How To Fix ads.txt Issues In AdSense | Josforup


How To Fix ads.txt Issues In AdSense 

Authorized Digital Sellers or ads.txt is an IAB initiative that helps ensure that your digital ad inventory is only sold through sellers (such as AdSense) who you've identified as authorized. Creating your own ads.txt file gives you more control over who's allowed to sell ads on your site and helps prevent counterfeit inventory from being presented to advertisers.
We strongly recommend that you use an ads.txt file. It can help buyers identify counterfeit inventory and help you receive more advertiser spend that might have otherwise gone toward that counterfeit inventory.

How To Fix ads.txt Issues In AdSens

Fix ads.txt issues in AdSense

If there's an issue with ads.txt on your site, you'll see an alert in your AdSense account. To prevent a severe impact on your revenue, follow the steps below to fix the issue.
Note: It may take a few days for your changes to be reflected in AdSense. If your site doesn't make many ad requests it may take up to a month.

Create an ads.txt file for your site

  1. Sign in to your AdSense account.
  2. In the alert on your homepage, click Fix Now.
  3. Click the Down arrow to open the "Create an ads.txt file for..." message.
  4. Click Download. Your ads.txt file is automatically downloaded.
  5. Upload the file to the root level domain of your site (for example, https://example.com/ads.txt).
    Root levels are one level down from what’s listed in the public suffix list. For example, "google.co.uk" is a root domain of "co.uk" but "maps.google.co.uk" is not. See the IAB ads.txt specification.
Note: If you’re using another ad network, remember to add that network to your ads.txt file. Contact your ad network for their ads.txt information.

Add your publisher ID to an ads.txt file

  1. Sign in to your AdSense account.
  2. In the alert on your homepage, click Fix now.
  3. Click the Down arrow Down Arrowto open the "Add your publisher ID to these ads.txt files" message.
  4. Click Copy.
  5. Paste the line into each of your ads.txt files.
    Your ads.txt file should now look like this, where pub-0000000000000000 is your own publisher ID:
    google.com, pub-0000000000000000, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0

How do I integrate the ads.txt file using Blogger?

In order to upload the ads.txt file using the Blogger platform please read the following instructions:
1) Sign in to Blogger. 
2) In the top left, click the Down arrow. 
3) Click the blog you want to set up an ads.txt file on. 
4) On the left, click Settings. 
5) Under “Settings,” click Search preferences. 
6) Under “Monetization,” find “Custom ads.txt” and click Edit. 
7) Click Yes. 
8) Copy the lines that Infolinks has provided and paste them in the text box. The lines can be found here: https://publishers.infolinks.com/members/new 
9) Click Save settings. 
10) Optional: To check the content of your ads.txt file, go to http://<your blog address>/ads.txt. 

Frequently asked questions

What if the ads.txt file is hosted on a subdomain?

Google crawls and enforces ads.txt files placed on subdomains, where one exists, and is referenced from the ads.txt file on the root domain.
To reference a subdomain in your root domain ads.txt file, you add a subdomain= declaration. For example, let's say your ads.txt file for example.com needs to reference the subdomain subdomain.example.com. You'd add this line to your root domain ads.txt file: subdomain=subdomain.example.comSee the IAB ads.txt specification for additional details on subdomain referral.

Note: You only need to do this if the authorized seller or your publisher ID is different for the subdomain when compared to the root domain.

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