Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

That's spam. I flagged it, and I destroyed that user. This is related to this other review casethis other review case.

When reviewing, you need to read the entire answer, not just the first few paragraphs. An answer by a brand new user that contains a paragraph like:

If still it does make your database accessible then you need to take help of SQL Repair Tool. It is powerful recovery tool effectively retrieves your new data and scans the damaged database file and repairs it to recover inaccessible objects in MDF and NDF database files.

speaking glowingly about a commercial product, followed by a link to the site containing said commercial product, should throw up a red flag. Even if you don't feel comfortable with a full spam flag, your first instinct on seeing something like that should be to provide moderators with an "other" flag explaining that this looks pretty shady. We can dig into it to see if there is something more going on here.

This is part of a highly coordinated spam ring that has been attacking Stack Overflow, Super User, Server Fault, and other Stack Exchange networks with spam for their various commercial products over the last couple of months. All of these products have something to do with account or data recovery, so they are posting spam answers to questions that have something to do with this.

At first, their answers consisted only of links to their tools. Those were mostly caught in review or otherwise flagged and deleted as spam. They then evolved to leaving longer answers that look like they have sensible text at the beginning (often plagiarized from other SO answers or outside blog posts), with advertising text and links added at the end. These are now getting approved by reviewers most of the time, letting their spam onto the site. As a further evolution of this (seen in that linked Meta postthat linked Meta post), they are now creating throwaway accounts to ask softball (and completely off topic) questions on various sites that they can provide their spam answers to. Almost all of these question / answer pairs are being approved here on SO, although the reviewers at Super User and Server Fault seem to be a little more discriminating in what they let through.

I have personally destroyed maybe 60 of their accounts in the past few weeks, yet they keep coming. I'm hoping that spam-flagged posts like this as audit cases will train reviewers to be a little more suspicious of promotional answers in this style and reduce the rate at which they are being approved. They are not the only spammers finding that padding their spam with a little legitimate-sounding text at the beginning is helping them fool reviewers, and it seems to be growing more prevalent over time.

That's spam. I flagged it, and I destroyed that user. This is related to this other review case.

When reviewing, you need to read the entire answer, not just the first few paragraphs. An answer by a brand new user that contains a paragraph like:

If still it does make your database accessible then you need to take help of SQL Repair Tool. It is powerful recovery tool effectively retrieves your new data and scans the damaged database file and repairs it to recover inaccessible objects in MDF and NDF database files.

speaking glowingly about a commercial product, followed by a link to the site containing said commercial product, should throw up a red flag. Even if you don't feel comfortable with a full spam flag, your first instinct on seeing something like that should be to provide moderators with an "other" flag explaining that this looks pretty shady. We can dig into it to see if there is something more going on here.

This is part of a highly coordinated spam ring that has been attacking Stack Overflow, Super User, Server Fault, and other Stack Exchange networks with spam for their various commercial products over the last couple of months. All of these products have something to do with account or data recovery, so they are posting spam answers to questions that have something to do with this.

At first, their answers consisted only of links to their tools. Those were mostly caught in review or otherwise flagged and deleted as spam. They then evolved to leaving longer answers that look like they have sensible text at the beginning (often plagiarized from other SO answers or outside blog posts), with advertising text and links added at the end. These are now getting approved by reviewers most of the time, letting their spam onto the site. As a further evolution of this (seen in that linked Meta post), they are now creating throwaway accounts to ask softball (and completely off topic) questions on various sites that they can provide their spam answers to. Almost all of these question / answer pairs are being approved here on SO, although the reviewers at Super User and Server Fault seem to be a little more discriminating in what they let through.

I have personally destroyed maybe 60 of their accounts in the past few weeks, yet they keep coming. I'm hoping that spam-flagged posts like this as audit cases will train reviewers to be a little more suspicious of promotional answers in this style and reduce the rate at which they are being approved. They are not the only spammers finding that padding their spam with a little legitimate-sounding text at the beginning is helping them fool reviewers, and it seems to be growing more prevalent over time.

