Admin: Comment and Pingback Limits
March 31st, 2005I’ve been spending a lot of time deleting comment and pingback spam from my two blogs (most of it from the moderation queue). My first impulse was to ban comments and pingbacks completely — after all, some blogs seem to do fine without them, and most people technically-oriented enough to read Quoderat already have their own blogs that they can use to comment on mine.
After some thought, however, I’ve decided on a compromise — I’m going to leave postings from the current and previous month open for comments, but close any older ones. That should eliminate a lot of the spam, but still allow discussion on recent postings. I might tighten that up a bit more, but I’ll give it a chance, first.
How is everyone else dealing with comment/pingback/traceback spam? My blog isn’t all that popular — it must be much worse for blogs with high rankings.
March 31st, 2005 at 01:58:43
It must be a consequence of the fact that I don’t use any “standard” blogging software, but I get almost no spam. Which is good because my tolerance threshold for
spam is pretty low these days.
March 31st, 2005 at 04:30:55
I upgraded to WordPress 1.5 and use the SpamKarma plugin. That eats most of the spam I get without my even seeing it. I haven’t seen any false positives either.
March 31st, 2005 at 07:45:20
If you can find a plugin to do it, make previewing a comment at least once before submission required. Comment spam bots will have a hard time getting past it.
March 31st, 2005 at 08:00:52
With WP 1.5 I set it so that the first time any email address is used to post, it must undergo moderation. This has killed nearly all spam.
May 14th, 2005 at 08:06:44
[...] installed the Spam Karma plugin, as recommended by Lauren Wood in a comment to my previous whining posting about comment spam. With luck, leg [...]