Saturday, 28 March 2015

why Google Adsense Disable

Does Google pays my earning on Adsense

HAHAHA! This is a very common wrong idea people hand regarding Adsense program. People think that whatever meny they earn on adsense, it is actually coming from Google’s pocket. No my friends, it is not. Adsense earnings actually comes from the ad publishers pocket. When organizations post ad through Google Adwords, the amount they mention for CPC, it is actually get divided into Google’s profit and as well as adsense users earnings. Now it has been calculated by using many complex mathematical formulas which included many key factors of your site like number of your daily visitors, your page rank, your website average pageviews etc. So, in short if you are a very reputable site which higher page rank and more visitors, you will earn more in adfsense than others. Even the higher CPC ads are shown most often in reputable sites. So, now as you have an overall idea about how adsense works, lets share top 5 tips to prevent your account getting banned or disabled on adsense.Google AdSense by default serve ads based on your visitor's browsing history that Google stores in browser's cookie. Depending on your website's niche, disabling it can serve more targeted ads to your visitors and increase your AdSense earnings.
A niche with high competition in Google AdWords (where there are a lot advertisers bid for keywords in your site) would benefit from disabling the option, while site's with less targeted keyword might suffer.
- See more at: https://docs.oseems.com/general/web/adsense/disable-interest-based-ads#sthash.1R0vI674.dpufSo you try to login to your AdSense account today and find it’s disabled. You frantically try again with no luck and then check your email to find Google’s contacted you to let you know your AdSense account has been disabled. Ugh…
We’ve had some readers and listeners email us about the fact that their AdSense account was disabled and were wondering how we continue to operate with such a potential risk looming. We were evencalled out in the comments section on Joseph Archibald’s blog about why we might be avoiding the topic or not sharing those risks with our readers.
While we did write a post about the risks of online publishing, we didn’t address this issue directly and I thought I’d lay out some of our thoughts here in this post. If you’ve found us vague on this subject in the past it’s mostly because it’s something we haven’t dealt with directly.
Most of our content is focused on building niche sites and AdSense monetization, so if you no longer have that as an option there hasn’t been much to say. Still, it’s a pretty serious issue for those affected and we wanted to give them the options that we know are available and would use if such a thing were