Spam Rapidly Increasing In Weblog Comments 387
dsurber writes "BBC News has a nice article discussing 'flyblogging', the phenomenon of spammers leaving advertising-related posts on personal weblogs. The writer comments: 'None of the other blogs I contribute to or run has been affected yet, but I can only assume it is a matter of time before the spammers move in, as they did first with UseNet and then with e-mail. It depresses me to think that any open medium can be so easily undermined by people with no scruples, no sense of responsibility and no idea of the damage they are doing.'" It seems a little surreal that people are having to develop anti-spam weblog tools.
Wikis too? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wikis too? (Score:4, Funny)
Here's My Solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Here's My Solution (Score:3, Interesting)
I wrote something like that into a messaging system that I wrote once..
If you go to voyeurweb.com (warning, porn site), and select any set of pictures, at the bottom there's a link where users can post their comments.
Anyone can write there, and frequently enough they write really rude comments. The people contributing the pictures don't like it, the people posting nice comments don't like it, so I added in a button, that simply keeps a record of how many people have clicked the alert button. T
This is why... (Score:4, Funny)
So why not try the best anti-spam tool on the market and wave goodbye to those pesky spams?!
Re:This is why... (Score:3, Informative)
I login to my blog page and add to the running log. No place for people to spam.
Though as a side note, I love getting spam about anti-spam software!
Re:This is why... (Score:3, Insightful)
With the massive adoption of programs like Moveable Type, the spammer's jobe becomes easier, since they only have to locate a new MT site and point their bots at it. Its pretty pathetic that they're even doing this, but not more than I'd expect from a bunch of bottom-feeders.
Mod (Score:5, Funny)
Don't be rediculous (Score:5, Funny)
*ducks*
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mod (Score:3, Funny)
Easy fix for spam. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mod (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Mod (Score:5, Funny)
Mod heretical parent down!!
Baa! Baa!
Google? (Score:3, Interesting)
This article implies that all these postings are an effort to stack the google rankings, in order to place spam sites near the top. I'm not a google wizard... is this actually a usable loophole in google's ranking system?
Re:Google? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Google? (Score:2)
Are you kidding? What search engine do you use?
Re:Google? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Google? (Score:2)
I got number 1 in Google for "arianna huffington spammer" and number 6 for "arianna huffington spam" just with my slashdot sig, without spamming weblogs.
Now that the election's over and us Californians have the Guvernator, I hafta figure out what I'm going to googlebomb next -- preferebly something amusing this time. As I'm indecisive, I haven't changed it yet.
Re:Google? (Score:4, Interesting)
How much truth is there to the statement that 2 + 2 = 4? A lot. Why? Because that's how it's defined to work.
Uh, that's how Google documents it. That's how all of Google's employees define it. That's how everybody's experience pans out. Maybe they're all just making shit up with nobody ever calling them on it, but I'd argue for "that's actually how it works" myself. Try going to Google and clicking "About".
Only if the log owners let the spam sit there long enough to be googled. If they do that, then my guess would be quite possibly yes.
Maybe compile a list of such spammers, then a list of the advertised sites. I'd like a checkbox on my google searches that says, "Ignore results on sites whose page rank is mostly due to asshole tactics."
Re:Google? (Score:2)
I've resorted to not linking the "username" field with the URL provided, instead doing it like:
Posted by ceejayoz (www [slashdot.org]) on Date
Re:Google? (Score:5, Interesting)
My hobbyist project [en.com] was picked up by Google after a while, but it wasn't until I retroactively changed my comment signature here on Slashdot and on Kuro5hin [kuro5hin.org] (thereby creating many links to my project page) that it went to the top of the search results. [google.com] It wasn't my intent to subvert Google in any way - I was quite surprised by the dramatic result.
There have been some less-than-scrupulous advertising companies in the business of that publishing dummy machine-generated web pages to exploit this trick. The dummy pages were typically filled with repitions of some nonsense paragraph, with self-links (to other dummy pages) and client-sponsored links interspersed here and there. The idea was that the self-linking would make the site look like a large, legit site to Google, which would mark it as relatively well-trusted and influential. Then Google would dutifully note the client-sponsored links and rank them highly. I believe Google has worked on ways to stop this; I don't know how successful they've been, or if the dummy-site makers are still around.
Arms race in the making (Score:2, Interesting)
The root of the problem might be in the impact a weblog link has on google ranking. Spammers have taken note, and they're acting on it.
I've Noticed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I've Noticed (Score:5, Insightful)
This is one of those simple-sounding, and utterly worthless "solutions".
