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After a cPanel account suspension Google Analytics still records traffic

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5 comments

  • webhostuk
    Yes that's possible.. if you don't want that traffic you need to add google bot block rule in robot.txt, so thing like : User-agent: * Disallow: / this should stop all the traffic shown in google Analytics.
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  • bcadej
    As I understand when the cPanel account is suspended nobody can access .htaccess file or index file or any file associated with this account? So that Apache and php doesn"t even know that anybody made any kind of request? This account and web pages don't even exists? And nobody could access the GA code embeded in my pages? What am I misunderstanding?
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  • cPanelKenneth
    Something like a proxy could be caching the website. In that case it's possible for the website to be visited and used, and GA tracking to work. For the time period in question is there anything in the domain's access logs that matches what GA is reporting?
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  • bcadej
    I haven"t used any proxies or caching (outside of this cPanel account). I have checked logs in /usr/local/apache/domlogs/this-cpanel-user. Logs shows activity just when the account was active, after suspension there is nothing logged.
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  • cPanelKenneth
    I haven"t used any proxies or caching (outside of this cPanel account). I have checked logs in /usr/local/apache/domlogs/this-cpanel-user. Logs shows activity just when the account was active, after suspension there is nothing logged.

    It's not whether you are using a proxy, it's whether anyone that visits the site is doing so through a proxy.
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