The recently released Stats feature, which competes with well known third party products like SiteMeter and StatCounter, has the option to block your own visits from being counted.
This option is required by any serious blog publisher, as anybody who wants to rely upon the accuracy of the visitor meter of choice is certainly going to want to see information about their readers - without the distraction of their own activity.
The "Don't track your own pageviews" setup wizard explicitly warns us
(Update 2016/03): Blogger has rewritten the Stats "Don't track" dashboard page, which now runs as the blog URL, and no longer requires third party cookies. Now, "Don't track" requires scripts, run under the URL of the blog.
The "Don't track ..." option is on the dashboard Stats "Overview" tab.
Look for the "Don't track your own pageviews" link, to the right of the activity graph on the Stats "Overview" sub menu. You will need to do this separately for each browser, on each computer, that you use.
If "Don't track ..." does not always work, look at cookie and script filters.
If you're watching your Stats displays carefully, you selected "Don't track my pageviews", and you notice that your pageviews are still being included in your Stats displays, you're going to need to examine your browser and your computer settings, for any cookie and script restrictions, and correct any settings, as necessary.
Since this is another feature that's enabled using a script run from "Blogger.com" and read from "Blog*Spot.com" (or whatever country code alias that affects you / custom domain your blog is published under), you're going to have to check the "third party cookies" browser setting, to start. Next, check that you have cookies from "Blogger.com" set to "Permanent", not to "Session".
If you can't find settings in the browser, look on the computer and network.
If the problem is not solved by enabling "third party cookies", and setting "Blogger.com" cookies as "Permanent", check the computer and the network, for any anti-virus, firewall, security appliance, or security suite, which might contain a cookie or script filter. And, do not clear cookies, without considering the consequences.
If your country is subject to aliasing, check for filters to pass the alias.
If access to your blog is subject to Country Code Aliasing, setup your filters to permit the CC Alias of "blogspot.com", for your location. Any filters on your computer need to allow the proper trust level, for your local alias of "blogspot.com".
Blogger cannot code around filter problems on your computer.
This is a problem which only you, the blog owner, can correct - and it's one which Blogger cannot code around.
Since this setting is specific by individual browser, it's going to be a constant challenge for people with multiple browsers and computers - as well as for people with mobile / pocket computers / smart phones. And it may be a problem that will require you to increase your technical skill level.
This option is required by any serious blog publisher, as anybody who wants to rely upon the accuracy of the visitor meter of choice is certainly going to want to see information about their readers - without the distraction of their own activity.
The "Don't track your own pageviews" setup wizard explicitly warns us
In order to do this, Blogger must add a tracking cookie to your browser.Here, we see another instance of the well known need for us to check our browser and computer, thoroughly, for any cookie restrictions.
(Update 2016/03): Blogger has rewritten the Stats "Don't track" dashboard page, which now runs as the blog URL, and no longer requires third party cookies. Now, "Don't track" requires scripts, run under the URL of the blog.
The "Don't track ..." option is on the dashboard Stats "Overview" tab.
Look for the "Don't track your own pageviews" link, to the right of the activity graph on the Stats "Overview" sub menu. You will need to do this separately for each browser, on each computer, that you use.
If "Don't track ..." does not always work, look at cookie and script filters.
If you're watching your Stats displays carefully, you selected "Don't track my pageviews", and you notice that your pageviews are still being included in your Stats displays, you're going to need to examine your browser and your computer settings, for any cookie and script restrictions, and correct any settings, as necessary.
Since this is another feature that's enabled using a script run from "Blogger.com" and read from "Blog*Spot.com" (or whatever country code alias that affects you / custom domain your blog is published under), you're going to have to check the "third party cookies" browser setting, to start. Next, check that you have cookies from "Blogger.com" set to "Permanent", not to "Session".
If you can't find settings in the browser, look on the computer and network.
If the problem is not solved by enabling "third party cookies", and setting "Blogger.com" cookies as "Permanent", check the computer and the network, for any anti-virus, firewall, security appliance, or security suite, which might contain a cookie or script filter. And, do not clear cookies, without considering the consequences.
If your country is subject to aliasing, check for filters to pass the alias.
If access to your blog is subject to Country Code Aliasing, setup your filters to permit the CC Alias of "blogspot.com", for your location. Any filters on your computer need to allow the proper trust level, for your local alias of "blogspot.com".
Blogger cannot code around filter problems on your computer.
This is a problem which only you, the blog owner, can correct - and it's one which Blogger cannot code around.
Since this setting is specific by individual browser, it's going to be a constant challenge for people with multiple browsers and computers - as well as for people with mobile / pocket computers / smart phones. And it may be a problem that will require you to increase your technical skill level.
Comments
Anyway, I can't figure out what I need to do to make it stop. Is it that I've set Firefox to empty the cache and remove all cookies when I close the browser?
I'd love to get this figured out and hope you can enlighten me.
