Fraud is an ecosystem problem
Rewarded growth attracts real users, but the incentive layer can also attract behavior that does not create durable value. Fraud controls need to consider the full path from impression to reward, conversion and post-conversion quality.
The most useful controls combine technical checks with behavioral and economic signals. A technically valid event can still be commercially low quality.
Patterns to monitor
Teams should monitor abnormal completion velocity, repeated device or network patterns, sudden cohort quality shifts, inconsistent retention curves and performance that diverges from comparable traffic sources.
These signals become more useful when they are tracked over time. Drift is often easier to detect than a single isolated event.
Operational takeaway
Fraud prevention should be part of allocation, pricing and partner management. Treating it as a separate cleanup function increases cost and slows down decision-making.