Update on shaving detection, network still playing dirty?

Update on shaving detection, network still playing dirty?

Scarcity

New member
Alright, so I dug into this again after some weird payout drops last week. Last month I was hitting 3.5 ROI across the board, then suddenly it's like I'm paying a ghost. Checked my tracking, no leaks, no suspicious jumps. So I ran a quick audit on the traffic sources, filtering out everything that looked odd. Turns out, the network was shaving a bit on the back end. Not huge, like 10-15 percent, but enough to eat into my margins fast. Got into the logs and found some click-to-conversion patterns that didn't add up - fake installs, bot traffic, the usual shady stuff. Sent the usual support tickets, got the canned reply about "algorithm improvements" and "high-quality traffic focus". Yeah right. Now I'm monitoring the clicks more closely, cutting out all the low-quality sources and testing new pools. But honestly, I'm over the waiting game with these networks. If you're not checking your numbers daily, they'll sneak that shaving in without you noticing till it's too late. Anyone else dealing with this? How do you spot the early signs and get ahead of the fraud?
 
You're spot on about the sneaky nature of this stuff. Shaving can be subtle but deadly if you don't catch it early. The key is setting up real-time alerts for weird patterns like sudden drops in CVR or unexpected spike in fake installs. Automated log analysis helps too, especially if you can flag suspicious IPs or unusual click-to-install timing. Cutting low-quality sources is good but you gotta dig deeper, look at user behavior post-click. If they bounce fast or never engage, that's a red flag. The networks will keep trying to slip this in, so stay vigilant and always test your traffic pools. What's your threshold for cutting a source?
 
honestly, I think a lot of folks get caught up chasing the latest detection tools and forget that a clean, fast-loading LP and strict filtering still matter more than fancy tech. Shaving is sneaky, but if your creatives are solid and your targeting tight, it's harder for them to sneak fake traffic past you. Automated alerts are good, but nothing beats daily
 
Bro, shavin on the backend? Please. if u ain't running real-time checks and cutting the trash instantly, u just cope.
 
Honestly, this whole shaven traffic paranoia is a bit much. Yeah, networks play dirty, but if you're relying on basic filtering and ignoring the bigger picture, you're just feeding the problem. Fake installs, bot traffic, all that nonsense, it's part of the game. But here's the thing, if your setup is solid, your tracking is accurate and you're focusing on LTV, then a 10-15 percent shaving isn't the end of the world. You don't need some magic alert system to tell you when your margins are shrinking, you need to understand your numbers, spot patterns early, and adjust your strategy accordingly. Monitoring clicks more closely and cutting bad sources is all good, but that's just bandaid stuff. The real deal is in your funnel quality and targeting. If your creatives are trash or your targeting is too broad, you're gonna get shredded by this shady traffic. So stop whining about networks shaving on the backend and start owning your traffic. If you're not doing that, no amount of fancy alerts or real-time logs will save you. Respectfully, you're missing the point, the fraud isn't the network, it's your failure to control your own damn traffic.
 
You're spot on about the sneaky nature of this stuff
i'm gonna have to call bs on the "sneaky nature" comment. sure, shaving happens, but most of the time it's more blatant than folks wanna admit. if you're running decent tracking and filtering, you should be catching most of the fake traffic before it gets to that stage. what probably means is that networks are trying to hide it better, but the real trick is having your own logs and real-time alerts. if you're waiting for some "pattern" to pop up in a dashboard, you're already late. the truth is, most of the "sneaky" stuff is just poorly hidden fake installs and bot traffic. the networks don't really need to be sneaky, just lazy. unless you're running some shady, untrackable stuff, the real solution is to keep your finger on the pulse and not rely on their canned reports. because, if your tracking is solid, you'll see the theft in real time before they sneak it past you.
 
RIP to the days when people thought filtering was enough. 10-15 percent shaving? That's a cozy sum if you ask me. Honestly, if you ain't tracking every backlink manually in a spreadsheet, you're just asking to get blindsided. These networks get smarter, and relying on canned support replies about "algorithm improvements" is laughable. Fake installs and bot traffic don't always come in obvious packages, that's the game they play. I've seen guys lose 20 percent ROI in a week just cuz they ignored early warning signs. The key?
 
RIP to the days when people thought filtering was enough. 10-15 percent shaving.
so, you really think manual backlink tracking is the magic fix for this? I mean, sure, more eyeballs help but the networks get smarter every day. I've seen guys waste tons of time on that old school stuff and still get crept. maybe the real key is less about tracking every backlink and more about building resilient funnels that can withstand a bit of shaving without tanking your ROI. rinse and repeat, right?
 
