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Blog Post Why Captchas on Blog Comment Stink

Posted in Comment Spam by Dave on the January 29th, 2008

stinkerIt’s a never ending battle that all honest people face due to unscrupulous people who seek to drive their business through unethical practices. Given the chance to work around the system, spammers will find any way they can to position their unsolicited information in your face no matter how many preventive measures taken to thwart them. For most of us bloggers, fighting blog comment spam is like trying to fight an avalanche with a garden spade. The longer your blog is operational and the more successful it becomes through publishing original content, the more comment spam you will find yourself fighting. Even the best spam filtering systems still have holes to be exploited and like death and taxes in life, in the blogosphere you can count on there being some comment spam to deal with every time you login to your blogging software’s control panelor dashboard.

In an effort to combat comment spam, I’ve noticed many bloggers turning to “captcha” codes to prevent bots from spamming their blog. By “captcha”, I’m not talking about the typical “Are you human” question/response type of check but I’m talking about the type of obscured, embedded image that expires after a set amount of time. While these type of filtering devices may be good for website logins to prevent “brute force” password attacks, on a blog’s comments, these this type of protection is ridiculous and if you implement it on your blog, you will definitely lose only legitimate commentors. I’m writing this after I was at a particular blog that had a discussion related to thepost that was quite interesting and I felt I had sufficient knowledge to share with several of the previous commentors regarding questions they had been asking. So, I spent almost a half an hour typing in my comment that covered most of the questions and hit the submit button. To my dismay, I was greeted with a message that “the security code has expired”. Nice. The worst part was that whoever authored that coding abortion forgot to re-populate the form fields of my post, including the comment text which I’d worked half an hour on. I tried the back button and the session was set so not as to store the information in my post. Scratching my head, I pondered re-typing my comment from scratch but I was annoyed at the experience, so I closed the tab I was browsing in and said “forget about it”.

If this is the type of experience, you as a blog owner, want to provide to your end users and especially to people who are going to take the time to type out legitimate, helpful comments, you are going to lose those readers just like the afformentioned blog lost me. While the goal in blogging is to be memorable so you have repeat visitors who enjoy discussing your posts, being memorable for your site trashing comments because your expired while the visitor was typing is not the impression you want to make on your visitors or fight .

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Blog Post Blog Comment Spammers Exploit Google’s Blogspot

Posted in Comment Spam by Dave on the September 16th, 2007

BlogspotSpammers are always looking for new ways to to manipulate the system to deliver their useless messages. Recently it appears that spammers have beem manipulating ’s which offers free blog hosting combined with an free MSN/Hotmail email account to blast bloggers with comment spam. I opened my Wordpress Dashboard and saw my comments had been flooded by prescription drug , and spam with links back to free Blogspot blogs that were nothingmore than MFA () pages. I started deleting comments but they were coming in faster than I could delete them so I had no choice but to blacklist all comments containing links to Blogspot. I honestly think Google should show a little more responsibilty if they are going to offer these free services to anybody who wants to abuse them. I personally don’t appreciate having my server loaded with spam comments and I’ll never understand why somebody would be so rude as to waste my time deleting their junk.

Here’s a small list of the Blogspot blogs that were spamming me to death…

esomeprazole-drugs-on.blogspot.com
avapro-drugs-on.blogspot.com
amoxil-drugs-on.blogspot.com
hydrochlorothiazide-drugs-on.blogspot.com
clopidogrel-drugs-on.blogspot.com
altace-dugs-on.blogspot.com
cardizem-drugs-on.blogspot.com
claritin-dugs-on.blogspot.com
hydroxyzine-dugs-on.blogspot.com
elidel-dugs-on.blogspot.com
naltrexone-dugs-on.blogspot.com
olanzapine-dugs-on.blogspot.com
diprolene-dugs-on.blogspot.com
accutane-dugs-on.blogspot.com
amitriptyline-dugs-on.blogspot.com
flurazepam-dugs-on.blogspot.com
valproic-acid-dugs-on.blogspot.com
clomiphene-drugs-on.blogspot.com
pravachol-drugs-on.blogspot.com
plendil-drugs-on.blogspot.com
sertraline-drugs-on.blogspot.com
rosiglitazone-drugs-on.blogspot.com
ramipril-drugs-on.blogspot.com
methadone-drugs-on.blogspot.com
orlistat-drugs-on.blogspot.com
metronidazole-drugs-on.blogspot.com
omeprazole-drugs-on.blogspot.com
naproxen-drugs-on.blogspot.com
estrace-drugs-on.blogspot.com
methylphenidate-drugs-on.blogspot.com
advair-drugs-on.blogspot.com
estrogen-drugs-on.blogspot.com
premarin-drugs-on.blogspot.com
propranolol-drugs-on.blogspot.com
avandia-drugs-on.blogspot.com
terbinafine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
albuterol-drugs-on.blogspot.com
actonel-drugs-on.blogspot.com
losartan-drugs-on.blogspot.com
ibuprofen-drugs-on.blogspot.com
paroxetine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
cardura-drugs-on.blogspot.com
gabapentin-drugs-on.blogspot.com
fexofenadine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
methamphetamine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
pseudoephedrine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
rabeprazole-drugs-on.blogspot.com
alendronate-drugs-on.blogspot.com
noroxin-drugs-on.blogspot.com
lamivudine-drugs-on.blogspot.com
sunglassesprada.blogspot.com
payday-loans-benifit-income.blogspot.com
payday-loans-california.blogspot.com
payday-loans-for-no-checking-account.blogspot.com
payday-loans-for-poor-credit.blogspot.com
payday-loans-careers.blogspot.com
clubedobox.blogspot.com
clubedobox.blogspot.com
lacinefilia.blogspot.com

I really wish Google would be a little more proactive in what they allow for content if they are going to allow people to sign up for anonymous free blogs. Until something changes I’ve blacklisted any comments with a blogspot url in the comment or in the return link on all of my blogs. I think I’m expressing the frustration many of us bloggers are currently feeling about comment spam and the fact that Google pretends to be so adamant about fighting search engine spam yet they operate two of the most notorious spam haus services on the internet in Blogpsot and Blogger. In my opinon, if a blogger can’t afford a domain name and a $5 per month hosting account there’s obviously nothing I’d be interested in reading on their site because hosting a free blog pretty much shows you’re not making a dime from your blog (unless you’re using it to lure people in for prescription drugs or free porn). Most of the free blog sites offer trashy garbage blogs or blogs with stolen content. Recently I had the displeasure of finding a blog on Google’s Blogger service that had blatantly stolen several of my best articles and even got them into Digg and actually had more Diggs than my original post did. It’s of little or no use trying to report a Blogger or Blogspot blog because all Google offers is the little “Flag this Blog” link but if your flagging it because of stolen content, how are they going to know? If anybody knows of a more effective way to report stolen content and spam to Google that’s coming from their services, please feel free to leave a comment here.

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