Fake Direct Traffic – Yahoo’s New Crawler?
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Have you seen a strange boost in direct traffic since December 19, 2012? Has it been steadily growing over the last few months? You might think that it’s your marketing efforts paying off; maybe your branding has finally found fertile ground! Unfortunately that’s not the case.
I first discovered the fake traffic several of weeks ago when trying to parse out some of the blocked Safari traffic (more on that in a later post). While trying to figure out more accurate traffic information for Safari, I noticed that for some sites Firefox was reporting unusually high direct traffic.
My curiosity was piqued I looked into the traffic and saw my average time on site decreasing, and my bounce rate increasing. I started digging into the data and found that all the traffic was coming from Firefox 3.5. The traffic from this browser appeared overnight on December 19th, 2012 and has a visit duration of 0 seconds along with a bounce rate nearing 100%. I took a look at some other sites and saw the same traffic pattern emerging on almost every single site. I was quite stumped at this point, why was I getting a large spike of traffic from an old version of Firefox? After talking with some of the members on my team we thought that it might be a bot emulating Firefox that Google Analytics is somehow tracking as a person.
Working off this premise I checked the network domain that the traffic was coming from, and all of it was coming from Yahoo.com. So it appears that since December Yahoo has been using a new bot that reports all its crawling as a direct visit. I don’t know why this crawler is being reported as traffic, but it has altered my data quite a bit over the last few months. Thankfully it is easy to take care of using advanced segments.
I first discovered the fake traffic several of weeks ago when trying to parse out some of the blocked Safari traffic (more on that in a later post). While trying to figure out more accurate traffic information for Safari, I noticed that for some sites Firefox was reporting unusually high direct traffic.
My curiosity was piqued I looked into the traffic and saw my average time on site decreasing, and my bounce rate increasing. I started digging into the data and found that all the traffic was coming from Firefox 3.5. The traffic from this browser appeared overnight on December 19th, 2012 and has a visit duration of 0 seconds along with a bounce rate nearing 100%. I took a look at some other sites and saw the same traffic pattern emerging on almost every single site. I was quite stumped at this point, why was I getting a large spike of traffic from an old version of Firefox? After talking with some of the members on my team we thought that it might be a bot emulating Firefox that Google Analytics is somehow tracking as a person.
Working off this premise I checked the network domain that the traffic was coming from, and all of it was coming from Yahoo.com. So it appears that since December Yahoo has been using a new bot that reports all its crawling as a direct visit. I don’t know why this crawler is being reported as traffic, but it has altered my data quite a bit over the last few months. Thankfully it is easy to take care of using advanced segments.