December 11, 2004
@ 10:26 AM

I haven't really looked around what other people's ideas (or implementations) are on referrer spam, but I think these idiots who want to use our blogs as a way to boost their Google rank are setting themselves up for trouble, because we are not really stupid. For the time being, I am simply letting it all run to collect evidence. There are wonderful things we can do with all these spam URLs. Distributed denial of service attacks come to mind ;-)  Or just redirect them to themselves.

Seriously, I am thinking of having word filtering and a manual negative list in the blog engine and to expose that list as a separate RSS as well as to allow import of such RSS lists into my blog engine. My exported list might also reference all my trusted negative lists that I import, so that this forms a mesh where folks can report those idiots and the engines will pick it up and throw out the crap. 

Categories: Blog | dasBlog

Friday, January 14, 2005 9:52:41 PM UTC
You're definitely not the only person receiving referral spam. We at www.heefthetover.net are also on their favorites list.

Personally I am using word filtering which works pretty well, but you still need to remove all the messages from your reactions, they are not shown but they are there.

Gordon who is also on www.heefthetover.net uses the approval process, which means you have to approve all reactions.

If you need anything url's, ip addresses, etc. Let me know!
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 2:21:36 PM UTC
It always amazes me when people design things with no security; get used to it that way and then complaint when someone violates it.

It's very simple. If you posted your credit card number on your blog, how long do you think it would take for someone to use it? If put a form on a webpage with no security how long do you think it's going to take someone to post something you don't like?

The answer to that question is how long you have to enjoy no security. And you have to know it's coming, especially you Clemens.

Wow. I'm blown away.

Just like with a door, a simple lock will solve the problem for 99% of the ‘intrusion problem’.
http://www.codeproject.com/aspnet/CaptchaImage.asp


Thursday, September 15, 2005 2:02:45 PM UTC
agreed
tim g
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