Look, filtering and manual tracking are band-aids at best. If you're still relying on old school methods to spot fraud, you're already behind the curve. Networks are constantly evolving their shaves, and what worked last month won't cut it now. You gotta get into the data at a granular level, do your own pattern analysis, and set up your own alerts. Anything less and you're just waiting to get spaghettified in some shady traffic mess. If you think support tickets and canned replies fix this, you're fooling yourself. It's a shitshow out there and only the paranoid survive. Stop pretending you can catch everything with a spreadsheet and start automating the hell out of your monitoring.
 
if you're running decent tracking and filtering, you should be catching most of the fake traffic before it gets to that stage
Haste, I gotta disagree there tracking and filtering are necessary but not enough. The networks adapt quick, they learn how to bypass those filters and scrape you on the backend. You can catch the obvious fake clicks but the subtle shaves are hidden in legit-looking data. If you rely only on those, you're always a step behind. Real edge is in proactive traffic monitoring, understanding patterns and adapting your approach before the fraud gets embedded deep.
 
So, how many of you actually have real-time checks integrated? I mean, I get it's a pain to set up, but if you're not catching this stuff instantly, you're just a step behind. Do you guys rely more on automated tools or manual spot checks for the quick wins?
 
Update on shaving detection, network still playing dirty
Fundamentally, these detection methods evolve fast and if the network is still playing dirty it probably means they're relying on fingerprinting or behavior analysis that hasn't been properly cloaked. Shaving detection is tricky because it depends on how sophisticated their fingerprinting is and how well your setup obfuscates those signals. You can get around some of it with a mix of rotating proxies, fingerprint randomization and behavior mimicry, but if they keep updating their heuristics it's a constant game of catch-up.
 
You can get around some of it with a mix of rotating proxies, fingerprint randomization and behavior mimicry, but if they keep updating their heuristics it's a constant game of catch-up
But here's the thing if the detection methods keep evolving so fast and the network keeps changing tactics how long before the whole game just turns into a messy arms race that no one really wins the data tells the story but who's really winning if the detection keeps getting smarter and the cloaking tactics just get more elaborate?
 
Imo, it's an endless game of cat and mouse. As soon as one side tweaks their tricks, the other side adapts again. Curious if anyone has concrete proof that one side is truly winning or if it's just a constant shuffle.
 
sorry but i gotta call bs on the idea that this is just a cat and mouse game with no clear winners. i've seen networks crack down hard on shaving and still get pretty good ROI after adjusting tactics. the key is in the data, not just chasing the latest tricks. if you track your cr, epc and lp decay, you can spot the patterns faster and adapt before the whole thing turns into a total mess. it's not about who is winning every single battle but who's adjusting quicker and smarter. anyone telling you it's just a shuffle is probably chasing shadows. test, scale, repeat.
 
Imo, it's an endless game of cat and mouse
I mean, calling it endless might be giving the network too much credit.

But here's the thing if the detection methods keep evolving so fast and the network keeps changing tactics how long before the whole game just turns into a messy arms race that no one really wins the data tells the story but who's really winning if the detection keeps getting smarter and the cloaking tactics just get more elaborate
Shaving detection is not just a game of catching them, it's about making it so unprofitable they move on. If they're still playing dirty, it's probably because the ROI is still there (or they're just stubborn sock puppets).
 
shaving detection is all about ROI disruption. networks keep tweaking, but if it's still worth it for them, then they're winning enough. it's not about a clear victory, it's about making it unprofitable enough to scare off the weak links.
 
Let me tell you a story. I saw a network get caught shaving, cleaned house, changed tactics, and ROI was still a nightmare a month later. SHAVING is just the surface - the real game is making it so unprofitable the weak links jump ship.
 
Yeah, shaving detection is just the tip of the iceberg. The networks will always tweak and play dirty as long as the ROI is still there. The real challenge is building enough topical authority to withstand their moves. When you got an asset that's not just a money page but a whole ecosystem, they struggle to knock you out. They're playing whack-a-mole with thin content and shady tactics but forget the fact that a solid, authoritative site makes that stuff less and less effective. The game is about making the whole thing so resilient that even their best tricks lose steam. Until then, they'll keep adjusting cuz the margins are too juicy to walk away from.
 
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