vulture.pngAlthough I still remember joining Entrecard less than a month ago, maybe things had really changed.  I recall signing up, being confused about the dashboard, and reading the help file to understand it all.   Was the new Entrecarder’s experience 30 days later so horrible that immediate change is required to save Entrecard?  To blow the lid off this story, I needed a scoop.  After writing my tirade last night, I had the clarity of mind to conduct a little experiment.

Operation Honeypot was born!   I threw some stuff on a webpage and created a new Entrecard account.  That wasn’t all.  I also kept 2 browsers open, one Firefox and one IE7.  First I checked that my new ad did not appear yet on the “most recent” page.  As I thought, it didn’t appear there until you insert the code and click “validate”.

With multiple windows open, I inserted the proper code, saved, then told Entrecard to go ahead and send their bot.  Over and over I refreshed the “Most Recent” page using another account.  The very second my new ad appeared I “confirmed”.  THEN  I logged out and logged in using a different account.  I used roboform, so that took a second at most.  I went right to “most recent” and confirmed.  Total amount of time passed between validating the account and confirming 2 ads?  Less than 1 minute.

Here’s where it gets interesting folks; I promise.  In between my first confirm and my second confirm, 4 people applied for that ad space.  The odds of 4 people getting lucky and spotting the ad seconds after available, zero.  All in a fraction of a minute?  No, way you say?.   Two other people spotted my ad and bid on it, 3 minutes later. 

Sam Spade time, I put on my detective outfit and got right onto the spammers trail.  Who were these people that somehow either got extremely lucky, or worse, had automated the process of advertising on new blogs?  Below are the 4 blogs that displayed such amazing dexterity:

Next I did a whois on the 4 sites to look for a pattern.

IP Address:  70.87.226.50      
IP Location   - Texas - Dallas - Theplanet.com Internet Services Inc 

IP Address:  77.232.68.93      
IP Location   - United Kingdom - Srvg-net-fl1-h  
 
IP Address:  82.165.49.27      
IP Location   - Germany - Schlund + Partner Ag 

IP Address:  64.13.192.197      
IP Location   - California - Culver City - Media Temple Inc 

No pattern at all! (I deleted the e-mails and their registrar names to prevent these people from being spammed)  So what did all four of these people, and the 2 others have in common? Was it the Evil Woobie or Evil Saphrym muscling out the noobs for cheap ad spots? Nope. All 6 of the blogs that requested ads were all new people themselves.

Mystery solved!  The “vultures” who prey on new people are actually new people themselves.  Why?  They are checking the “most recent” screen for their own ads, and that is also the only screen they can afford to advertise on.  That’s why they jump on new ads so fast.  I’m actually sad there was no conspiracy.

Add to Reddit.com RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Stumble It! Digg It! Mixx It!