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Major % of traffic from IP location is to another country's site

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Level 1

Hi!

 

We're seeing strange results as a major percentage of traffic from certain IP locations is actually associated to visits to another country's site. For example: almost 30% of traffic allegedly from London (looking at the "Cities" dimension i.e. IP based) is actually to the French version of the site. 

 

This trend started towards the beginning of December 2021. 

 

Moreover, all of the visits at issue are from iOS devices, which makes us wonder if this could be related to an update in the privacy policy of the operating system, but we're not sure. 

 

Does anyone have any idea of what could be causing these results or have experienced anything similar?

 

Thanks!

1 Accepted Solution

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Correct answer by
Community Advisor

Generally when I see a high % of traffic coming from a location to an odd place, I suspect a bot. in this case, I will do a Data Warehouse export looking at IP Address, City, Browser, (you could also add device, since that is part of what you are seeing), PVs (and generally pull a full month of data - and I may do this a few times)

 

(I know that city is IP based, but if it's a bot it will likely come from the same 2-10 IP addresses)

 

I will sort highest to lowest to ensure that if the data truncates when I pull into Excel I don't loose the important stuff.

 

I then check for high levels of PVs from the same IP address, and if the browser data looks to be old... Generally bots tend to come from the same IP address usually record as older browsers (not always, but generally). I flag these to the management team and often we will create a custom bot rule to exclude the traffic but we can still monitor it through our bot reports.

 

If the traffic is split across different IPs, it's either legit traffic of the bot is more sophisticated. However, if real traffic, you could look into search engine referrals (and if you have contact with your SEO people, see if they see any upticks in Google Search Console or Bing Webmaster Tools that could explain why traffic has increased in those areas). You could also check if maybe Social Media referrals are having an impact? Being iOS that seems like it could be related to social media.. or maybe your content is now more prominent on Google News and Apple News?

 

Or maybe your French site has a better Core Web Vital rating and Google is promoting it more? 

 

Or maybe there's some incorrect IP redirect happening on your code site (maybe someone added a IP based redirect to the site to try and funnel people to the correct language site, but instead it's sending people to the wrong site?)

 

There are a lot of things to check, and without knowing your site or the complexities around it, I can only offer these suggestions and wish you the best of luck in your investigation (we've all been there, and it's not a fun job... )

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3 Replies

Avatar

Correct answer by
Community Advisor

Generally when I see a high % of traffic coming from a location to an odd place, I suspect a bot. in this case, I will do a Data Warehouse export looking at IP Address, City, Browser, (you could also add device, since that is part of what you are seeing), PVs (and generally pull a full month of data - and I may do this a few times)

 

(I know that city is IP based, but if it's a bot it will likely come from the same 2-10 IP addresses)

 

I will sort highest to lowest to ensure that if the data truncates when I pull into Excel I don't loose the important stuff.

 

I then check for high levels of PVs from the same IP address, and if the browser data looks to be old... Generally bots tend to come from the same IP address usually record as older browsers (not always, but generally). I flag these to the management team and often we will create a custom bot rule to exclude the traffic but we can still monitor it through our bot reports.

 

If the traffic is split across different IPs, it's either legit traffic of the bot is more sophisticated. However, if real traffic, you could look into search engine referrals (and if you have contact with your SEO people, see if they see any upticks in Google Search Console or Bing Webmaster Tools that could explain why traffic has increased in those areas). You could also check if maybe Social Media referrals are having an impact? Being iOS that seems like it could be related to social media.. or maybe your content is now more prominent on Google News and Apple News?

 

Or maybe your French site has a better Core Web Vital rating and Google is promoting it more? 

 

Or maybe there's some incorrect IP redirect happening on your code site (maybe someone added a IP based redirect to the site to try and funnel people to the correct language site, but instead it's sending people to the wrong site?)

 

There are a lot of things to check, and without knowing your site or the complexities around it, I can only offer these suggestions and wish you the best of luck in your investigation (we've all been there, and it's not a fun job... )

Avatar

Level 1

Hi!,

 

we are having the same problem. Since the end of December 2021 all users using the iOS operating system (mobile or desktop) are placed in another country that is not correct in the variable "Countries". In our case, instead of placing them in Spain it places them in Algeria, Somalia and Portugal.

 

This does not happen with other operating systems.

 

 

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Level 3

I've seen on a forum on LinkedIn that this is some kind of issue with Apple devices and Apples privacy updates I think.