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Abisola Tanzako | Jun 26, 2025
Bot traffic makes up over 42% of global internet traffic, with bot farms responsible for a significant share.
In a universe where online interactions, social media platforms, and web-based campaigns dominate, much of what we see, hear, and believe on the net is manipulated by unseen forces. Among the strongest and least appreciated are bot farms.
These vast networks of bots warp web structures, bias information, and sway everything from politics to web marketing campaigns.
A 2023 Business of Apps study estimates that bots generate 22% of total web traffic worldwide, and bot-driven ad fraud in advertisements costs advertisers approximately $84 billion annually.
This article explains how bot farms work, the risks they pose to advertisers, and how to defend against them.
A bot farm is a company with many automated accounts, “bots,” programmed to perform actions imitating actual humans. These actions can vary from liking posts, following accounts, commenting, and sharing content to clicking on ads.
As opposed to legitimate automation or customer service bots, bot farms are employed with the aim of deception: to simulate, mislead, and overstate artificial activity.
They can scale from hundreds to millions of accounts, typically controlled from central systems or even real devices (e.g., click farms).
Bot farms use both software and hardware solutions in maintaining and expanding their activities:
Here are the top tools for detecting and blocking bot farm traffic, widely used by businesses to protect their websites and digital platforms:
1. Imperva bot protection
2. Cloudflare bot management
3. DataDome
4. Akamai bot manager
5. PerimeterX (now HUMAN)
They include:
One of the most brazen financial impacts of bot farms is ad fraud. Bots click on ads to blow through advertising budgets without driving real consumer demand. According to the Business of Apps report 2023, global advertisers lost an estimated $84 billion to ad fraud in 2023.
Influencer marketing relies on trust and credibility. However, several influencers have been found to purchase bot farms’ artificial followers and engagement to boost their perceived influence.
59.8% of brands reported influencer fraud during campaign runs, a 2023 Firework study stated.
Platforms like TikTok took down 32.6 million artificial followers during the first quarter of 2024.
Bot farms can generate artificial site traffic and backlinks, which spam search engine rankings. This undermines the integrity and relevance of search results, making it harder for original content creators to compete.
One of the most perceptive cases of bot farm manipulation in digital marketing was revealed in 2018, when The New York Times looked for an American company called Devumi.
The company sold millions of fake social media followers, likes, and retweets, produced mainly by bot farms. Influencers, celebrities, and even politicians were among their customers, all wanting to artificially inflate their online standing.
For advertisers, the consequences were enormous. Influencers spent millions with brands that appeared popular but had fake account followings, resulting in low ROI and lost confidence in influencer marketing.
Consequently, platforms like Twitter purged over 70 million fake accounts, and advertisers began requesting stricter performance expectations and follower audits.
This instance is a wake-up call to marketers to prioritize authenticity most carefully, screen partnerships, and use detection technologies to safeguard campaigns against non-human traffic.
Even when bot farms become increasingly sophisticated, there are still some telltale signs that marketers and users of the platforms can watch out for:
They include:
The advent of generative AI adds another level of sophistication. Bots are now able to:
Bot farms waste advertising budgets and invalidate public trust in the online world and the validity of online interactions. It has spillover effects in society:
Bot farms are not just a technological headache; they are a systemic threat to the integrity of digital advertising. Their influence is far-reaching and corrosively deep, ranging from distorting campaign metrics to draining ad budgets to misleading consumers.
As artificial intelligence increasingly empowers such networks, it is becoming increasingly complex to distinguish actual human behavior from computer-generated deceit.
For marketers, this is not a technology problem but a trust problem. Credibility is the foundation on which all great marketing lies. When followers are for sale, metrics can be bought, and trends can be faked, everybody, from consumers to brands, loses.
But within this challenge is an opportunity. Marketers can build more credible, human, and performance-driven campaigns by actively indicating bot traffic, auditing influencer partnerships, investing in AI-fueled fraud prevention technologies, and educating clients and teams.
Protect your brand from phony engagement. Start your free traffic with ClickPatrol today and take back control of your marketing ROI.
A bot farm is an organized undertaking employing many automated accounts to simulate real human online behavior. Its purpose is to force manipulative metrics, spread disinformation, or continue fraud.
Seek quality engagement: Are there authentic comments? Do followers display diversity of action and location?
No, some engage in customer service automation, news feeds, or access tasks. Bot farms are a technical term used for fraudulent or manipulative purposes.
They use fraud detection tools, engage platforms like ClickPatrol, measure traffic quality, and choose good ad networks and influencers as key strategies.
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