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I don't want to be counted as visitor every time I test my page in the hosting. Does Google know i'm the owner of the site by checking if i'm logged in my Gmail account?

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  • Thanks for the responses but I'm still not very sure. I'm not using any CMS. So basically I won't be counted as visitor if I access my web from my computer?
    – wyc
    Dec 8, 2009 at 9:38
  • If you have a static IP you can exclude it by following Google's instructions here: google.com/support/googleanalytics/bin/… - or you can set up a hidden page for yourself to set the exclusion cookie. But it almost definitely won't happen automatically. Dec 11, 2009 at 22:00

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I don't think Google does anything like this automatically. But they do provide instructions for excluding based on IP address (or range) and apparently also now by cookie. If you use a CMS or admin interface, you could put the code they provide in an HTML file that you then include into the admin interface pages by IFRAME (to ensure that the cookie stays set for anyone who uses that interface).

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One option is to install Ghostery addon your browser. Ghostery can block trackers and scripts used on webpages likes google analytics, google adword and other adwares.

You can also block or unblock the trackers for a specific site or specific tracker for a particular site.This add on is available for Firefox and chrome browsers. If you have this installed on your browser, your visit wont be counted as google analytic script wont be executed.

You can learn more about ghostery at: http://www.ghostery.com/about

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There are also often application specific ways of blocking google from counting administrators. For example I've used a wordpress analytics plugin that would automatically not include the tracking code if the user was logged in as an administrator. If you are application has the concept as admin then you could write something similar that controls when the code is added.

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If you visit your site frequently from connections with a dynamic IP address, eg. home broadband, then excluding IP addresses is not particularly practical. To go beyond IP exclusion, you can create an isolated page on your site that only you know about that includes a call to Analytics to label your cookie.

The Google Analytics _setVar() function lets you label yourself with an arbitrary string, eg. 'internal'. You only need to do this once per browser as long you don't clear your cookies.

Having labelled yourself as 'internal', you can create an Advanced Segment within Google Analytics to exclude visitors with that label.

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Google Analytics relay on you embedding a call to their JavaScript see this link - do not confuse it with how Google does page ranking.

So the answer to your question is that your pages should be smart enough to recognize when the request comes from you and skip the call to the JavaScript.

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