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Arizona Is In The Spotlight…Again!

July 06, 2010 By: Nicky Category: Financial, Lead Exchange, Microlending Leads

Arizona’s new law has drawn so much national attention recently that even the Justice Department has stepped in to file a lawsuit against the state. The new law, requiring immigrants to carry alien registration at all times and allowing authorities to question their residency status with reasonable suspicion that they are not in the country legally, is being seriously questioned.
The Justice Department is suing the states new law in violation of the supremacy clause in the Constitution. Along with many others who are fighting against the law, the Justice Department believes the law is too strict. Although it is federal law to illegally be in the country, the department believes this specific law takes it too far and causes further unnecessary problems with racial profiling. With the hispanic culture expanding throughout the country, it isn’t easy to to chose those who may or may not be living here legally, making it easier for even those who have legal papers to be harassed.
It seems that Arizona is in the news all over the place…. payday loan law going in effect this month, and now also the excitement surrounding the immigration law. Leadpile is located in AZ, so we all will be keeping an eye on all this EXCITING news!!!!

Where are Your Ads Being Placed?

July 17, 2008 By: Mari Woods Holt Category: Lead Exchange, Lead Generation, Lead Marketplace

Adwords - Keywords Lead ExchangeThis is a question that should be asked if you are spending any money with Google and specifically with AdWords. Quietly, last week Google was sued by a Boston attorney who purchased search ads and alleges that they yielded clicks, but no clients. The attorney complains that his pay-per-click search ads were placed on parked domains and “error” sites. He believes that Google is misleading advertisers by including these sites, since no actual searches occur on these pages. The clicks generated from these sites accounted for 15% of his budget and resulted in no conversions.

The attorney is seeking a refund (so far denied by Google) for the clicks from the parked domains program and the “AdSense for errors” program. He is also asking for Google to make it easier to opt out of the parked domains and error programs. The attorney is being represented by a firm that believes an entire class of Google’s advertisers are similarly being defrauded, thus a class-action lawsuit has been filed.

Google is no stranger to lawsuits, but this one may have some teeth. In the least, companies should now pay more attention to where their ads are being placed. Wouldn’t leads coming from a proven marketplace and exchange make more sense? Leadpile does not use parked domains, nor do we capitalize on errors made by consumers.

UPDATE – Google has had a second fraud lawsuit filed regarding their parked domain program. This time an online retailer complains that they purchased ads without realizing that the ads would appear on parked domains. The company said in it’s lawsuit that it had been charged for clicks from parked domains “that had little relation to its business.”

It will be interesting to see if Google aggressively fights these lawsuits, or if they quietly settle the cases. Of course, that will add to the “legal fees” when future quarterly reports are released.