Hey guys,
It's been a while since I posted but I've been hit by a bit of a road block with Adwords account creation process. Couple months ago I would be able to to create a random yahoo account, create an Adwords on a new IP, plug in one of my bofa employee cards and bam, I have a running Adwords account.
Couple weeks ago I got down to my last account and yesterday lost my only one left. Something has changed and I cannot figure it out. I was hoping to hear from you guys.
What I've tried:
New PC + New IP + New fake Yahoo + New card
New PC + New IP + Real Aged Gmail + New card
New PC + 3g hotspot + Fake Yahoo + New Card
New PC + 3g hotspot + Real Gmail + New Card
For the first ad I would find a local coffee shop or online typing courses or a local iphone repair shop. Stuff like that.
I've tried using other people's cards with the above combinations. I get banned either instantly or during account review. The furthest I was able to get was going under review for about 2 days with a new laptop, new ip, real aged gmail and new card.
What has worked before:
My personal PC has worked for multiple fake and real accounts. I have a dynamic IP and so after each IP change I would just log in to a gmail or create a fake yahoo and I would be able to create an adwords and run it for a while but that does not work anymore.
Another thing that has worked before is setting up laptops at friends houses and using a fake billing address and most fake info.
I've used virtualbox and no success.
Can anyone steer me in the right direction? Could it just be the time of year?
I'm down to keep digging and I'll be grateful for the slightest hint.
It looks like Google's machine learning algorithms keep on advancing ... That is certainly in line with what some Google execs have mentioned.
Few things to consider, as it could be any number of reasons
Does your IP match a REAL billing address for the card, which is different to previous attempts?
is your IP marked as commercial (ideally) or residential? using a proxy typically does not work
Dont use chrome
Would a real business use yahoo email? with a residential billing address?
Are you using the same virtual box windows image?
What domain are you using, is it aged? good history in google?
Answers:
IP does not match the billing address, Never had an issue with that
IP is always residential, always worked for me before
I used to always use chrome and my accounts lasted up to a year
I'm not sure but it was working for me for a while
Different virtual box every time with new everything
Domains are legit and are legit businesses
I am thinking that it's possible that the IP needs to match the real billing on the card. If that is the case then how would it be possible to run multiple accounts?
There are mixed opinions on it, but for sure the IP and billing address need to match the same timezone (east/west coast etc) of your computer clock (In my opinion)
Just to be sure, you're card billing address is different each time and it's for a real address? Google does an AVS check a few days after creation
Correct, I used to be able to set the account address the same as the IP or wherever the PC is located and I would sometimes either set billing as that same address or use the real billing for that card and that would work every time. The problem with using real billing is that all of my employee cards are linked to the same billing address
Never had an issue till now I guess. I've tested several accounts with someone else's card with their billing info. New PC, New domain, New hotspot, their CC with their billing and a real phone number. Got banned instantly.
So how could I make it work?
Try using a non-free email, something that looks a bit corporate. Or maybe setup something like a shitty 
[Update]
So I contacted a relative in a different state, Used their PC, their CC, Their billing and their gmail and the account works right off the bat. No review process yet.
So having this working set up down I am going to try to recreate this set up with a different account and change 1 thing at a time ex: diff CC or diff address, hotspot