On 2003/10/08 00:21, Alon Altman wrote:

http://www.haifux.org/index.html and

I doubt *that* page (as opposed to http://www.haifux.org/) is of much use in this context. I don't see anything linking to it apart from the main Haifux page, nor do I see it come up in any obvious Google query.

Reread the terms of the program. It doesn't have anything to do with Google search. Google simply serves ads to pages you select based on the content of the pages.

Sure. But if nobody gets to that page, it's not worth the trouble.



> [...] we could place the ads on the message pages in the
> linux-il archive at http://mirror.hamakor.org.il/archives/linux-il/
I'm not sure Google will approve of this one -- they seem to be
interested in proper "content" sites. Won't hurt to ask, though.

I think the linux-il archives have a lot of very useful content for Google to make relevant ads for.

So do blogs, which they explicitly disallow. Anyway, I've sent Google a query about this.




On 2003/10/08 00:09, Eli Billauer wrote:
> I see one main benefit of this: To know, once and for all, how much
> money one can *really* make out of web advertising. My personal hunch:
> nil.

I'm running some Hebrew sites (haayal.co.il and friends). We tried several Israeli banner ad providers, and also home-cooked text ads. Revenue was on the order of 0.0001 NIS/pageview. Do the math.


On 2003/10/08 00:43, Eran Sandler wrote: > I guess you can appeal to the community and ask them to click one time > each day, but that's not the point for that, is it...

Google AdSense explicitly forbids that.


About pop-up or otherwise obstructive ads, I strongly object. To my taste old-fashioned banners are already marginal.


Eran




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