.
The fake click market has generated another business: auditors.
Robert
Waller, founder of London-based Status People, helps clients block
fakes. "We have had a lot of people who have bought fake accounts,
realized it's a stupid idea and they're looking for ways to get rid of
them," he said.
David Burch, at TubeMogul, a video marketing firm
based in Emeryville, Calif., said that buying clicks to promote clients
is a grave error. "It's bad business," he said, "and if an advertiser
ever found out you did that, they'd never do business with you again."
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