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Not sure if anyone else got this, but I found the following in my mailbox:

Hi, Peter!

My name is [removed], and I’m Sales & Marketing Manager in Ispirer Systems. I found your contacts on stackoverflow.com. We are impressed with your activity on this website. Our company would appreciate if you could help us to promote our tool and services on it.

We would be grateful if you could post a few answers mentioning our company’s name, tool or services. Can this collaboration be interesting to you? Under what conditions would you agree to do this?

I look forward to your reply.

Note: I noticed that the mail address used was lifted from my website, and is different from the one I used at SO, so I have no reason to believe that those details got compromised in any way.

I'm not interested in adding spam to the site, but hopefully someone could alert the powers that be about these kind of schemes being pulled.

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    Note that if you had turned this around and asked a question about "Which companies are trying to persuade users to promote their products" and named Ispirer Systems in an answer, they "would be grateful". I guess for some companies there's no such thing as bad publicity (or else Meta posts like this are better publicity than what they conventionally receive).
    – Ben Voigt
    Oct 20, 2014 at 17:52
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    It's like soliciting product placement. "I can answer this, but first, I need some coca cola to go with my little debbie's oatmeal pie. (BTW. dont you hate when the cream filling gets on the genuine leather of your new 2014 Lexus xxxx? I do! It takes nearly half a bottle of Armour Leather Care(TM) to clean it off.) So, you asked about Integers..." Oct 20, 2014 at 17:54
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    It didn't take me more than 10 seconds to find your address, phone number and email. Maybe you shouldn't make it that easy. Oct 20, 2014 at 18:00
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    On a side-note, this post is now on the first page of search results for Inspirer Systems ... All attention is good attention? :)
    – Bart
    Oct 20, 2014 at 18:02
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    @HansPassant - I run a business. Hiding my details would not make much sense. The mail I received clearly references SO. I'm not worried about being contacted, I'm more concerned that apparently spammers are trying to have their wares peddled by approaching SO users through their profiles.
    – SchmitzIT
    Oct 20, 2014 at 18:02
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    Boy, these winners sure are persistent. They must have started this after they realized the anti-spam system was blocking them from posting more from their location. We've been destroying dozens of their accounts over the years, and the last round should have outright blocked them for a while.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Oct 20, 2014 at 18:12
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    [sends email, motivates meta post that drives traffic to website] -- Mission accomplished. Oct 20, 2014 at 18:26
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    Wish someone would give them my email so I could get some of that sweet, sweet Ispirer cash. Love it. Just like I love the Ispirer FizgigWidget! I use it every day to hurf all the durfs in my codebases. Terrific! Great job.
    – user1228
    Oct 20, 2014 at 19:04
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    How much are you earning from this Meta post? Confess! (; Oct 20, 2014 at 19:55
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    @FranciscoPresencia quickmeme.com/img/5f/…
    – SchmitzIT
    Oct 20, 2014 at 20:10
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    There's still a few links using ispirer as documentation which should be fixed up to point to official sources instead.
    – Ben Voigt
    Oct 20, 2014 at 21:27
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    If you google for "Ispirer Systems", this meta post is on the first page. Well done everyone!
    – Mysticial
    Oct 20, 2014 at 22:52
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    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about partially accomplishing the mission of a spammer. Oct 21, 2014 at 7:38
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    @lpapp: it became our problem when they tried to use Stack Overflow to lie to their potential customers. Stack Overflow is built on quality and trust, and lies like these undermine both quality and trust.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Oct 21, 2014 at 17:06

1 Answer 1

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There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

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    One of the (many) awesome things about Stack Overflow is just how naturally resistant to spam the platform has been, in spite of the popularity. No doubt a lot of that has been due to work by dev team, but it's still nice to have such a high confidence that a random post will be ham signal instead of spam noise. Oct 21, 2014 at 16:55
  • @Tim Post There are some questions on SO like this one stackoverflow.com/questions/9392084/…, where the user just searches for a tool to use. As you can see other tools are mentioned there. However, according to the rules provided by you a company is not allowed to write about its tools or services here. Therefore it seems like compliance with the rules in this case does harm to the questions’ content and meaning. What is then a good and allowed answer to questions like this? Oct 23, 2014 at 7:55
  • And to clarify the situation for those who first met our company name in this topic: We have never posted millions of answers. As far as we know the total amount of answers mentioning our company has never exceeded a few dozen (and all of them were in relevant topics). Oct 23, 2014 at 7:56
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    @IspirerSQLWays You've personally contacted Stack Overflow users and asked the to advertise your product here. That's one. Second, questions seeking for tools are off-topic on Stack Overflow. Third, it's perfectly fine to post an answer containing your product if and only if: You specifically say that it is your product, and you are affiliated with it, and it provides real value to the answer, and you aren't just forcing your product on the answer. Look at your answer below. It didn't accumulate that many downvotes for nothing. I suggest you take this and think well where and how you want to ad. Oct 23, 2014 at 10:41

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