The post What is Bot Traffic: How to Identify and Block Bot Traffic first appeared on Publir.
]]>A bot, which is short for a robot, is an automated computer program that acts as an agent on behalf of a user to simulate human activity. They are non-human visitors to websites that facilitate a variety of tasks, including search engine operations, human interactions, social and commercial activities such as gaming, customer services, and medical services like scheduling a vaccine appointment. The same bot can be used for fraudulent practices and malicious activities like ad scams, malware attacks, and data theft. Bot traffic is online internet traffic that is not generated by a human.
With 4.72 billion internet users in April 2021, there’s a constant influx of information: images, text, music, and videos. Of course, there’s also activities like messaging, commenting, tweeting, or re-tweeting with emojis and emoticons, making it a place for personal, professional, and business interactions.
Search engines are an essential part of our daily life as there are over 70,000 Google searches each second, 227 million an hour, and about 5.4 billion Google searches per day. Automated bots are applied to save users time in doing things manually and to perform a wide range of tasks from clicking links and downloading images to scraping or filling out forms on a large scale and function almost non-stop. Although these bots try to imitate human behavior, they are not human. But they do serve a purpose—and not all of them are good.
Not all the bot traffic visible on the internet is bad traffic. In 2020, one-fourth of the Internet traffic (25.6%) was bad bot traffic, an upwards trend from 2019, which was 24.1%. Combined with good bot traffic, 40.8% of the internet traffic comprised of non-human traffic, and human are responsible for generating 59.2% of the internet traffic past year. A significant portion of what we notice on websites was not human and human traffic decreased by 5.7 percent in 2020.
As a business owner, it’s important to recognize the positive impact of bots and be able to mitigate the bad bot traffic so it doesn’t throw off your data.
Social media posts that receive unusual traffic or responses are most likely victims of bad bot traffic. Other indicators that you’ve received bad bot traffic include:
Bad bots post spam comments on social media, spreading misinformation and confusion. Circulating fake information on COVID vaccination and cases is one such example that created havoc in society. Another example is the target of online retail stores during festive and holiday seasons, where there will be a huge demand for consumer durables and electronics. There was a 788 percent increase in bad bot traffic to retail websites globally between September and October 2020, aligning perfectly with pre-order or holiday dates, and the gaming hardware market has lost $82 million during holiday seasons due to Grinchbot attacks.
Google Analytics provides all the essential site metrics that you need as a business owner, including average time spent on the page, bounce rate, the number of page views, and other useful data. This information is useful in determining whether or not bot traffic skewed your site’s analytics data and to what extent.
As you’re exploring Google Analytics, you’ll want to use some of the practices below to help restrict the bad bot traffic so you can have an accurate measure of what is drawing users to your website and what they’re doing once they’re there..
Any good bot management should start by setting a thumb rule in a website’s robots.txt file on a web server, which specifies the rules for any bots accessing the hosted website or application. This will stop bad bots from accessing sensitive information by limiting their entry only to certain pages within the website.
Allowlist is nothing but a list of bots that are allowed to access a web property. This can be accomplished either through a ‘user agent,’ the bot’s IP address, or both. The user agent is a string of text that identifies the bot trying to access information.
Web servers can also have a blocklist to stop known bad bots. A blocklist contains a list of IP addresses, user agents, or other indicators of online identity that are not allowed to access a server, network, or web property.
Bad bots may try to sneak into your server with fake identities, making it difficult for the blocklist or allowlist to identify good and bad bots. Your bot management strategy must include machine learning tools that shed light on behavioral analytics. These tools can identify both bad bots and unknown good bots, apart from allowing known good bots. Add a bot manager to your perfect bot management strategy.
With over 50% of the internet traffic made up of bot traffic, it is neither possible nor desirable to eliminate them. What is essential here is to have a suitable bot management strategy to identify and block bad bots and allow god bots to ensure cybersecurity. If you want to read on Data Privacy, Cybersecurity, and more, read our blog here!
The post What is Bot Traffic: How to Identify and Block Bot Traffic first appeared on Publir.
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