Comment Spam: How do you tackle it?

How do you guys deal with comment spam? I have been using Akismet and Spam Karma, both of which have deal wonderfully well with most types of comment spam. Unfortunately, though, there is a type of comment spam that is manually submitted and can pass even the most strict SK tests, including captcha.

I was browsing one of my other blogs when I noted that there had been three or four spam comments similar to the one below, all directing me to one ESL website in an English-speaking country and posted on one of my ESL websites. The spam was attached to different posts, but the format was very similar each time, with the same URL.

Anyway, I wrote a short but polite email asking the webmaster to desist from spamming my blog(s), but within five minutes of sending the email, I found another spam comment exactly similar to the one above. The email was worded thus:

Dear Website Owner,

In the last few days, your website has been linked via comment spam in
three of my posts. I’d appreciate it if you didn’t use comments on my
blogs as a way to spam links to your website.

You can of course buy them, I’d be happy to provide real links to your
blogs. I have a number of blogs and websites that would be appropriate
for real text links, either in posts or in the sidebar.

Best Wishes
etc.

Well, after my appeal fell on deaf ears, I decided to contact their webhost, I had to do a tracert command to find the hosting company and the IP address. It wasn’t particularly difficult, and I forwarded a polite but detailed email complaining about the spamming, with pretty much all the details I included here.

> I’m receiving a lot of comment spam from one client that I have traced
> to you through the IP address: 72 . 52 . *** .**
> This user is using a form of comment spam on one of my blogs where he or she
> is repeatedly placing comments in my posts.
>
> I have asked him to desist, but all I go t was more comments of the type:
>
> It’s quite clear to me that comments of the type are spam comments as
> they are all very similar and come from the same person.
>
> Author : ****. (IP: *** , host.***.net) E-mail :
> ***@yahoo.com URL : http://www.***.***

Comment: Hello
> webmaster, Nice writeup about <enter postname>?. I would
> have to agree with you on this one. I am going to look more into ***l.
> This Friday I have time.
>
> This is a sample. I’m sure that this is a violation of a TOS on your
> server hosting. I’d appreciate some action.

They promised to send it to their Abuse department to look at it. I regret having to do this, but if a spammer doesn’t stop, as a website owner, what alternatives do I have?…

What did you do to combat spam on your blog(s)? I’d love to know. Names, IPs and Web URLs have been changed to spare the blushes of the spammer, …

My first advertising campaign on $100: Raising IB’s profile

How much advertising can you get for a $100? Well, I’m now about to find out. I’ve set a budget of this amount of money, and I’m looking to spend it in a variety of ways to generate much interest.

There are still a number of things that I haven’t tried yet… Here’s what I tried.

  1. Blogmad and Blogsoldiers: all very good, but low quality traffic.
  2. Buzz Contest: Worked well, and it managed to raise my profile on Technorati nicely.
  3. Kiva Contest: Cost $25, but was a big flop… !
  4. I added myself to several directories, but with little effect.
  5. I installed an SEO plugin to reduce the additional Supplemental entries: Worked well.
  6. I’m building a series of articles that will be turned into PDF books to be given away. (Can you guess what it is?)
  7. I have got quite a few blog friends that I contact regularly and who comment here.

But I haven’t written any articles for websites like Article City, and I don’t really frequent too many forums, as I prefer time writing the entries.

So I’m now trying to see what $100 can buy me in traffic and exposure. I’ll be looking for good deals, such as reductions, deductions, special offers and so on to maximize this… Step #1 has already been done, but we’ll see what happens… more news soon.

Quick Linking: PR + Fake PR, a Scam, and WP

Here’s some interesting reading from around the net. Cash Quests writes about how “Google Abandons PageRank

Has Google abandoned their PageRank algorithm that so many of us use to make money online? My prediction is “Yes!”

Andrew Talk writes about a scam that is affecting non-US Residents who want to open a US bank account.

Dr. Michael Roizen Audio explores health and aging and reveals some useful tips on staying healthy. Dr. Roizen is a well-known author.

Given CashQuests claim is not true, issues of Fake Page Rank have affected one blogger. I didn’t know that Page Rank could be faked, but it can.

WordPress 2.3 is coming closer, due to be launched on Monday 24th September. It is looking like a good release, too!