Cookie Stuffing Forum Scraper
The Cookie Stuffing Forum Scraper is a tool that can automatically search the related forums which are allowed HTML and IMG codes based on the keywords you set. And then register the forums and post your cs code.
With Cookie Stuffing Forum Scraper you can find the forum which you need very quick and start to make fast money.
Cookie Stuffing Forum Scraper working screenshot:

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Money Making Idea – Cookie Stuffing Forums
This is a brand new idea about online money making, if you already know this method please just pass it, for those of you who don’t know yet this may a good chance to start making over $1000 a month from affiliate marketing.
One thing I must point out first is that this is a black hat method and could get you banned from the affiliate companies, so please don’t over do it.
Step 1: Join a Affiliate Company
Ok first if you are not a member of any affiliate company you need to join one. I am a member of Commission Junction so that the company I am going to tell you to join. Cj.com is my choice as you can find the right offer to target the right people.
Ebaypartnernetwork.com is also another great choice because whoever you stuff your affiliate cookies with is a potential eBay customer. And therefore a big chance for you to make some nice money.
Step 2: Find the Right Affiliate
We are going to be stuffing forums with this method. So what you have to do is find the forum you are going to stuff and then a suitable advertiser to promote.So for example Forums.digitalpoint.com is a webmasters forum, so the members there are likely to buy hosting and domains.
So therefore go daddy the domain registering company would be a good option to choose.
Feel free to pick more than 1 company as it will increase your revenue chances. DigitalPoint may not be your best option of a forum but its just a example. If you can find a big forum then eBay would be great as there are all ways people joining eBay.
Step 3: Get The Affiliate URL
I’m hoping your able to find this yourself as I am not walking you through this properly.
Click banner, then there should be a few banners
Click on any of those banners as that bit doesn’t matter
Click “Get HTML”
Then the first line of the HTML code should be something like

Step 4: editing the .htaccess file
Login to your website hosting. In the public_html folder (For most website hosts, if this isn’t the case then open the folder that has all your public files in)Now you are there you should see the .htaccess file. If you don’t have one, then just create this file.
Now at the top of that file put:

So at the top of the file it could look summit like
Redirect /image1.jpg http://www.dpbolvw.net/click-2965748-10536129
MAKE SURE THE IMAGES DON’T EXIST ON YOUR WEBSITE HOSTING.
Step 5: Posting
Now that you have targeted your forum and found the correct affiliate for the forum its time to post and get some “clicks” on your affiliate link.
Now just post whatever you would be posting and at the end of your post put this code:

