I noticed that the posts of the recent spam surge on AskUbuntu were all edited by community members into something like

EDITED - REMOVED SPAM ANSWER

or similar.

While I understand why the users have done this and I too don't want to leave the spam content visible for longer than absolutely necessary, it made flagging more time consuming for me.

I had to check the revision for every of those possible spam posts to check if it is actually spam, instead of being able to flag directly from the review site. Spam flags carry a serious penalty, I'm not willing to add my spam flag without checking that it's really spam.

I see the benefit of editing spam, but it also causes some more effort for the later flaggers. Should we as a general policy edit out the content of spam posts, or should we deal with them solely by flagging?

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2 Answers

up vote 42 down vote accepted

This was recently brought up at the Super User Meta also.

Why shouldn't we edit spam posts?:

  • Usually spam is easy to spot, and gets removed very fast. 6 spam flags deletes the post.
  • Moderators can easily see the links posted by spammers, and can blacklist sites once it is posted enough.
  • Spam doesn't usually stay there long enough for it to be cached by search engines or to have random users stumble upon it.
  • As nhinkle says, most links do not even need to be removed, unless there are linking to porn, viruses, or disturbing content.

In short, the community is usually too fast for spammers, so by the time anything can happen out of it, it's already gone.

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6 spam flags? Is that the limit on every site, because it's highly unlikely to be reached on smaller sites in a timely manner. – htorque Oct 22 '11 at 13:58
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@htorque it's part of SE I believe. On smaller sites you'd more heavily rely on moderators, or use chat to ask for help from others – Simon Sheehan Oct 22 '11 at 14:04
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Spam doesn't usually stay there long enough for it to be cached by search engines or to have random users stumble upon it. => Considering that the users that have 2,000 reputation are considerably less than 1% of all the visitors, I'm not sure your statement is true. – Andreas Bonini Oct 22 '11 at 16:22
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@Koper You only need 6 users with 15+ reputation to flag the spam into oblivion. On many SE 2.0 site you often won't achieve that and need a moderator, but the older sites have a decent chance of deleting spam without needing a moderator. – Mad Scientist Oct 22 '11 at 18:19
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@Fabian Also why i suggested using chat - I'm sure users from other sites would happily come help out – Simon Sheehan Oct 22 '11 at 18:20
Moderators can't blacklist links. – badp's kitten Jan 21 '12 at 0:05
@badp They can request it to be done by a team member though – Simon Sheehan Jan 21 '12 at 0:35
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@SimonSheehan sure, but talking to Rebecca isn't precisely a moderator power :) – badp's kitten Jan 21 '12 at 1:39

I think editing like this is counter-productive because:

  1. It makes it harder to manually spot patterns of spam through searching/memory
  2. It presumably makes automated spam handling harder

The automatic downvotes from flagging spam seem to be sufficient to hide most posts suitably far down the answer list until they're deleted.

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