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Angela700

: General questions about link spam A CMS-based site I manage is suffering from a small but ominously growing number of almost certainly bot-emplaced, invisible spam links placed in registered-user-only

@Angela700

Posted in: #Spam

A CMS-based site I manage is suffering from a small but ominously growing number of almost certainly bot-emplaced, invisible spam links placed in registered-user-only shoutboxes and user forums. "Link Spam", yes?

Until recently, I've kept my eyes on narrow tech issues, and I'm having trouble understanding what's going on. I understand that we need to tighten up our registration procedures, but more generally...

Do I understand correctly that our primary interest in combatting link spam on our site is that major search engines reduce or zero the search visibility of sites that contain link spam? Although we're non-commercial, we don't want to be at the bottom of the rankings, or eliminated altogether.

Are the linked-to sites the direct beneficiaries of the spam links, or is there some kind of indirection? What is the likely relationship between the link-spammers and the owners of the (directly or indirectly) linked-to sites? Are the owners of the linked-to sites paying the link-spammers for higher visibility? Are the owners aware that this method is being used?

It is my impression that major search engines are capable these days of detecting that given sites are being promoted by link spam, and that these sites may consequently be reduced in search rank or dropped altogether.

Do these sanctions occur frequently? Is there any potential value in sending notifications to the owners of the linked-to sites that their visibility is at risk?

TIA,

hen3ry

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@Yeniel560

If you use a popular opensource software to power your forum try switching the URL for the registration page most people use defaults for their sites so most spambots look for defaults IE if you installed your site and it uses site.com/register as the registration page change it to site.com/why-not-create-an-account most bots will look for domain/register and if it's not there move on to another site. Additionally you can create levels IE you must make 10 posts before you can post a link.

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@Rambettina238

Your primary interest in combatting link spam should be preventing your shoutbox and forum filling up with junk, and possibly links to malware. Potentially getting penalised by the search engines is a concern too, but probably a secondary one.

These days most link spam (that I see at least) links to forum-type sites, where the spammer can setup links to the actual beneficiaries of the spam. So the goal is to build some page rank to various throwaway spam pages which they can then use to influence page rank on other sites.

It's quite easy for search engines to detect which sites the spam links to, but they can't know for sure that it's the owners of said site creating that spam (either directly or indirectly). If Google penalised any site linked to by link spam, a company could nuke their competitors from the search engines just by submitting some spam on their behalf. This is why the problem is more difficult to solve than it first appears.

For solving your immediate issue, consider:


Adding a CAPTCHA to your sign up form (and/or the shoutbox and forum post forms, at least users who've not posted before)
Using something like Akismet to check submissions


possibly both.

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