There is no question that you can make some good  money with Google AdSense, but you’re setting yourself up for disaster  if you make any of these Top 10 mistakes! 
1. Do not use fake information when opening your Google AdSense account. 
Google says that’s a no-no and they will cut your account off and  keep all the money you may have earned. Besides, trying to hide your  true identity can cause serious problems with the I.R.S. or whoever your  tax authority is. 
2. Do not hack or modify Google AdSense code other than to change the parameters that Google authorizes you to change. 
Any attempt to bypass Google’s built-in algorithms not only poses a  danger to the integrity of the network, but it threatens the financial  modle that Google operates under. You’re not dealing with some  Mom-and-Pop company here, and Google has the legal muscle and deep  enough pockets to drag you through every court in the land if you damage  their business with your hacking antics. 
3. Keep AdSense ads off of your registration, confirmation, and all "thank you" pages. 
Don’t ask me why you can’t put your ads there. It makes sense to me  that those would be wonderful locations. Google thinks otherwise,  however, and doing so is a hanging offense according to their Terms of  Service. 
4. Do not display AdSense ads and a competitor's ads (like Overture's) on the same page at the same time. 
That just makes plain good sense. Google doesn’t demand 100% SITE  loyalty from you, but they do insist that their own ads not be cluttered  up by offerings from their competitors.  
5. Don't "beg for clicks" or provide any incentive for clicking on your Google AdSense ads. 
This is a biggie and you see this rule violated all the time. Any of  the “get paid to do stuff” sites that put Google ads in the member’s  control panels are walking the plank and they don’t even realize it.  Even those sites with the polite little messages asking you to “help  keep my site running by clicking on our sponsor’s ads” are asking to be  cut off if those happen to be Google ads. 
6. Never click on the ads running on your own site, even if you are  genuinely interested in the product or service and are thinking of  buying it! 
Nothing screams FRAUD louder than a webmaster running up his or her  own click counts by happily clicking on ads fromtheir own site. The  Google Gods can track this activity and it won’t be long until you find  yourself getting a goodbye note from their fraud team. 
7. No misleading labeling 
Google is very specific about what text can be placed around their  ads. Their Terms of Service state: “Publishers may not label the ads  with text other than ‘sponsored links’ or ‘advertisements.’ This  includes any text directly above our ads that could be confused with, or  attempt to be associated with Google ads.” 
This is to keep visitors from becoming confused and barking up  Google’s tree when they clicked on an ad that led to a porn site instead  of the recipe site they were expecting to visit.  
8. Avoid keyword spamming and other divisive tricks 
You may be tempted to buy one of those “generates thousands of  key-word rich pages in seconds” programs that are so popular these days  but I’ll tell you this: Their days are numbered. Google is wise to such  shenanigans and they will be hot on your trail. Other prohibited  gimmicks include: 
• ”Sneaky” page redirects that send a visitor off to a different site then they were expecting to visit. 
• Multiple sites, domains, pages, etc. which have substantially duplicate content.  
• Hidden text or links of any type. 
• Excessive outbound links on any page. Google recommends no more than 100. I’d keep it way below that. 
• And here is a nugget of wisdom straight from Google’s mouth: “Do  not participate in link schemes designed to increase your site's ranking  or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or "bad  neighborhoods" on the web as your website may be affected adversely by  those links. 
9. Don’t advertise anything on Google’s prohibited items list.  
It’s a lot shorter lists than PayPal’s or eBay’s, but it includes a  lot of the same stuff like hacking/cracking content, porn, illegal  drugs, gambling sites, beer or hard alcohol (I guess wine is OK),  weapons, and the other usual stuff. 
10. And the 10th dumbest thing NOT to do with Google AdSense is to  let the other nine things stop you from running an honest site that’s  designed to make the most out of this very profitable opportunity that  Google offers!  
 
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