You allow Blogger to drop cookies on your browser, to block them from tracking your own pageviews. If Blogger can't drop cookies, and if BlogSpot (or your custom domain) can't read the cookies, your own pageviews will be tracked.
Blogger calls them "blocking cookies" because they are used to block tracking of your own pageviews.
When I look at the list of cookies allowed it's there. But if i go into stats, it isn't. Statcounter works. This is just a Google failure.
OK, did you allow "third party cookies"? That is a separate setting, completely. And, it's essential.
Lots of people have this issue; I hope it gets fixed soon, or that someone will tell me how to do it right. A minor issue for me--still appreciative of all that Google offers, for FREEEEE!
Thanks for your help, that rebel, Olivia
thank you!
Nelson,
The best advice that I can offer is that you check your computer and network, for any anti-virus, firewall, security appliance, or security suite, which might contain a cookie or script filter.
There are millions of computers all over the world, each with its own different combination of applications (like a browser) and filters (like anti-virus, firewall, security suite), and each will differently affect your ability to use Blogger.
This isn't a case where Blogger can help you, nor can I do so. I'll advise / coach you - but you have to do the detail work.
From within stats or posts, if I click on a link to a page, it opens up in a new window and is NOT tracked. However, if I click on a link on that page in this new window, the next pageview IS tracked.
I find this behavior quite unexpected. Hmmm, is this a bug? If there is something with my cookies, I have not yet found it.
wqbelle@gmail.com
http://wqebelle.blogspot.com
Every Blogger feature that involves cookies becomes quite frustrating, and perplexing.
Even when Blogger knows that a problem exists, and sometimes even acknowledges a code problem, finding any such problem is complicated by the thousands of extraneous problem reports from bloggers who cause their own problem, by having a cookie or script filtering security setting on their computer.
The "new window" detail of yours is very interesting. Thank you for contributing.
From "Edit Posts" you click on view, your pageview is NOT tracked. However, I have the adult content warning turned on which means before I view the page, I must accept that I am going to look at adult content. If that warning pops up, my pageview IS tracked. However, after I've done this once (you only have to do this once per visit), the next pageview is NOT tracked.
Curious. If I may quote Hamlet Act 1, scene 4, 87–91: Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.
I have now come to realize that if I'm delighted sometimes by the hits on my blog, I must remember that this delight must be tempered with the knowledge it is partially me fascinated by my own words. Hmmm, kind of narcissistic, eh? :-)
Besides that, I do have the preferences set to allow cookies.
I suppose it's ok for now (perhaps even a relief) that I'm just talking to myself, but after a while it's going to be annoying that posting and editing and learning how to use the site is just tracking me.
Mtn Doc
10-30-10
Maybe session cookies?
Now for reasons unkown it has reverted back to "track my pageviews" and again I can't change it back. All my browser settings are to allow third party cookies and blogger.com and blogspot.com are both on the "Allow" list.
I'm assuming it is Norton which is blocking them but I can't figure out how to find the setting in Norton, let alone change it.
Any ideas?
Thanks heaps for the article.
Strictly speaking, all problems with Blogger are Google problems. That said, all problems with Blogger can't be solved by Google - and even with the problems that could be solved by Google, not all will be solved by Google.
You may have to do some of the work. A problem with Stats failing to not track certain activity is in no way an outage. If Google never gets around to solving this problem, I would not be surprised. Every week, they get new fires to fight, that are both 1. More urgent, and 2. Affect more people.
Pure economics suggests that you won't ever be able to exclude your pageviews from Stats.
What make / model modem and router do you have, connecting your Mac to the Internet?
"Pure economics suggests that you won't ever be able to exclude your pageviews from Stats."
If this is true the feature is BS.
You completely misunderstand my comments. An epidemiological analysis of forum reports show a complete lack of any affinity, for people complaining that "Don't track my pageviews" does not work.
If you have watched Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken for any amount of time, you will have seen what the forums look like, when Blogger breaks something. The volume of problem reports is unmistakable. What you have right now, with "Don't track my pageviews" not working, clearly has no volume, suggesting that it's a Blogger problem.
And even given the slight chance that it might be a Blogger problem, it is of such low volume that other problems are going to bump it, continually, in the queue. That's the "pure economics" issue.
So if you can't get the feature to work on your computer, then it's BS - for you. But it works fine for me - and for thousands of other blog owners.
Sorry, but I will continue to insist that epidemiological analysis of forum posts points to a client side problem - ie your computer.
which is a blogger blog and it seems to be always counting my tracks. :(
Thousands of blog owners are using Stats successfully, without their activity being counted.
If you have tried everything, and Blogger still counts your activity, then you have not tried enough.
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2010/11/blogger-layered-security-and-you.html
http://www.naijagym.com.ng
Thanks for the comment!
See if my latest cookie setting article is more interesting to you.
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2016/04/blogger-magic-enabling-cookies-in-your.html