Quote:
Originally Posted by RawAlex
I don't understand either. I would be pretty easy I suspect for Zango to spot the domains used by most of the major online processors and payments systems and make that a "no go" for popups. You would think they would also consider anything that is an https (secure) as "off limits".
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very easy. would take them a few minutes to compose a list. But i suspect that those urls make the most money for the people buying traffic from them. So the more the people targeting those urls make, the higher the bid prices for those urls, the more zango makes. They wouldn't block those they are too greedy to lose that income.
Ron, if you still reading this zango accounts for roughly 1 - 2% of all traffic, reported by several people here looking at their logs. Some people have reported higher. 1% to an affiliate might not be a lot of money, 1% to a program owner, who loses 1% from each of his affiliates ads up a lot. You guys losing 1% of all your transaction to this shit has to be a ton of money. ANYONE with zango on their pc, which estimates around 80 million infected pcs, who tries to go to a ccbill signup page is not going to signup with ccbill because your url is being targeted. Please nail these guys, the people buying traffic from them, and the companies who are acepting the traffic.