Re: Beneficial site spamming framework

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On 13-10-2012 01:55, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Fri, 2012-10-12 at 01:59 +0200, Maciek Sokolewicz wrote:

On 11-10-2012 22:18, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
I've been getting spam comments on my personal blog (runs on
self-written PHP blog software). I'd like to test some methods I've
devised to prevent or block it. Does anyone know of a very
lightweight
framework for simulating an automated "form fill-out" on a site?
Something where you could just add some code to designate the site
for
the "attack" and then what fields you wanted to send?

This should be a relatively simple task for PHP and curl, but I'm not
really familiar with the headers and that part of the HTTP
conversation.
Yes, I know this is a risky question for a public list. Feel free to
contact me privately if you think the answer shouldn't be in the
archives of a public list. Likewise, if you can point me to a source
of
quickly absorbable research on the subject. I frankly don't know how
I'd
google such a thing.

Paul

--
Paul M. Foster
http://noferblatz.com
http://quillandmouse.com

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To avoid having to create your own anti-spam system, I recommend Akismet, which weights posts allowing you to set a rejection threshold. The great thing is that it is constantly improving over time.

I've recently looked into the more modern captcha systems. I personally
can't stand the "standard" captcha of having to decipher what characters
are present on a distorted image. The last few years I've noticed that
more and more often I can't decipher what an image is supposed to say.
And after a few tries of unsuccesful replying what the image says, I
just give up. This seems to be a reverse-Turing-test by now. Computers
being able to guess better than humans.

Anyway, I wrote my own captcha system. I've noticed that simple things
like "what is the capital of the USA?" and then being able to choose
"Hong-Kong, Washington or Rome" or a question like "Is water wet or
dry?" work very very well. Just make up a bunch of these, and then
randomly pick one to have people answer on your blog. It completely
stopped registration spam on my forum. Simply because bots don't
understand such questions.

- Tul


There's a slight irony that this message got posted to the list 5 times,
given the topic :p

Haha, good point. I forgot to remove half of the reply-to addresses from the message (thus sending it to both the newsgroup and the mailinglist); still that should send it only twice, not 5 times(??). Oh well... :)

- Tul

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