You see, you can stop buying what the spammers are offering, but will everybody else? You see, this world is chock-full of people who just don't get it when it comes to spam. They don't realize the mechanical nature of SPAM, many think the message was sent by somebody to them personally.
Scams were common in the 20th, 19th, 18th, 15th, and 11th century, why would they stop now?
So, really, what you in fact just said was " The solution is simple: change human nature for every person on the earth to a very cynical nature and then spend billions of dollars in education so that people know what SPAM is and how best to treat it, and they will go under soon after."
Utopia doesn't exist, and won't as long as there are people to pollute it. In the meantime, we have to deal with the fact that this world has both unscrupulous people and suckers.
The solution is to change the protocol of Email to introduce enough resistance to communication to thwart SPAM. Until that happens, SPAM will be a problem.
Re:I've Noticed (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, we are going to have to change human nature [hedweb.com] eventually, if we want to survive alongside exponentially advancing technology [kurzweilai.net] where any random psychopath will be able to "press The Red Button" with exponentially decreasing effort.
I think humans are basically good when resources are abundant and life is good, but when resources are scarce (artificial or not), then the "selfish gene" goes into overdrive and people get desperate. But there's also that rare mino
Re:I've Noticed (Score:5, Interesting)
But google reads a lots of blogs. If a spammer gets their link onto a whole lot of blogs, Google PageRank would see hundreds or thousands of links to their site and bump up its rank. They exploit everyone's blog in order to improve their score on searches.
That's the theory anyway. Whether or not it works is another story [zawodny.com].
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I've Noticed (Score:2)
I'm not sure about the demographics, but I saw a story on the local news channel about the U.S. government getting involved in spam. They said that about 30% of people request more information, and 7% of people place orders.
The best thing that could happen is that the spammers let us know who they successfully sold to, so that we can collectively beat the crap out of them for making spam a worthwhile thing for the spammers.
Re:I've Noticed (Score:2, Informative)
The numbers I allways hear for spam are around 1 hit (purchase, mortgage lead, etc) per 100,000 emails sent. I've even heard 1 per 1,000,000.
slashdot spam (Score:2, Flamebait)
I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:2)
If the message (from an anonymous poster) contains the usual '.com', '.net', '.tv', '.whatever', the program sends the "message accepted" response for a regular post, but sends the entire message to the bit bucket. A human will notice it didn't work if they check, but the bot will simply go on to the next site.
The major fault with this is that if the bot checks the page, it could get into an endless loop trying to post the url and suck up a lot of bandwidth. Perhap
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:2)
Why not just ban the IP for 24 hours. That would work better.
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:5, Informative)
Once I installed the latter and did some of the former, I've had almost no spam, vs several hundred over a couple of days. Now whether that is testimony to how well the tips work or that the spammers are going in short bursts then taking breaks is still unknown.
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:2)
Does anyone have any good links to this type of program? I haven't seen any packages available for people with little web programming experience (i.e., me). If nothing good exists out there, I'm sure someone from the /. community could type something up. All you need is a few dozen images, a random image p
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:2)
For that matter, wouldn't be difficult to write a script which simultaneously signed up for 50 accounts, showing all the mangled images and text boxes on a single page for a human to type in. They can hire some kid to 'translate' at a few bucks an hour, creating hundreds of accounts a day....
I have a pacifist friend whom I'd like to introduce to spammers, see how quic
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:2)
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:5, Insightful)
That excludes people who prefer to browse using text, which is what that image recognition filter effectively does. Blind people, low bandwidth folks are automatically eliminated from the community.
Requiring a periodic human response at the other end of a live email address, after a time interval, helps some. It's still possible for spammers to cultivate a temporary reputation of responsibility and spam a site as their last post, but requiring them to periodically exert effort to prove they're authentically human helps to make spamming hard work.
It wouldn't hurt for sites to start keeping a growing list of bad urls and poisoned posters. A spider that visits url's, maybe one or two deep after the posted URL (phenomena of delayed appearance of herbal viagara behind URLs that are opaque looking), checks for spam links, and assigns big negative karma would help some, especially if it runs before the posting appears on the blog.
Re:I have a quick and dirty solution. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:You, on the other hand, are the regular type. (Score:3, Funny)
Uh, try disabling comments altogether... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not every single web site needs to be a two-way communication system. That's what email and discussion groups are for.
Re:Uh, try disabling comments altogether... (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah I mean who reads these comments anyway? Can you imagine a site full of these asinine people writting about stuff they don't even know the first thing about?
