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Aaron Greenspan

Aaron Greenspan

Posted: March 6, 2009 01:37 AM

This is the first article in a two-part series.

Like most Americans, I use Google's search engine several times a day without so much as a second thought. It was only in 2007 that my company's relationship with Google, Inc. temporarily escalated to that of a full-fledged customer, when Think Computer Corporation became yet another a Google AdWords advertiser. (AdWords advertisements appear on the right side of the main Google search results.) Sadly, the several ad campaigns we tried during this brief experiment failed miserably to bring in any new revenue, and so I personally went back to being just another user of Google's search service -- at least until March, 2008. That's when my company signed up for the flip side of Google's advertising juggernaut: AdSense. In anticipation of a new product, Think had acquired a brand new domain name that was unexpectedly receiving a high volume of internet traffic. Instead of paying Google for Think's ads, I thought it might make more sense for Think to get paid for displaying Google's.

Everything went according to plan until 11:00 A.M. on December 9, 2008. With a single click, a faceless Google employee decided that Think Computer Corporation's membership in the AdSense program "posed a significant risk to our AdWords advertisers," and the account was disabled with no warning. Trying to sign into the AdSense management site brought not the familiar user interface, with its limited account payment records and reports (including what Google currently owed Think, which amounted to approximately $721.00), but the following unhelpful statement, and nothing more:

Your AdSense account for this login is currently disabled. We recommend checking your email inboxes for any messages we may have sent you regarding your account status. Sometimes our messages can be caught by email filters, so please be sure to check the Bulk/Spam folders of your email accounts as well.

If your account was disabled for invalid click activity, please visit our Disabled Account FAQ for more information.

Return to AdSense home.

Knowing only that I was somehow posing "a significant risk" to advertisers, I e-mailed Google to ask about exactly what had happened. An errant automated response told me that my records could not be found. Going back and using the on-line appeal form on the AdSense web site similarly yielded no result; not even a confirmation that the appeal had been received. In the appeal I offered to send Google hundreds of pages of log files to prove that no fraud had taken place, but no one replied.

More than once, I tried calling Google at its corporate offices in Mountain View. Invariably the person on the other end of the line sounded like they were approximately my age, and there's a chance I might have even gone to college with some of them, but despite all of those similarities the difference in bureaucratic flexibility could not have been more vast. While I was capable of authorizing any action on behalf of my company, Google's overachieving receptionists were not even permitted to transfer my phone call to AdSense customer service. There was no AdSense customer service. Even if there had been, it would not have mattered much. I also couldn't be transferred to any of the engineers who worked on AdSense. Or product managers. Or executives. It made no difference that I was also a paying AdWords customer.

Trying a more aggressive approach, I tried instead to be transferred to the legal department. That, too, was not an option. Despite the clear existence of the legal department, I was told again and again that I was not allowed to speak with anyone in it. For the time being, I gave up.

Two days after the account was disabled, on December 11, 2008, Google's AdSense team posted a message on its blog introducing a new system called "AdSense for Domains." Unlike normal AdSense ("for Content," as it was then re-branded), AdSense for Domains was designed to be used by web sites that were effectively blank. When I had tried to sign up for it previously, given that my domain name needed exactly such a service, it had been "closed"--code for "available to a limited number of companies with large numbers of domain names." Now, I was once again enraged since Google could have easily allowed me to switch over to their new service if they had merely waited two days.

Another flurry of phone calls to the AdSense employees who had written on the corporate blog got me nowhere. I left voicemails about my disabled account diligently, to no avail. I even called AdWords customer support, intentionally asking for the wrong department to see if a real human being could help. These efforts netted a relatively quick e-mail rejection of my appeal form, and fairly unbelievable recordings of telephone calls with Google employee Adam C. When questioned, "Can I just ask in general why you guys have a support team for AdWords, but not AdSense?", the knowledgeable Mr C. replied, "I do not know." When asked, "Is there a project manager," he replied, "There's no one I'd be able to transfer you to." I was able to get an e-mail address for the legal department, so I e-mailed legal@google.com--and never received a reply. In the meantime, I tried to figure out what to do with my web site since I couldn't use AdSense anymore.

I found Sedo, a European company that had a contract with none other than--you guessed it--Google AdSense--to display advertisements on placeholder web sites. By signing up with Sedo, I could once again use AdSense, but with one small catch. Since Sedo was the middleman, my effective rate of payment per click was somewhere between 1/5,000th and 1/10,000th of what it had been previously. Despite all of its well-meaning claims about its Terms and Conditions, it appeared that Google was willing to pay for my web site traffic after all--so long as it wasn't me receiving the money.

