Breaking: Google AdSense Stops Showing Ads For Many Publishers

i hope you like this article on Breaking: Google AdSense Stops Showing Ads For Many Publishers

Google AdSense

The Google AdSense forum has begun lighting up with publishers complaining that their AdSense ads are no longer showing up on their web sites. There seems to be hundreds, if not in the thousands of complaints starting early this morning or last night.

I don’t see any response from Google yet and I am unsure if this is a bug or some sort of quality clean up on publishers. I personally am able to see AdSense ads on some sites, including the one ad unit I have on this site.

There are also complaints of this on Twitter and other social networks. Again, I did not see any word from Google on this but here is a screen shot of just some of the complaint threads:

Again, I see probably over 1,000 complaints across hundreds of threads about ads not loading or appearing on their websites.

Do you have any issues?

Forum discussion at Google AdSense Help.

Update: Google is aware of the issue:

Update 2: Many are now reporting as of around 1pm EST that their ads are showing up again.

Update 3: Google sent us this statment, “​It ​was a minor bug impacting a very limited number of AdSense publishers. ​There’s a​ fix ​- it’s being rolled out currently.”

Feel free to visit this post on Breaking: Google AdSense Stops Showing Ads For Many Publishers any time

link to main source

Google proposes a new version of ‘rival links’ to remedy shopping search antitrust violation

See details of post Google proposes a new version of ‘rival links’ to remedy shopping search antitrust violation below

In June, Google was fined $2.7 billion by the EU for “favoring its own content” in shopping search results. The company is reportedly appealing the decision.

In the interim, Google has been compelled to propose an alternative presentation of search results to remedy and respond to the EU decision. According to Reuters, the company “has offered to display rival shopping comparison sites via an auction.”

While we haven’t seen any specific details of Google’s proposal, this approach is conceptually similar to the “rival links” proposal that was proposed and failed to settle the antitrust dispute before the formal Statement of Objections (antitrust case) was filed in 2015.