What a stupid stupid idea
Re:Uh, try disabling comments altogether... (Score:2)
Says the guy posting a comment on a weblog...
Uh, what's really all that insightful? (Score:2)
Kjella
IANAS (I am not a spammer) (Score:2)
Solution to the problem (Score:3, Interesting)
2) With every post, display the advertising policy (buying an ad on the site is $5000)
3) Make sure they confirm that if their message is an ad, they agree to pay the $5000
4) Host their ad for them, and collect your money. Small claims is helpful here.
Re:Solution to the problem (Score:2)
3) Make sure they confirm that if their message is an ad, they agree to pay the $5000
4) Host their ad for them, and collect your money. Small claims is helpful here.
This is exactly what I was considering suggesting. Any lawyers out there know if this would be legally binding? If so, I may quit my job and start my own BLOG today. Let's see, 20 spamvertisements * $5000 per day = $100,000 per day. I could handle that
Re:Solution to the problem (Score:2)
Make them fill in contact information when creating the accounts, and then actually verify the existance of said person prior to allowing them to post. That would take care of the anonymity issue.
Yeah, it is a bit of work. No, it isn't too difficult to make a quick phone call. Besides, if all goes well, you might actually net a few of the spammers.
Awkward Alternative. (Score:5, Funny)
I like I have been splamogged much better. Just rolls off the tongue.
I have already seen this with my blog (Score:3, Interesting)
This past week alone I cleaned out about 20 spam comments.
Re:I have already seen this with my blog (Score:2)
M.
Re:I have already seen this with my blog (Score:3, Interesting)
I've seen the requests for a mass delete of comments in the
I doubt this is a big deal (Score:2)
You could just run
Direct financial impact on users (Score:2)
However the site that I run is hosted on MovableType through a commercial host. I have a metered limit on database queries and bandwidth. Excessive blog comment spamming could end up costing me money!
A new version of MT-Blacklist comes out today. Use it!
This was happening to my guestbook too (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This was happening to my guestbook too (Score:3, Interesting)
Originally the spam was just huge lists of porn sites, from a few specific spammers. To fight that, we kludgingly ad
Google.. (Score:2)
Of course, I can't remember the last time I had to google for 'penis enlargement'. Companies have been kind enough to save me the trouble and send the results straight to my inbox.
Side note: My blog gets about 2 of these a week now.
Why let users comment on your blog at all? (Score:4, Insightful)
Doesn't it?
I think the whole "open forum" thing is overrated... Look at all the junk that gets published here, on Slashdot, one of the more serious of the open forums (yeah, I know how crazy THAT comment is, but it's true).
Re:Why let users comment on your blog at all? (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't it?
Yes, but in many cases so also will the blog's audience go away.
One of the key atttractions of small-to-middle-sized weblogs is the interactivity. If the blog author says something incorrect, you can let him know. If you have additional information pertaining to something a blogger wrote about, you can share it with her.
Without comments, blogs are just another one-way communications medium. Not to say that's an undesirable thing, but we already have plenty of those.
I've seen far worse from spammers. (Score:4, Interesting)
Last year, I closed my hotmail account and two spammed-to-heck e-mail accounts. To keep old friends and family from getting shafted, I had an autoreply attatched to those addresses, announcing that those addressess were closed and that I could be reached through the contact form [rahga.com] on my website, prior to sending those e-mails to
To date, through this manual entry, effort-draining contact form, I have had at least 20 offers to increase my manly-ness, 10 offers to find the love of my life, and 5 death threats from annoyed spammers. Only one charitable organization had a problem with my auto-reply, because a spammer was using their e-mail address to send junk to me over and over again.
I have had problems (Score:2, Informative)
1) If you get flooded with spam just go directly into MySQL and issue a DELETE...WHERE query, it's really too much trouble to use the MT frontend to delete multiple comments.
2) Check out MT-Blacklist at http://www.jayallen.org/misc/projects/mt-blacklist / [jayallen.org]
Legislation (Score:3, Interesting)
It's taken eight years since email spam became an issue for signifigant legislation to pass.
We need an easily amendable federal law that simply says unwanted, unsolicited, uncompensated advertising is simply illegal.
Usenet, fax, email, public chat, blogs, RPC messenger, any forum that allows public input for free has become a spammer magnet. They don't own it, get them out.
We need a law that says this, as a statement that to live under our social contract you can't be an annoying louse.
Re:Legislation (Score:3, Insightful)
Would you like to be notified when the U.S. becomes a military state, or would you rather be thrown up against the wall when the time comes?
