Drowning in Spam
Spam is the worst thing ever invented by man. It is completely useless and wastes my time. Nobody wastes my time except me. At least thermonuclear weapons may someday be used to blow up a planet-annihilating meteor heading our way like in Armageddon.
Before Akismet was added to WordPress as a default plugin, I manually moderated all comments. Those were the days when I was lucky to get a single comment for any post. After that Akismet took over and it worked fine for a while. I would still go through all the spam comments to check for false positives but at least Akismet ensured that comments from trusted sources (well, most of them anyway) appeared immediately without having to wait for my moderation.

Staring into the face of evil
Well, recently the increasing spam volume has made it impossible for me to check through them for valid comments. I’ve been getting nearly 1000 spam comments a day and I’m very, very certain that some of your comments have been eaten up by Akismet as false positives in the process.
So I have finally implemented an image verification system for commenting. I hate image verification systems, especially since half the time I can’t tell apart a capital “i” from a lower case “L”. But it’s the lesser of the many evils. An e-mail verification system is even more annoying, Akismet eats comments like Cookie Monster eats cookies and a forced registration policy will just turn lazy people like me off.

The good thing is that if you register an account and remain logged in, you won’t have to enter a security code when commenting. Hurray!
Oh well, hopefully this is enough to stop the spamage. Please tell me if you find any bugs with the verification system.



March 3rd, 2007 at 3:44 am
Yikes, that is a huge amount of spam… can understand the need for the new system… and its really not that much different from the normal experience really…
March 3rd, 2007 at 6:12 am
You do realize that even moderately advanced spambots are going to have the capability to OCR your security image and get through the barrier. I’m curious as to how much actual spam reduction you’re seeing after implementing the CAPTCHA, and whether you’d consider using a more obfuscated image.
March 3rd, 2007 at 9:38 am
How does the system recognize spam from posts?
March 3rd, 2007 at 1:47 pm
Use Spam Karma 2 with Akismet plugin. SK2’s probably the best anti-spam plugin out there yet and it’s done wonders for my blog. I think in all in all, it only failed me about 10-20 times.
Also, I guess I’ll register a User Level 1 account too.
March 3rd, 2007 at 2:25 pm
lets hope it works
March 3rd, 2007 at 4:42 pm
Test. Test. Testing… Testing 1, 2, 3….
Here is a question - are you doing this image verification alongside the the Akismet spam filter? So that you can still catch the manual spams?
March 3rd, 2007 at 7:35 pm
Is this security code thing permanent?? Coz this things always piss me off T.T
March 3rd, 2007 at 11:53 pm
hey!now I’m registered >_
March 4th, 2007 at 1:05 am
well lol
March 4th, 2007 at 1:50 am
Question: What if the spamming is done by a human who can enter the security code anyway?
anyway, 1000 spams per day is scarry….I didn’t even get 100 spams on my old forum…
March 4th, 2007 at 2:03 am
It works ^_^
March 4th, 2007 at 2:31 am
Spam. :D
March 4th, 2007 at 2:37 am
I’m pretty sure that Akismet does something to amplify or exaggerate the quantity of spam it reports. When I was just using MT-Blacklist, I used to get a couple dozen spams trapped per day. When I switched to Wordpress and used WP Hashcash, maybe four spams would leak through per week (Hashcash didn’t report how many were failing). Since installing Akismet a couple months ago, it claims to have stopped around 30,000 spams. Nonsense.
Oh, and CAPTCHAs are horrible. Bad, bad, bad, bad.
March 4th, 2007 at 6:42 am
Ooh… All numbers….
Well, good luck with this. :3
March 4th, 2007 at 10:58 am
That is a lot of spam.