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> Get Articles > Affiliate and Associate Programs > Stop Thieves Who Steal Your Affiliate Commissions

Stop Thieves Who Steal Your Affiliate Commissions


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Vickie Bennett
TopTenMarketingaol.com

TopTenMarketing.com
http://TopTenMarketing.com


Stop Thieves Who Steal Your Affiliate Commissions

by Vickie Bennett, TopTenMarketing.com



In his article "How To Protect Yourself Online -- Are

You Safe?" Ellery Coleman, ClickBankGuard.com, wrote that

he lost 25% of his sales to thieves -- until he secured his

affiliate links.

In their May 2002 newsletters Neil Durrant,

AffiliateMarketing.co.uk. and Allan Gardyne,

AssociatePrograms.com, busted Morpheus file-sharing

software that overwrote affiliate links, a "problem" the new

version corrects.

According to NameStick.com, domain name

forwarding, as much as 43% of affiliate commissions are not

tracked.

Jim Edwards, AffiliateLinkCloaker.com, estimates 10-

30% of affiliate commissions are stolen, but his product offers

limited security, 70-80%.

In fact, it's so simple to alter affiliate links and codes

that anyone can.

These Click Bank and PayPal examples are from

Ellery Coleman, ClickBankGuard.com.

Test this ClickBank affiliate link:

http://hop.clickbank.net/?gra27/salesguide

Right Click on the Web Page, then click View Source.

You've accessed the HTML code and can make changes.

A thief could substitute his ClickBank account ID for

the affiliate’s. He pays half price for the book and bypasses

the 50% commission.

PayPal affiliate links are just as easy to change.

Test this link: http://www.instantdough.com .

Right Click, View Source for the HTML code. Use

Search, Find to go to this line:

input type="hidden" name="return"

value="http://www.instantdough.com/thankxyz.html"

The thief could copy and paste the code into his

browser and click Enter. He sees, "Thank you for paying your

sponsor, etc." But He bypassed the $20.00 sponsor

commission and pays $9.00 for the membership.

In contrast, look at:

http://AutomaticBanking.com/pa/main.cgi?TopTen

Right Click, View Source and use Search, Find to look

for this line:

input type="hidden" name="return" value="http://www.automaticbanking.com/cgi-bin/autoforward.cgi?lock=protect"

This merchant changed the HTML code that PayPal

provided. A thief can’t bypass the affiliate code. If he tries to

copy and paste this URL into his browser -- he's busted!

Redirect pages don’t protect affiliate links either. The

thief could substitute his ID for "ThiefCode."

https//secure.clickbank.net/cgi/sgspay/1.cgi?i=3c5060e85tmybxfl .ThiefCode.wahgold.003.4777&&t=Instant_Internet_Empires

I tested AffiliateLinkCloaker.com, from Jim Edwards,

which promises limited security for affiliate links. Go to his

web site: http://affililiatelinkcloaker.com

and...

Test his unprotected link:

http://hop.clickbank.net/?ebookfire/ebksecrets

Test his cloaked link:

http://www.affiliatelinkcloaker.com/ese.html

I could still access it on the product page and

ClickBank order form. I did not see the hexadecimal code that

is supposed to encrypt and protect his ClickBank affiliate ID

code, "ebookfire."

Go to the ClickBank Secure Order Form, Right Click,

View Source. Go to this line:

input type=hidden name=i value="3d386f37689keg74.ebookfire.ebksecrets.001.4900"

I asked Jim Edwards if I (or a thief) could change

"ebookfire" to another ClickBank ID and bypass his

commissions.

He responded, in part:

"ClickBank ... nobody can defend against the last ditch hijack

of someone replacing the ClickBank affiliate ID in their

browser address bar (that 20% we mention on the web site).

An alternative is for the merchant to not pop a new window to

the order page on ClickBank, ... you could lose sales because

the buyers don't think it's a secure transaction."

I asked Ellery Coleman if I used ClickBankGuard.com,

could a thief go to the ClickBank order form and steal my

commissions. He responded:

"Changing the (ClickBank) affiliate ID will not change the

original affiliate, who is credited for the commission.

We are working with ClickBank and hope that soon

you will not be able to right click on their order page

anymore so as to avoid this confusion."

ClickBankGuard creates a secure page added to your

web site for each affiliate link. You promote your business

with your domain name, not the affiliate link. Thieves (and

innocent prospects) never see your affiliate URL in their

browser.

Test ClickBankGuard at:

http://TopTenMarketing.com

His response made me feel much better. But...

Affiliate links create other problems for my business --

and yours.

1. Search engine spiders that rank web sites don't rank

affiliate URLs high.

2. Prospects are suspicious of long affiliate URLs. They

shorten them to find the big company, rather than deal with

the affiliate, the "little guy." (NameStick.com claims a short

domain name can increase your sales up to 327%.)

3. Redirect pages also cost extra time and identify you

as an affiliate.

4. Long URLs are unreliable. Impatient prospects won't

copy and paste a broken link into their browsers.

5. Affiliate companies promote their domain name in

your affiliate links to build their businesses. You lose name

recognition and credibility.

6. Some ad or link trackers also require you to use their

domain name in your links. It’s free advertising for them, but

you lose business.

Fortunately, we can take charge. We can secure our

affiliate links and commissions. We can learn to promote our

businesses, not the other guy's.

1. Test your affiliate links to see which are vulnerable to

thieves.

2. Know what security your affiliate companies use to

protect your links and commissions. Don't promote programs

that are vulnerable.

3. Verify that your PayPal merchants modify their HTML

code to lock=protect your affiliate links.

4. Promote programs that offer their affiliate programs

after the customer purchases a product or service.

5. Don’t put your download page in your main directory

or name it thankyou.html, thanks.html, or other code that’s

easy for thieves to guess.

6. Don’t rely on redirect pages, ad or link trackers,

domain name forwarding, or affiliate link cloaking for security.

7. Find alternatives to affiliate links. Write free reports

and e-mail courses to pre-sell your products and services.

Start a newsletter. Write ebooks that include your links.

8. Make internet security a top priority. Research

hackers, scammers, thieves and other crooks.

9. Educate your affiliate program managers, affiliates,

customers and prospects. (You may reprint this article.

Please keep the resource box intact.)

10. Use a security product or service to protect your

affiliate links and commissions.

Thieves, hackers, scammers and other low-life scum

will always be with us. But if we work together, we’ll have a

better opportunity to succeed.



ClickBankGuard secures your links and commissions.

AdTrackZ tracks your promotions. Use your domain name and earn 50% commissions. Vickie Bennett, http://TopTenMarketing.com , or Contact me at: TopTenMarketingaol.com







(NOTE TO PUBLISHER: 996 words. If you are already an affiliate of ClickBankGuard and AdTrackZ, or if you join from TopTenMarkeing, you may substitute your response box for mine.



Please include my contact information as follows:

VickieBennett, http://TopTenMarketing.com

Mail to: TopTenMarketingaol.com



Thank you.)





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