A research project I'm assisting at the University of Texas at Austin
notes that:
On Tuesday 2 June 2009, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) took legal steps that shut down the web hosting provider Triple Fiber network (3FN.net).
Looking at Autonomous Systems (ASNs) listed in the spam blocklist CBL,
Continue reading "3FN + FTC = Some Less Spam From Some ASNs" »
After outsourcing call centers, rote financial work, and programming,
why not comment spam?
This reporter's blog comment filter was working, yet:
...so far it's stopped 10,000 spams while allowing 377 human comments. So why had this got through? The electronic trail explained: the "captcha" (Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart) had been filled in.
The captcha is the junk filter's last resort. Because it's easy and cheap
to program machines to post any sort of junk on blogs, a captcha (which
puts numbers or letters in an image, which a machine in theory can't
read) shows whether you've got a real live person giving their thoughts,
or just a dumb machine trying to up some spammer's search-engine ranking.
If the captcha was filled in, it must have been done by a person; if it
had been done by a machine, the spammers would have cracked the problem of
solving captchas and would be busily spamming every blog they could find.
The price of humans who'll spam blogs is falling to zero,
Charles Arthur,
The Guardian
Thursday November 23, 2006
Who dunnit?
Continue reading " Outsourced Blog Spam" »
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