Every day I wish people would stop putting more and more control of their daily lives into the hands of Uncle Sam. Remember, the more control the government has, the less control you have.
I've been seeing this for months (Score:3, Insightful)
It's frustrating on so many levels. The spammer always sees a hit from your website in their logs if you do a background check on the user (you have to visit the site in order to realize it's spam), so the insentive to spam is reinforced. On the other hand, you run the risk of deleting a user who is truly interested in your site if you don't investigate their profile information.
Unfortunately, it's really easy to use google to find phpbb based sites, and it's just as easy to write a script to register yourself with all of these sites. The signal to noise ratio is making it hard for me to justify the admin time costs of running a public site.
The other (not as easy) solution is to modify your site code in some non-standard way so that their scripts fail.
Another interesting phenomenon (Score:2)
To hell in a handbasket, i tell you! (Score:2, Interesting)
My hosting company was unsympathetic to my pleas for help. Needless to say, I now host elsewhere. I mean, sheesh...my mother reads that that thing. The last thing I want to think about is her and my dad...and viagr^H^H^
Solutions (Score:3, Insightful)
One blog I frequent -- Samizdata [samizdata.net] (a libertarian site) -- was recently hit with this kind of stuff. They've initiated a technology that forces people to enter a code supplied on the comments page before being allowed to post a comment.
Slashdot's moderation feature may also help with this problem. If the spammer's goal is to be seen, rather than just Googled, moderating down spam as offtopic or some other negative category may help reduce that visibility.
I have also seen this (Score:2)
On my main site, I use Greymatter [noahgrey.com], and I view my control panel log every few days. It gives me who has commented since I last cleared to log, and I have only had a few posts to some "porno4u.nu" stuff, and since I could trace the IP, I added it to my "blocked IP" sites.
Still, my journal does not get a lot of traffic, so my way of working with this is fine. But if I had hudreds of posts a day, then, no. I'd
Alan's Rules (Score:2)
"Any useful tool will eventually be inandated with porn spam and advertising, therefor making it useless"
No Spam Blogging Here... (Score:3, Funny)
Get 500 by tomorrow. It's quick, easy and confidential.
CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW!!! [emailpls.com]
Use the money anyway you like:
...sigh. Okay, I keed I keed and I know I'm going to get modded down for posting some actual spam I found in my inbox. But I have actually heard of this problem [lyricsdir.com] before. I wish it would just go away along with the majority of our obsessivly consumerist culture. But thank god, though I have seen some folks accuse Slashdot of being in bed with some of the product manufacturers it features in its stories (an accusation I don't actually subscribe to), I have NEVER seen blatant spam (that wasn't a blatant troll [slashdot.org]) mixed in with the blogging on this site. Could it be that the lameness filters are admirably effective in blocking this sort of content? Or have, I wonder, the spammers not figured out how to interface with Slashdot as of yet? Repeat: yet?
How about... (Score:2, Interesting)
Then, google would still spider the page, but any spam would fail to be indexed.
Of course, blogs aren't the only application for such a thing, any time you take user input to be posted online you could surround it with a tag to aleviate any spam possibilities.
Re:How about... (Score:2)
Tag, slashcode must have stripped it from my comment, oops
Re:How about... (Score:2)
Personal Guestbooks have been targeted also... (Score:2, Interesting)
The article misses the point (Score:5, Interesting)
The BBC article misses the point, as does a similar article in Wired [wired.com]. Seems the editors are more focused on name-dropping and doomsdaying than on focusing on some recent solutions. For example:
Point is
Just so long as no one attempts to use a rather evil solution [nielsenhayden.com] I discovered here on
porn spam thoughts (Score:2, Funny)
Tell me something new... (Score:3, Informative)
SMTP Sender Authentication, Blog Spam, and PageRank [zawodny.com]
Cheap Viagra, Vicodin, Xanax, Prescription Drugs, and Penis Enlargement Pills!!! [zawodny.com]
Gureilla Tactics Against Blog Comment Spammers [zawodny.com]
Russell Beattie [russellbeattie.com] on this:
Googler Comments [beattie.info]
Simon Willison [incutio.com] on this:
Battling Comment Spam [incutio.com]
Banning Google Comments [incutio.com]
Michael Fagan [faganfinder.com] on this:
Seven Ideas for a Spam Free Blog [yoz.com]
Scott Johnson [feedster.com] on this:
A Possible Blog Comment Spam Solution [feedster.com]
That's terrible... (Score:2)
A lesson. . . (Score:2)
You can find nice people. But you have to look. Most of them aren't.
