Monday, December 6, 2010





Here He Blows Again!

Halburn's Stats A Sham

Halburn likes to brag about how many hits his cluttered advertising shopper gets.
Over 40,000 in November. He says.
We say bullshit. He's a liar.

It's called click fraud.



We have a counter too!

Let us clarify exactly what that counter does.
It counts page hits not actual individuals.
So if one person reads 20 pages, it counts them as 20 visitors. Or if a certain fatbody sits around and reloads a page 150 times, guess what? 150 visitors.
And his newest scam is to write a little intro to the article he links to so the reader is forced to go to another page to get the actual link. That way he increases his hit count for anything anyone wants to read.

Here's what the guy that "redesigned" Halburn's blog has to say about hit counters:
"Please, don’t fall for claims from website hosting companies that promise to bring hundreds or even thousands of potential customers to your website… if only you let them build and host it for you. These are false claims! Even if you see high traffic numbers on your hit-counter, it is very likely being done by fraudulent means.
The Facts about Hit Counters
Hit counters on websites can be set high and raised at anytime with very little effort. A brand new website can be shown as having 1 million hits with a 2 second code change. Website hit counters do not reflect unique visitors – they don’t even necessarily reflect ANY visitors at all.
Some Companies Pay People To Browse The Web
Why in the world would a company PAY someone to surf the web… unless they got something out of it? Recently, a large web hosting company was paying people directly to repeatedly visit websites they promised high hit rates! Meaning these were never potential customers to begin with, just paid visits who loaded your page, then moved on to another site they were paid to visit.
Server Software Can Fake Hits
However, hosting companies don’t have to pay anyone to surf web pages these days. There are many software programs that web hosting companies can run on their server to run up artificial hit rates when they promise a hit count they can’t really deliver.
One such program is “I-Faker”. It promises to send as many unique hits a day as their server can handle. Using PHP, it routes HTTP get requests through a massive list of anonymous proxy servers which can be defined by the company. The advertisement for this software says that even banner ads on the site get hits. It is not only a fake hit generator, but it can in conjunction with the Alexa tracker improve your Alexa rankings.
All the traffic sent by the fake traffic PHP script is unique and shows up as unique in your website and server stats."
Straight from the horse's mouth, so to speak.
This is exactly what we're saying he's doing. Artificially inflating his stats to make his site more attractive to his so called advertisers.

So here's a little warning to those who may be thinking of advertising with this reprobate.

These numbers are completely unverified and he has no way to do so. He can make up a number and say that's how many people have visited.

BTW, we've had 9161576 visitors since we've started.

Related story:
Hallburn's Readership Stats Disproven!

6 comments:

  1. It's taken me nearly a year and a half to make 50,000 unique visitors over at Wordpress, because they have proper settings in recording hits. They don't include your own! This guy stabs at the refresh button more than Jeffery Dahmer did at the 10 year old boys he had for dinner.

    Then again, maybe I'm just not as "famous" as the all important news reporter.

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  2. More top-notch reporting!

    Any blogger like Halburn can make up a number to try and get advertising. Truth is, he has NO advertising dollars.

    What does he charge to "advertise" anyway?

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  3. I see the letters to the publisher has disappeared; must not be getting anything supportive anymore.

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  4. The politicians have gotten sick of him and stopped sending him their press releases.

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  5. The suspicion of many of us is that the ads he runs aren't legit. He runs them for free to fool others into maybe advertising with him.
    Lying about how many people actually visit is no surprise.

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  6. A Winfield family lost their home to a fire on Monday, basically lost everything they had a week and a half before Christmas, and no mention of it... top-notch reporting there I tell ya... but we know where to get a prime rib dinner now!

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