That's spam. I flagged it, and I destroyed that user. This is related to this other review case.

When reviewing, you need to read the entire answer, not just the first few paragraphs. An answer by a brand new user that contains a paragraph like:

If still it does make your database accessible then you need to take help of SQL Repair Tool. It is powerful recovery tool effectively retrieves your new data and scans the damaged database file and repairs it to recover inaccessible objects in MDF and NDF database files.

speaking glowingly about a commercial product, followed by a link to the site containing said commercial product, should throw up a red flag. Even if you don't feel comfortable with a full spam flag, your first instinct on seeing something like that should be to provide moderators with an "other" flag explaining that this looks pretty shady. We can dig into it to see if there is something more going on here.

This is part of a highly coordinated spam ring that has been attacking Stack Overflow, Super User, Server Fault, and other Stack Exchange networks with spam for their various commercial products over the last couple of months. All of these products have something to do with account or data recovery, so they are posting spam answers to questions that have something to do with this.

At first, their answers consisted only of links to their tools. Those were mostly caught in review or otherwise flagged and deleted as spam. They then evolved to leaving longer answers that look like they have sensible text at the beginning (often plagiarized from other SO answers or outside blog posts), with advertising text and links added at the end. These are now getting approved by reviewers most of the time, letting their spam onto the site. As a further evolution of this (seen in that linked Meta post), they are now creating throwaway accounts to ask softball (and completely off topic) questions on various sites that they can provide their spam answers to. Almost all of these question / answer pairs are being approved here on SO, although the reviewers at Super User and Server Fault seem to be a little more discriminating in what they let through.

I have personally destroyed maybe 60 of their accounts in the past few weeks, yet they keep coming. I'm hoping that spam-flagged posts like this as audit cases will train reviewers to be a little more suspicious of promotional answers in this style and reduce the rate at which they are being approved. They are not the only spammers finding that padding their spam with a little legitimate-sounding text at the beginning is helping them fool reviewers, and it seems to be growing more prevalent over time.

Source Link
Brad Larson Mod
  • 170.3k
  • 114
  • 634
  • 562

That's spam. I flagged it, and I destroyed that user. This is related to this other review case.

When reviewing, you need to read the entire answer, not just the first few paragraphs. An answer by a brand new user that contains a paragraph like:

If still it does make your database accessible then you need to take help of SQL Repair Tool. It is powerful recovery tool effectively retrieves your new data and scans the damaged database file and repairs it to recover inaccessible objects in MDF and NDF database files.

speaking glowingly about a commercial product, followed by a link to the site containing said commercial product, should throw up a red flag. Even if you don't feel comfortable with a full spam flag, your first instinct on seeing something like that should be to provide moderators with an "other" flag explaining that this looks pretty shady. We can dig into it to see if there is something more going on here.

This is part of a highly coordinated spam ring that has been attacking Stack Overflow, Super User, Server Fault, and other Stack Exchange networks with spam for their various commercial products over the last couple of months. All of these products have something to do with account or data recovery, so they are posting spam answers to questions that have something to do with this.

At first, their answers consisted only of links to their tools. Those were mostly caught in review or otherwise flagged and deleted as spam. They then evolved to leaving longer answers that look like they have sensible text at the beginning (often plagiarized from other SO answers or outside blog posts), with advertising text and links added at the end. These are now getting approved by reviewers most of the time, letting their spam onto the site. As a further evolution of this (seen in that linked Meta post), they are now creating throwaway accounts to ask softball (and completely off topic) questions on various sites that they can provide their spam answers to. Almost all of these question / answer pairs are being approved here on SO, although the reviewers at Super User and Server Fault seem to be a little more discriminating in what they let through.

I have personally destroyed maybe 60 of their accounts in the past few weeks, yet they keep coming. I'm hoping that spam-flagged posts like this as audit cases will train reviewers to be a little more suspicious of promotional answers in this style and reduce the rate at which they are being approved. They are not the only spammers finding that padding their spam with a little legitimate-sounding text at the beginning is helping them fool reviewers, and it seems to be growing more prevalent over time.