Make them registered-based (Score:2)
Criminal Trespass (Score:2)
Responsability (Score:2)
Well, welcome to humanity. Yes, most (?) people are responsible, but some are not. In the real world, people can do what they did in Bagdad today, or in New York in Sep 11, or in Columbine, so yes, some people have no scruples. The behavior of people on the Internet is no different. Those without scruples can do any
SPAM will kill the open nature of the internet (Score:2, Interesting)
They attack guestbooks too (Score:2)
I feel the pain (Score:2)
Not as insurmountable a problem as with usenet (Score:3, Informative)
My solution (Score:4, Insightful)
my solution? Have MySQL log IP addresses along with the comment submission. My intended audience is so small I know the majority of the viewers personally, and thus have no issue walling off an entire ISP ( after reporting that IP address to said ISP's abuse dept)
About time. (Score:2)
I'll support death to blog spammers when they start using their robots.txt file to stop their lame sites ruining search results.
something similer happened on my BBS (Score:4, Interesting)
I dont remember where it was linking to but I think it was a seach index or something similer.
were they trying to boost the ranking on search engines by having these so called links in place?
The real issue is trust management. (Score:3, Interesting)
Just like spam on other media (email, usenet, web forums, etc), you can apply quick and dirty fixes :
But the real issue is always the same : trust management. You want to be able to grant as much trust as possible to trustworthy (non-spamming) strangers, while revoking all trust to others.
So why do we always want to build trust management systems on top of other systems, and not design a stand-alone one, that can be used by a wide range of media (email, usenet, blogs, etc) ?
Note: identifying "personas" does not mean identifying "real people", so there are no privacy issues in such a system.
this is just a taste of our doom (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll save you a bit of surfing by extracting a tasty morsel, but do glance over the rest as it is quite a classic:
[snip] [endsnip]
The key insight here is that freedom in a commons brings ruin to all. So in other words, we kid ourselves into thinking that our tiny individual impact does not make a difference, that societal good is not impaired, thus we have the freedom to pursue our impulses to better our share, and working individually this way we ruin everything that does not have a high barrier to entry. The way this applies to email/weblogs/Usenet/etc is that in the beginning the technical hurdles are too high for there to be very many users with thier little impacts, so the Commons is safe for a while. But then comes the GUI and push-button bots and the Commons is swamped. The normal "natural" balance is broken apart and the Commons collapses from the death of a thousand cuts. It has ever been thus, and unless I am mistaken it always will be unless you defend your Commons from newcomers. Which has been tried. [gbso.net]
privacy, openness, spamfree (Score:4, Interesting)
Wake up and smell the bacon, people. The techno-utopianism of Wired when it was boosting the dotcom era into orbit has proven itself a poor match with human nature on all fronts.
The benificient fathers of the internet made two horrendous design decisions concerning the final destination of a global internetwork: excessively strong anonimity and a near zero cost for dumping pollution into public media.
Privacy, openness, spam-free: pick any two.
For anyone who looked into ECC yesterday, you might have noticed that RSA has ideal properties for preventing some of this mess: expensive to sign a certificate, cheap to verify, and the ratio becomes worse as you scale up.
If every spam artifact was signed with an anonymous RSA cert (anyone could make as many of these as they wish), as soon as one spam is confirmed, every other post signed by the known-spam cert could be instantly revoked.
This would force the spammers to create a new anonymous cert for every spam instance. Yet with RSA certs, the computational cost to generate a cert is vastly greater than the cost to verify the cert.
As an added step, the cert could require the IP address of both endpoints to be embedded inside (the server would reflect back the IP source address it sees, and then ask for an anonymous cert to be generated at a desired RSA key size).
We won't have to damage anonymity very much to vastly increase the cost of dumping pollution.
In this respect, weblogs would be a good place to start. This is a relatively new technology that could be retrofitted at one percent of the cost of a global e-mail infrastructure upgrade. It really doesn't matter if you inconvience a few bloggers working out the kinks, these people have not much useful to do in any case.
Re:It is natural (Score:2)
Re:It is natural (Score:2)
Re:f???ing bloggers (Score:2)
Re:An interesting double standard re: spammers (Score:3, Insightful)
Enlighten me, please, how does buying Viagra support the Internet?
I think you are confusing two issues here. On one side, you have the Web sites I want to visit and products I want to buy. I am fully aware that nothing is for free, and because of that I don't complain abo