Saw a lot of guys got huge number in carrier billing by some "black tec"(eg:iframe and more), So is that necessary in carrier billing? Can someone do huge number by normal promotion?
I agree with Matuloo - not everyone goes Black hat.
You can see a lot of people on STM working legit and getting green, check Amy's legendary tutorial for instance
https://stmforum.com/forum/showthrea...eparation-Work
As usual, like in any business, following the rules takes more time and effort, but at the end it's something that has more potential to work in a long term, and (important) save your reputation as an affiliate! Otherwise, if you decide to go to the "dark side" make sure you play smart.
Lets not be misleading, since thats not kosher according to chrome's new policy.
So misleading text could be blocked.
Non-misleading version:
All high volume dcb is cloaked, is triggered only on very specific carrier ips (so you wont even see it), uses shitload of device detection scripts, so its only shown on valid physical devices,
uses even scripts that detect if device is charging (which is not typical for the average user). Iframe is really old,school, the way to do it for the past 2 years is actually inapp.. in android apps,
since you can nicely override all permissions, and do your nasty stuff in the background.
So no..
huge numbers are not possible with a normal promotion.
They were 3 years ago. Now not, at least not sustainable.. you might get a lucky 2-3 day break when some carrier forgots to put some restriction in place,
but this is not normal.
Some chinese networks are experts in this, they are so good in fact, that they single-handedly managed to get some carriers, and even state regulatory agencies, to change the rules of the game,
which effectively killed entire carrier billing business in several countries.
Huge numbers maybe not, but profitable camps definitely yes.
It HAS gotten harder, so extensive testing while spending minimal test budget per offer would be necessary.
And yes, blackhat tactics will help conversion rates. Iframes and clickjacking and zero-click subscriptions - stuff we can't talk about openly. Some aff networks will turn a blind eye to CERTAIN tactics for CERTAIN offers, but if you get caught by the advertiser it may be game-over, especially in geos where regulations are strict.
Try: Testing less-known traffic networks. Test landers if you can figure out how to keep them out of spy tools.
Amy