LiewCF.com: “How Did Malaysian Pro-Blogger Get Google AdSense Ad Serving Disabled (and Re-enabled) on His Blog?” plus 1 more |
| How Did Malaysian Pro-Blogger Get Google AdSense Ad Serving Disabled (and Re-enabled) on His Blog? Posted: 19 Jan 2011 01:40 AM PST Malaysian Pro-blogger, Liew Cheon Fong (a.k.a LiewCF, yours truly) got Google AdSense disable ad serving on his tech blog. How did he get it re-enabled in 14 hours? Also, the AdSense alternatives he used and the lessons he learned. Read on for the details. Last week afternoon (Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 1:35 PM), I suddenly received an email from Google AdSense with subject title “Google AdSense ad serving has been disabled to your site”
My first reaction was “Another scam email!” but after reading it thoroughly… Hey, it is genuine! Google disabled AdSense ads on my site! OMG! This is the WORST nightmare for AdSense publishers! Why Google AdSense disable ads serving on LiewCF.com?It is caused by my blog post “HOW TO: Crack Mac App Store and Download Free Angry Birds for Mac [ILLEGAL]” (article has been deleted, more details below) Though I had already put warning messages in title and in the article body… but the blog post ranked No.1 for the search keywords “Mac App Store Crack”, ranked better than the popular Mac blog – 9to5Mac.com.
(Thanks to my SEO optimization and Twitter ReTweets) My site received many traffic for the keywords but, at the same time, it is a significant target if anyone want to hunt down websites that spread the Mac App Store crack news. Getting AdSense re-enable on siteThe email was sent from no-reply email account. I must find a way to contact Google AdSense team. A google search for the email subject “Google AdSense ad serving has been disabled to your site” and leaded me to Google AdSense forum. There are also many other publishers received the same email before but most of them did not have second chance… Bad news.
There is a Google AdSense Policy Violation Appeal form where you can request for re-enabled ad serving to your site. Immediately, I deleted the affected blog post and submit my details using the Policy Violation Appeal form. I wrote:
After that, all I could do is WAIT and PRAY. Google AdSense alternatives?Then, I checked my site and the AdSense ads are still serving normally. So, I thought only the related web page is affected. “Lucky!” I was wrong! In the midnight, I noticed ALL the AdSense ads on my site were gone and left only white spaces! OMG! Google AdSense disabled the ad serving for the whole website, instead of the affected page only! While I am still waiting reply from Google AdSense team for my appeal, I immediately replaced all Google AdSense ads spaces with other alternative advertising networks, such as Chitika, CPM-based ads, local ads, etc. The alternative networks revenue would not match the Google AdSense income, but it is better than wasting the ads spaces. Google AdSense ad serving re-enabled!Just as soon as I done switching AdSense ads spaces to alternative ads, I received an email from Google AdSense again (Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 3:33 AM). This time, is a good news.
Phew~ What a relieve! Ad-serving is back to normal after 24 hours. Lessons learnedI felt like bungee jump – jump off from a high bridge then bounced and at last landed safely. Certainly, I did not feel good but it is a good experience. I shall not write anything about cracking and hacking (even with loud and clear warning message). I could not afford to risk my house, car, living. etc for popular but questionable articles. Glad that Google AdSense team resolved my case in 14 hours. Many publishers complain that Google AdSense ignore them or slow response, which is false in my case. Also, the incident make me to re-think the dependents on Google AdSense as a blogger. I shall reducing the portion of AdSense revenue in my total income. I said the same at years before and I am still working on it. While I could survive without Google AdSense, but I never want to do that. Darn! I love AdSense! Related book: Google AdSense For Dummies [image courtesy of Jon Ovington] |
| Posted: 18 Jan 2011 07:19 PM PST Now HTML5 has a logo and you can wear it!
Price is USD$22.50 each. Free shipping in USA (as far as I found out). International shipping fee is fixed at USD$10 per shirt: 1 tee $10, 2 tees $20, 3 tees $30, … Fixed shipping fee per shirt is bad. By the way, HTML5 logo is licensed under Creative Common Attribution 3.0 Unported. Anyone can use the logo and use it anywhere. Meaning, you can print your own HTML5 t-shirt, stickers, etc! You could ask a local printer to print your own custom HTML5 logo t-shirt. |
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