Knocking spam dead

Blogging can indeed be a nightmare, without the right tools. Why? Spam.

Yes indeed – Spammers and their spambots, can make life a living hell for any popular blog. The aim is usually to gain links to their websites. Thus, they post irrelevant content in the comment section of a blog, with links to their website. Some are even more sophisticated and make use of “spambots” (an acronym of spam+robots) to automatically enter such useless comments.

Almost a year ago, I asked: “What is it about my blog?

What is it about my blog that makes me have to delete so many junk comments? As a matter of fact, I just marked 198 comments as SPAM and had them deleted immediately. Just as they were deleted, another 2 were waiting. I promptly deleted them too.

If you blog, and use WordPress, and have not installed any form of plug-in to control spam, you should consider the highly popular Akismet WordPress-plugin.

According to their website:

Automattic Kismet (Akismet for short) is a collaborative effort to make comment and trackback spam a non-issue and restore innocence to blogging, so you never have to worry about spam again.

This is how Akismet works. When a new comment, trackback, or pingback comes to your blog, it is submitted to the Akismet web service which runs hundreds of tests on the comment and classifies it into Awaiting Moderation, or spam. If the comment ends up in the Awaiting Moderation section, you can later approve it. The downside is that you might still have to scan through the Spam section, to be sure legitimate comments/trackbacks are not lost with the other gabbage.

Another WordPress plug-in that can be nicely combined with Akismet, is WP-Gatekeeper.

This plugin contains all the routines needed to display, check, and manage challenges for the Gatekeeper anti-spam system. The point of Gatekeeper is to stymie spambots by requiring a commenter to answer a question that has an obvious answer. Challenges are not posed to users who are logged in.

Essentially, WP-Gateway keeps the spambots away and Akismet handles the spam comments entered by humans. This combo is now working well for me, and I can spend useful time on my other endeavours.

What are your experiences, please share your thoughts.

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Oluniyi D. Ajao
Oluniyi D. Ajao is an Internet Entrepreneur and Tech Enthusiast based in South Africa. Follow him on twitter @niyyie for more tech updates.

4 Comments

  1. There are days that I had to manually delete hundreds of spam posts! It got me angry again and again. Solution? SPAM Karma 2.2. The developer says, Spam Karma 2 (SK2) is an anti-spam plugin for the WordPress blogging platform. It is meant to stop all forms of automated Blog spam effortlessly, while remaining as unobtrusive as possible to regular commenters.

    So far, so good. I will be doing a similar post to this on my blog. Cheers!

  2. Well, I’ve been using Akismet on my WordPress blog, with some spams still managing to get in as legitimate comments. In frustration, I configured that all comments must be manually approved before appearing on my blog. I don’t think that is too cool. David, I might need your assistance with the WP-Gateway plug-in.

  3. I have de-activated Wp-Gateway on my blog because its blocking Trackbacks from other blogs. Spam has reduced on my blog recently. Always update your WordPress software, and all will be well with you and your blog. All the best…

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