Make sure you edit your website with your website url obviously.
What have I just done?
You are doing a method called Cookie Stuffing. You are stuffing everyone’s cookies that visit one of your posts with these hidden images.
So say someone who visits your post then goes to Godaddy a week later. There computer will remember this cookie so if they then buy something from go daddy then you will receive the commission for it.
Got any Proof ?
I am not going to tell you the forum I used or the advertiser I promoted because if I decide to cookie stuff again it will be more competition for me and you, because everyone who reads this will use that forum.
But I stuffed 1000 people – had 1000 clicks. This took me 15 mins to get this upon which I deleted my thread.
That day I honestly made $0
However about 10 days later I had made £112.37 which is roughly $225.
This was at 10% commission – which means that I had over £1000 worth of sales created. Which for you Americans that means over $2000 worth of sales.
Step-By-Step Overview:
1. Find a forum to use cookies stuffing (not a webmaster forum).
3. Join an Affiliate Company.
4. Get the affiliate URL to stuff.
5. Edit your .htaccess file to cloak affiliate link.
6. Post to forums.
7. Wait some days.
8. Check account and you are rich!
Conclusion:
Remember this was 1000 cookies stuffed in 15 mins. If you do this on a bigger scale of 100000 people a month, think of your potential earnings.
Thanks for reading and I hope this information is useful for you.
Last: Remember, cookie stuffing is against many affiliates rules. So be sure that before you use it, you know that you are risking getting your account banned as a result.
PPV Stuffing Part Eight – Cookiesnooping
For PPV stuffing, you quickly realize that some programs just plain don’t work at all! While others bring the cash rolling in. Mileage will vary with different techniques…but for the techniques I talk about in the PPV Stuffing Series, there is one ‘prime’ determinant of what makes a network stuffable, and what doesn’t.
In order to “discover” this we’re going to take a look at the CJ match.com program. This is a program I’ve never seen a single return from stuffing. Lets find out why.
This is our affiliate url:
http://www.dpbolvw.net/click-xxxxxx-xxxxxx/?sid=CnCqg8dJcv
I have made an output dump of running this url via livehttp headers…and combed through it cutting out all the “junk”. I’ve noted all mentions of p3p policy, cache control, expiration dates, and set-cookie functions, as well as all of their requesting URLs. These all can be clues in isolating the exact cookie(s) that determine your commission.
So, once you have a list of this ‘clean’ pull. Your browser has been cookied with an affiliate cookie. Next, go search around for Match.com review on google, and find somebody ELSES affiliate link. Open it and comb through the http header dump, looking for the same information.
Pay special attention to the set-cookie lines, and see if there are any promising looking cookies that did NOT get set this time.
1) I know that match.com is not giving me commissions for traffic stuffed while on their site.
2) After combing through their cookies, I tested multiple patterns of affiliate links
Clear Cookies -> My Affiliate Link
My Affiliate Link -> Someone else’s
Direct Homepage -> My Affiliate Link
3) Watching the set-cookie function, I came to the conclusion that this set of cookies is the one being set by match.com for tracking commissions.
Set-Cookie: Match=CCount=1&CDate=2/16/2011;
Set-Cookie: dMatch=CCount=1&CDate=2/16/2011;
Set-Cookie: MatchSession=CDTF=2/16/2011&UMID=9c4ad
Set-Cookie: SECU=TID=525572&ESID=7908af0d-9206-4
4) Now the test…from a clean browser, go directly to their webpage…watch in livehttp headers as these four cookies get set. Now try out an affiliate link…you will notice that the affiliate link does not set it’s cookies, because match.com has already set their own ‘inhouse’ cookies. Thus, if you are targeting this network with PPV traffic bidding on their own URLS, you will get nothing. Ever.
I feel like this must have a strong affect on whitehat affiliates too…if your audience has ever been to match.com…you get Zero commission…doesn’t matter if your site provided the information that lead to them purchasing. You get nothing. I would think that Match.com should be releasing this info to their affiliates, nowhere in their programs does it tell you that your traffic must not have visited match.com before making their purchase in order for you to get credit.
Perhaps their homepage cookies expire in a day like the other affiliate cookies? Perhaps not…that would be a good thing to test
Next time we discuss how to work around this little inconvenience.
Back to PPV Stuffing Part One: Intro & Teaser
PPV Stuffing Part Seven: Testing Again and Again
Some PPV networks just don’t have traffic on certain URLS, some may filter them out on request of specific merchants. You just never know until you TRY. Setting up a stuffing script for targeting just 3 or 4 urls of the same site is time consuming, and I have found myself wasting a lot of time and not earning much information. One technique I’ve started using is this.
Instead of setting up a stuffing campaign immediately…I compile a list of 10 or 15 merchants I am interested in stuffing. Then, I grab an easy CPA freebie offer, like a free ipad, and launch it across all of the urls I would target for those merchants. Let it run for 2-3 days on each ppv network and see which ones provide traffic before you go through and start setting up a stuffing campaign.

Also….try a LOT of url variations. PPV systems are weird, you just never know whats going to ‘set them off’ and what isn’t. If I wanted to target the url
bingopajama.com/modular/barking/bee/frenzy
I would mix it into the following…
bingopajama.com/modular/barking/bee/frenzy
bingopajama.com/modular/barking/bee
bingopajama.com/modular/barking
bingopajama.com/modular
.bingopajama.com/modular/barking/bee/frenzy
.bingopajama.com/modular/barking/bee
.bingopajama.com/modular/barking
.bingopajama.com/modular
I’ve discovered urls with huge traffic, and absolutely zero competition in this manner.
Continue to PPV Stuffing Part Eight – Cookiesnooping
PPV Stuffing Part Six: Penetrating the Wary PPV Networks
There are really only two networks this post will apply too. In my opinion, the two most powerful forms of PPV traffic. Traffic vance and Lead impact. Out of these two I think that TV provides better quality/targeted traffic, and sometimes slightly less to significantly less volume of traffic, but still a lot more then any of the lower PPV networks manage. Part of this I suspect is from the various forms of filtering that TV utilizes.
I think that they may actually have some sort of relationships with very large companies that allow those companies either primary access to impressions or to formulate rules about how the rest of us access those impressions [especially for their own company domains]. At any rate I feel that LI, formerly Zango, has totally raw access to impressions…however their Manual reviews team is relatively in the know about cookie stuffing.

