Gennaro Prota wrote:
On Sun, 18 Jun 2006 15:38:45 -0400, David Abrahams <dave@boost-consulting.com> wrote:
Jeff,
I still don't understand why we don't have a simple "register and reply to an email before editing" interface as so many public sites do. This constant battle against wiki spammers hardly seems worth the trouble.
Indeed. And also having the user to enter the text content of a raster image (some Wikimedia wikis do this when links are added to a page, for instance) after any edit.
A captcha test might be a reasonable way to cut down on the robo spammers. But realize, there are lots of spammers out there and there are strategies for defeating captcha as well. And captcha is a problem for the visually impaired and dyslexics. For the most part, spammers currently get one shot at the Boost Wiki and then they are shut out via content banning -- I won't describe the details in public, but it is very effective. Yes, if they change their content then they can respam, but I typically IP ban as well. That said, the "big guys" have lots of bot machines to spam with, so IP banning doesn't do much. Anyway, what I've seen is that after a few tries when the spammers see quick reversions and content banning they give up... Jeff