I'd already posted once on the AdSense Forums, where thousands of AdSense partners regularly asked questions and voiced gripes about the program, so I thought it wouldn't hurt to post again, hoping someone from the Google legal team might see my concern. Again, there was no reply.

I looked up the profiles for the "AdSense Experts" who answered questions in their official roles as forum moderators. Each expert had a different crayon stick-figure picture, and (useless) information about their favorite food or town, but no contact information--not even an e-mail address. With undoubtedly hundreds of employees working on advertising alone, all of them completely unreachable except in heavily scripted contexts, Google's amazing money machine was starting to look a bit more like the type of Potemkin Village the parents of the company's founders had fled decades before.

I spoke with Adam C. of AdWords once more on the phone. After pointing out that in the United States of America, the accused are generally given the right to know both the crimes they are being accused of, and the identities of their accusers, Mr. C. responded by saying that such thinking did not apply to Google's terms of service. Effectively, Google's position was that it was above the law, and if not any law in particular, then at least the spirit of the law. Irked, I decided to find out if such a position was tenable.

On January 15, 2009, I walked over to the Santa Clara County courthouse in Palo Alto, which conveniently fell within the same county lines as Google's home of Mountain View, and filed a civil small claims lawsuit for $721.00--the amount Google owed Think when it disabled the account--using form SC-100. For a total of $40.00 in court fees, I arranged for Google, Inc. to be served by certified mail. The hearing was scheduled for March 2, 2009.

Since lawyers are not permitted in small claims court, Google instead sent Stephanie Milani, a Litigation Paralegal. During the short last-ditch-resolution period before the hearings on the afternoon schedule began, Ms. Milani argued that I must have done something wrong to deserve my fate. When I asked her what, she didn't know. The AdSense engineers had not told her.

"Google can terminate your account for any reason," she told me.

"Not any reason," I said. "Not because I have blue eyes. Or brown eyes." After being told to quiet down by the courtroom guard, we decided that we had reached an impasse, exchanged documents, and went back into the court room.

Arguing before that day's pro tempore judge, I pointed out that my company had done nothing wrong to deserve termination of the contract, that Google could not prove any wrongdoing, that Google's fraud detection algorithm was imperfect by definition (since one cannot intuit moral intent through mathematical analysis), that advertisers must already agree to bear risk as part of the AdWords terms and conditions (clause 5), and that Google had gone to great lengths (including eliminating the ability to view account records) to make it difficult to dispute anything--all while owing Think money. In fact, terminating accounts for "posing significant risk" just when they started to earn significant amounts of money seemed like a great way for Google to cut accounting liabilities in a difficult economic climate. After my explanation, the judge had a question.

"What was the reason Google gave you for disabling your account?"

"Beyond, 'posing a signficicant risk to advertisers,' they didn't give a reason." I said. "I don't know."

Google's Ms. Milani didn't know either. She argued that advertisers had already been refunded my $721.00, even if they hadn't asked for a refund. She claimed that Google could terminate accounts for any or no reason, and that I had agreed to such terms by signing up for AdSense in the first place. She even said that I'd admitted to violating the terms of service when I sent in my appeal form, because I had mentioned that my new domain name was only a placeholder site.

In fact, clause 6 of the AdSense for Content Terms and Conditions does not allow Google to terminate accounts for "no" reason--only "any" reason. Much to my amusement, the judge interrupted her to make a point that sounded familiar.

"But you couldn't terminate my account because of the color of my eyes, could you? I have brown eyes. You couldn't terminate my account because of that."

Ms. Milani reiterated her previous arguments, but the judge didn't buy them. "I don't think I have the power here in Palo Alto small claims court to make you reinstate his account, but I think you owe this young man $721," he said finally. "I think there might be money in Google's treasury for that."

In the end, printed on a baby blue sheet of paper by the clerk's aging dot matrix printer, the judgment was actually entered for $761.00 total, due to the $40.00 court costs. I couldn't help but to smile in front of the judge.

"But it's not fair!" Google's paralegal protested. "What if everyone whose account was canceled sued Google?"

It's a valid question. Yet until Google changes its policies to become more transparent, which might also reassure skeptics that AdWords and AdSense, which have oddly limited reporting capabilities, aren't just two sides of the same ponzi scheme (for why else would one want to terminate legitimate accounts with high monthly liabilities when they're supposed to be making money for Google on each click?)--I will give this answer:

Maybe everyone whose account was canceled, should.

Aaron Greenspan is President & CEO of Think Computer Corporation and the author of Authoritas: One Student's Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era.