So today I am sharing a few tactics I play around with when trying to land longterm stuffing campaigns on these two most profitable sources of PPV traffic. TV’s manual review team is not nearly so wary. They don’t however like seeing session based, rotating, or cloaked ads. If they notice that refreshing your ad drops them down into a different place they will probably ask you to fix it, and make you resubmit your keywords/urls.
If LI saw this, they would likely notify you it violates their terms of service, and if they saw it a second time they would shut down your account [or ignore you for weeks on end, means the same thing], and take any money you had left.
To an extent this can be combated with IP cloaking. You can find out which IP addresses the reviewers are connecting from by logging visitor information via your script. Either cross reference an early segment of addresses or just pay attention to the live feed, lazily you could chop off the last bit and filter it as a full C Block…or take the time to look up the company’s registered blocks.
Cloaking used in this fashion can provide longterm protection for one or more of your campaigns. There are still a few things that can bite you here, mostly with LI. First off. LI has some limited nastyness scanners built into their system. They monitor the Top.Location value via some overhead javascript. If they register any changes to this locale without input from the user it instantly flags your account for manual review. Secondly, LI in general…is prone to looking more closely at ALL your campaigns, even if only one of them gets flagged. The other networks definitely don’t work like this. They are more liable to turn a blind eye to your other business, and deal with whatever they just happened to stumble upon.
More or less…if you can navigate through these obstacles, the good news is…your campaigns will run for many months with extremely little input from you. Some stretches I’ve cleaned up 15 or 20k with no real need to do anything.
Continue to PPV Stuffing Part Seven: Testing Again and Again
PPV Stuffing Part Five: Targetting & More
Targeting can be extremely powerful, and have a huge affect on the success of your cookie stuffing campaigns. Understanding how targeting resolves against URLs in consumer’s browsers, and against other competing advertisers within the networks can give you a fairly big leg up on a profitable campaign.
All PPV/CPV networks function differently. There is a LOT of research that could go into this subject. I simply haven’t had the time to extensively test it out. This post will share with you some of my observations and experiences that I have found helpful.
Competition & Bidding:
The networks always work differently…Media traffic for example has a ‘Target Outbid Report’. For example, if one of your targets is ‘fatcock.com’…and some whitehat fella is bidding on the term ‘fat’…his bids are going to take precedence before yours. You can vastly overbid him if you like…knowing that your fatcock.com is going to be satisfied less then his fat…or you can give him the traffic for the time being. Certain high cost keywords seem to come and go often. And it’s not always worth it to try and strong arm out the people who aren’t in for the long haul anyway.

Not all the networks have this cross keyword resolving…and usually the only way to find out how the bidding is actually resolving is to test. For example, in Trafficvance, there are certain keywords/urls I have NEVER been able to get traffic for. I can only presume either it’s blocked within the system, or there is another inclusive bid that is soaking up all the impressions.
Targeting Advanced URLs & SSL:
This is a nasty good tactic. I think there are very few people who use it. In most networks, just like you can target domains. You can also target individual pages. Why spend so much money targeting thisshoppingsite.com, when oftentimes for a cheaper bid you can target thisshoppingsite.com/shoppingcart.
You will have to play around with this concept, because it doesn’t always fit, if the networks use inclusive bidding like example above, or if the affiliate site’s cookie settings prevent the action from being recorded you won’t receive any benefit doing this. The point is, this does not always work with all networks/targets/affiliates but when it does, it’s really good to know about.
It’s also useful when the URL structure of a sales funnel changes…like with Vistaprint for instance. Depending on how close to checking out the consumer is…their URL will read
vistaprint.com
vistaprint.com/vp
vistaprint.com/vp/ns
etc…take the time to study the affiliate program’s URLS to see how you can take advantage of this. Also…some networks don’t seem to read URL strings when they are in the HTTPS protocol. This is a good thing to note, because then you may want to target a step in your affiliate network’s shopping cart that is further another along then their homepage, but hasn’t yet kicked the customer into SSL.
Nothing is for sure!
I hope you have some more to think about at any rate…but these are just some things I have dealt with, that sometimes exist, and sometimes don’t. You will have to experiment with your own systems to see what works. Good stuffing.
Continue toPPV Stuffing Part Six: Penetrating the Wary PPV Networks

