Alright, listen. First off, a leaky bucket setup with cheap proxies and free anti fingerprint extensions? That's like trying to fill a swimming pool with a garden hose. No matter how many times you run it, if the quality is crap, it's gonna spill out quick. FB is not some naive kid falling for...
Yeah, push traffic is a gamble no matter how you slice it. Smartlinks do give some safety net but they also just get lazy people off the hook. If you know your audience, direct linking can smash. But remember, it's all about testing and tracking tight or you end up chasing ghosts. No magic...
Man, that feeling when you finally think you got a hot offer and then poof, gone. It's like chasing a mirage in this shitcoin of a game. I swear, some AMs are just out to drain your wallet and leave you with nothing but a bad taste. Always, always do your homework before sending any traffic...
Let me preface this by saying I respect Whet's point but I gotta call some BS on that "show me the data" thing. The thing with link hijack is it's super hard to track exactly how long those links stay live unless you have a pretty fancy setup. Most people don't and they just keep going off gut...
but have you considered the TOS risk difference? HTTP proxies are often more flagged or scrutinized, especially with high-volume CPA stuff. SOCKS5 might be more stealthy in certain niches, even if they seem clunkier. so isn't it kinda risky to just say HTTP is better now without factoring in that?
Yikes, sounds like a headache. Always double check the TOS and compliance angles before jumping in with networks. You dont want a water-tight FTC disclosure only to get banned for sketchy claims later. Watch out for the shitcoin stuff too.
Yeah, native ads are kinda like that. You tweak, you gamble, and sometimes it hits, sometimes it flops. The real trick is not getting attached to any one campaign and knowing when to fold. But have you considered the compliance angle? Sometimes it's not just about the bids or creatives but if...
Honestly, this whole heatmap obsession is overblown. People get too hung up on visuals w/o understanding the actual behavior behind those clicks. Session recordings? Yeah, they help, but if you're not testing your core value prop, layout and headlines are still king. All these shiny tools are...
Let me preface this by saying following the rules is kinda like bringing a butter knife to a gunfight. Yeah it might keep you safe for a bit but if you want real results you gotta know when to bend and twist. Platforms are like whack-a-mole, change the rules or shift the goalposts overnight...
Dropped Mullvad into my tests today? Nice choice. Always like to see VPNs that keep it simple and get straight to the point. Just keep an eye on those leaks, no matter how fast the speeds look. Sometimes the quiet ones are hiding the good stuff but also the bad. Never let your guard down just...
Haha, cycle, you got a point. It's all about playing it smart and not flashing your hand. One slip and your whole campaign's toast faster than a toast in a toaster. But honestly, calling it a secret weapon? More like a double-edged sword, especially if you don't know how to wield it. That...
Look, all this talk about mobile proxies being the holy grail is just another shiny object. You want consistent, reliable speeds? then stop chasing after mobile proxies like they're some magic fix. Most of that hype is just sellers trying to charge a premium for a slightly different IP pool...
Honestly I think some folks overthink vetting. Yeah dead links suck, but if you're throwing automation at every site w/o a quick manual check, you're just asking for trouble. Quality over quantity still rules, especially when clients get burned over tiny mistakes. Automation helps, but a human...
In my humble, and prob wrong, opinion, networks tweaking attribution or setup can cause weird data but sometimes I think the raw numbers just tell a different story. No matter how much you double check, some gaps or hidden tricks are just part of the game. Data's data till it isn't.
Let me preface this by saying there is no one size fits all. back in the day we just ran some tests, watched the metrics and adjusted accordingly. now everyone wants a magic number but thats just chasing shadows.