***

UPDATE:

Read the next article in this series, Why Google Bothered to Appeal a $761 Small Claims Case (and Won)

 

Follow Aaron Greenspan on Twitter: www.twitter.com/thinkcomp

This is the first article in a two-part series. Like most Americans, I use Google's search engine several times a day without so much as a second thought. It was only in 2007 that my company's relat...
This is the first article in a two-part series. Like most Americans, I use Google's search engine several times a day without so much as a second thought. It was only in 2007 that my company's relat...
 
 
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06:05 PM on 03/17/2009
Excellent article.

I just had my Google Adsense account "closed" as they stated it was harmful to Adword users.
02:16 PM on 03/14/2009
Well Google cannot always get things right, but we are all human. But with a post like this makes me think. I have many people with disabled Adsense accounts. Even if you have a small amount to claim, with todays economy, any amount is still money.
01:39 PM on 03/13/2009
It would great to have Co-op email website which does not sell or market client information with out personal authorization and also discloser of any mail activity to federal authorities, without the knowledge of the client.
By which it would possible for those who use the email and other related services, to know what is being done with their information and their rights to protect and defend it in cases of personal violation.
With out such measures and a public participation and collective watch, it is most likely the future of internet will be bleak for its users.
10:34 AM on 03/13/2009
Every one who uses google invariably ends up on the data base of various consumer analytical services for ever. Not just that ,one entire profile on the net enters in to the databse framed as an account that can be pulled off , which invariably gets shared with the secret service and it can at any given time of one's life can be brought out as a surprise and also as a copromise.
That means there are very few excercisable options of rights available for each person, though on paper most of the constitutional and legal rights are there, but just as a notion to make us beleive that we are living in an open and democratic societies, try using any of the rights, one will be ready for a shock of life time.
02:30 AM on 03/13/2009
my adsense account got disabled and still no reply from appealing to google...

what should I do?

I didnt do any invalid clicks but I got disabled...

pls email me
beeant@gmail.com
01:16 AM on 03/13/2009
HELP

My Adsense account was banned today, and I'm having this exact same dilemma that the author of this post is having, as well as some of the commenters.

I'm in the same state as Google, California, for whatever that may help.

My balance was in the mid xxxx figure.

email me, I'm not familiar with the process. domain1@dr.com
03:43 AM on 03/12/2009
I wish I lived in the USA so I could sue AdSense for how they've treated me. They owe me a good sum of money and gave me the lamest of reasons for closing my last Adsense account and not paying me what I have legitimately earned.
11:21 AM on 03/10/2009
I agree, Google is growing as a monopolistic web entity...unfortunately, I don't see it losing steam anytime soon. As long as it's free and provides superior features, there isn't an incentive for the average user to move to another provider of the same services. Frankly, most people aren't aware of the issue and the rest just don't care. It will be interesting to see how it all pans out in the future.
03:40 AM on 03/10/2009
Your post will give many people a hope to fight against Google crime!
08:30 PM on 03/09/2009
Goodsearchdotcom revenue goes to charity of your choice. I choose direct relief international because of low overhead costs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FCBarca
Anther wrld is not only pssible, she is on her way
05:54 PM on 03/09/2009
Nice work...And on a related note, small claims court does work
03:36 PM on 03/09/2009
It certainly doesn't speak well for the supposedly enlightened employer Google that they sent their employee into court apparently unarmed with anything resembling a rational defense. Judge Judy would've ripped Stephanie Milani's face off.
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JeanPaulSatire
Wordsmith, liberal, skeptical idealist, 99%er.
11:45 AM on 03/09/2009
"Too big and successful to have to answer to anyone" is the flip-side of "too big to fail."

The lesson here is that we need to be concerned about the size/power of corporate/financial entities long before there are even hints of monopoly in their futures.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
batbird
Commit random acts of liberalism.
10:57 AM on 03/09/2009
Hell yes!
$721.00 is Seven Hundred and Twenty-One Dollars! It's not about the money, it's about the f-ing money! WooHoo!

Just a side note. Got your story off the HuffPo sidebar widget. It was right below the story about how Limbaugh wants Ted Kennedy to Die and Pam Anderson's Boob Pops Out.

Thought you should know. Maybe you could sue HuffPo. (Just saying.)
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breakingpoint
War is a Racket - Smedley Butler
02:07 AM on 03/09/2009
Congratulations!

Google and all it's little companies, including youtube, has turned into a shadowy cartel.

Business in the US is all about avoiding the customer, this action you took was a small step into turning that around,. I hope more people start suing, it's seems to be the only thing that gets their attention.

If it can make the IRS nicer it can make Google customer friendly too.
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derekc06
Good night, you Princes of Maine.
07:39 PM on 03/09/2009
too true...