CommentLuv and Spammers Redux

After my CommentLuv and Spammers post, I figured I was done with the topic. After all, I had figured out the spammers’ latest tactic and the CommentLuv authors had figured out a workaround. Alls well that ends well, right? Well, not quite. Turns out there’s a wrinkle to this story.

I should have seen this coming, to be honest. My initial spammer, who called himself “Bruce”, actually posted two comments. One had the hijacked CommentLuv link but the other didn’t. I felt this was odd but didn’t look into it. Then, a few days ago, I was looking through my spam posts, since valid comments sometimes get mistakenly marked as spam, and I found what looked like just another CommentLuv-hijacked spam comment. It was on my Aloha Friday: Happy B-Day JSL & Your Favorite Winnie the Pooh Character post.

The first interesting thing was that this spammer hijacked B’s CommentLuv link. At first, I chuckled over this as I know for a fact that B’s real name isn’t “Emily” (the spammer’s supposed name). As I was about to delete it, I stopped, though. Emily had written: “Eeyore since he is adorable in his positively pessimistic mannerisms ;)” Now that seemed awfully familiar. Almost like something B would write. So I looked back at B’s comment on my post and sure enough, it was the same. Emily had not just stolen B’s CommentLuv, she had stolen B’s entire comment! The CommentLuv link was just going along for the ride. (As an example of irony, a spammer named “Steve” stole the entire comment that Andy, the CommentLuv developer, left on my CommentLuv and Spammers post.) I looked back at Bruce’s previous comments (which I had kept in my Spam queue). Sure enough, they were lifted from other, real commenters.

So it looks like the spammers’ new method isn’t “lift the CommentLuv links”, but rather “pull some random comment from a post and use its text for your own comment.” The hope here (for the spammer) is that the author will see the text as being relevent to their post (which it is being from a real comment and all) and let the spam post through, thus allowing a link to the spammer’s website.

The good news is that Akismet seems able to catch these and send them into the Spam queue. All that bloggers need do is exercise a little caution when approving comments. Keep an eye out for spammers posing as legitimate commenters and you should be fine.

CommentLuv and Spammers

I’m a big fan of CommentLuv. It lets me reward my commenters with links back to their blogs. It also introduces me to blogs that I might not have otherwise stopped by (either due to a comment on my blog or a CommentLuv-enabled comment on someone else’s blog).

Not too long ago, B brought an issue to my attention. Apparently, a spammer tried to post to her blog. Akismet caught the spammer, but what worried her was the CommentLuv link. Despite filling out his URL, CommentLuv was showing a different, legitimate blogger’s CommentLuv link. We wondered how exactly he was able to pull this off and worried that it might mean the beginning of spammers abusing CommentLuv. A short while later, this same spammer tried to spam my blog with the same tactic. Again, Akismet caught it. Instead of deleting the spam like I usually do, however, I decided to hold onto it to examine it.

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Aloha Friday: Revealing Your Blog To Family

JSL’s third birthday is coming up. Family will be gathered and celebrating will be done. So why am I nervous? Well, we’ve never told my family that we blog. This isn’t to say that we’ve been actively keeping our blogging activities from family. It’s just that our blog lives and real lives were separate for the longest time. However, recently, B decided to “come out of her bloggy shell.” As such, our real lives are seeping into our blog lives and vice versa.

Meanwhile, NHL is 6 years old. As we all know, six year olds don’t exactly have the greatest track record for secrets. Add in an up and coming secret-revealer (aka JSL) and it’s only a matter of time before one of them blabs.

My Aloha Friday question for this week is: Is it time to reveal our blogging activities to our family? Should we control this reveal rather than it come as a surprise uttered by a child? If you’ve revealed your blog to family before, how did you do it?


Thanks to Kailani at An Island Life for starting this fun for Friday. Please be sure to head over to her blog to say hello and sign the MckLinky there if you are participating.

Aloha Friday by Kailani at An Island Life

Aloha #37

Blogging Limitations

Everybody has limits on what they talk about to other people and that goes for blogging as well. Of course, these limits are dependent on who you are talking to. A close personal friend might lend a supportive ear during a couple’s fight, but the spouse is unlikely to post the gory details on their blog for all the world the read. Limits are also different based on people. Some people will post tons of photos of their children, others won’t post a single shot. Some will reveal their real names and others like being anonymous.

Here at TechyDad.com, I tend to avoid some personal issues and try to keep my blog rated PG. This wasn’t a concious choice, it’s just what I think is appropriate. Two things happened recently, however, that got me thinking about Blogging Limitations.

The first was a review opportunity. I saw a review by CutestKidEver concerning a massage kit from Eden Fantasys. In case you don’t know, Eden Fantasys sells (among other things) certain “gadgets” to help make you and/or your significant other “happy.” I commented to CutestKidEver how it might be a challenge to review some of their products on my blog. After all, I don’t use graphic terminology here so I’d have to describe the product’s performance via euphemism (e.g. “gadgets” and “happy” above). I wasn’t sure I was up for the job, but Eden Fantasys thought I was. I took it as a challenge. Look for my first review within a month. (I’m starting with a tamer item at first which should help.)

The next thing was a post that I wrote out. I had finished up and was quite proud of my literary accomplishment. I showed it to B and she immediately said “No.” It seems my idea of Blogging Limitations differed from hers and she didn’t want me posting on that subject or at least not in as much detail as I went into. (This was a mundane topic, nothing X-rated.) I was heart broken that my prose wouldn’t see the light of day (and did an awful job of hiding it), but I respected her decision. After all, I don’t want to make her uncomfortable with my blog posts.

What topics do you avoid talking about on your blog? What tends to be out of limits for you?

It’s time for a Revolution!

Grab the torches and pitchforks… It’s time for a revolution!  Ok, maybe not *that* kind of revolution.  (You in the back, please extinguish that torch.)  This is a virtual revolution.

For a long time, dads were regarded as parenting jokes.  Who’s the guy who’s clueless about everything kid related?  Who wouldn’t know what to do with a stinky baby and a fresh diaper?  Who would scratch his head over anything cooking related that didn’t involve a microwave, grill or ordering out?  Yup, that’s dad!  Who’s the guy who drives mom crazy by lounging on the couch in his underpants watching football and drinking beer while she takes care of everything around the house?  Dad!  Who couldn’t care less about the fact that the kids are climbing on the bookshelf so long as they don’t knock it over until the commercial break?  (All together now…) DAD! » Read more

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