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

A while ago, I actually argued against something like thisargued against something like this, but the reasons I gave there no longer apply. I had wanted these accounts to stick around long enough for us to use them to uncover other spammers at their IP address.

We now have other ways of doing this that don't require these accounts to hang around. Spammers are also less likely to come from the same location with relatively recent modifications to the intelligent spam-blocking system. There isn't as much of a need to keep them around for moderators to look at.

When moderators encounter accounts that only have one or two pure spam posts to their name, we almost always destroy them after we remove the spam posts. The ones that aren't deleted are typically the accounts that get posts destroyed by 6 community spam flags before we even notice them. That tends to happen when we're lightest on active moderators (night in the U.S.), so I'll tend to search back for these in the morning.

Keeping the accounts around generally doesn't do much, as they tend to be hard-blocked from posting after their initial post is destroyed as spam, but I've occasionally seen spammers revisit old accounts to use them to work around First Posts review. Most spammers tend to move on to new throwaway accounts at different locations once each has been spam-flagged.

As CRABOLO points out, many accounts like this are automatically deleted after six months.

Looking at things now, I think it makes sense to automatically delete an account immediately if the only post or posts they have made are all destroyed by either 6 community spam flags or 1 hard moderator spam flag. That would save us a little time, and maybe a little follow-on spam. This automatic deletion would not apply to an account that had any posts that were not destroyed in this manner, so as to avoid possibly removing any accounts that had any value or to avoid malicious coordination of spam flags.

A while ago, I actually argued against something like this, but the reasons I gave there no longer apply. I had wanted these accounts to stick around long enough for us to use them to uncover other spammers at their IP address.

We now have other ways of doing this that don't require these accounts to hang around. Spammers are also less likely to come from the same location with relatively recent modifications to the intelligent spam-blocking system. There isn't as much of a need to keep them around for moderators to look at.

When moderators encounter accounts that only have one or two pure spam posts to their name, we almost always destroy them after we remove the spam posts. The ones that aren't deleted are typically the accounts that get posts destroyed by 6 community spam flags before we even notice them. That tends to happen when we're lightest on active moderators (night in the U.S.), so I'll tend to search back for these in the morning.

Keeping the accounts around generally doesn't do much, as they tend to be hard-blocked from posting after their initial post is destroyed as spam, but I've occasionally seen spammers revisit old accounts to use them to work around First Posts review. Most spammers tend to move on to new throwaway accounts at different locations once each has been spam-flagged.

As CRABOLO points out, many accounts like this are automatically deleted after six months.

Looking at things now, I think it makes sense to automatically delete an account immediately if the only post or posts they have made are all destroyed by either 6 community spam flags or 1 hard moderator spam flag. That would save us a little time, and maybe a little follow-on spam. This automatic deletion would not apply to an account that had any posts that were not destroyed in this manner, so as to avoid possibly removing any accounts that had any value or to avoid malicious coordination of spam flags.

A while ago, I actually argued against something like this, but the reasons I gave there no longer apply. I had wanted these accounts to stick around long enough for us to use them to uncover other spammers at their IP address.

We now have other ways of doing this that don't require these accounts to hang around. Spammers are also less likely to come from the same location with relatively recent modifications to the intelligent spam-blocking system. There isn't as much of a need to keep them around for moderators to look at.

When moderators encounter accounts that only have one or two pure spam posts to their name, we almost always destroy them after we remove the spam posts. The ones that aren't deleted are typically the accounts that get posts destroyed by 6 community spam flags before we even notice them. That tends to happen when we're lightest on active moderators (night in the U.S.), so I'll tend to search back for these in the morning.

Keeping the accounts around generally doesn't do much, as they tend to be hard-blocked from posting after their initial post is destroyed as spam, but I've occasionally seen spammers revisit old accounts to use them to work around First Posts review. Most spammers tend to move on to new throwaway accounts at different locations once each has been spam-flagged.

As CRABOLO points out, many accounts like this are automatically deleted after six months.

Looking at things now, I think it makes sense to automatically delete an account immediately if the only post or posts they have made are all destroyed by either 6 community spam flags or 1 hard moderator spam flag. That would save us a little time, and maybe a little follow-on spam. This automatic deletion would not apply to an account that had any posts that were not destroyed in this manner, so as to avoid possibly removing any accounts that had any value or to avoid malicious coordination of spam flags.

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

A while ago, I actually argued against something like this, but the reasons I gave there no longer apply. I had wanted these accounts to stick around long enough for us to use them to uncover other spammers at their IP address.

We now have other ways of doing this that don't require these accounts to hang around. Spammers are also less likely to come from the same location with relatively recent modifications to the intelligent spam-blocking system. There isn't as much of a need to keep them around for moderators to look at.

When moderators encounter accounts that only have one or two pure spam posts to their name, we almost always destroy them after we remove the spam posts. The ones that aren't deleted are typically the accounts that get posts destroyed by 6 community spam flags before we even notice them. That tends to happen when we're lightest on active moderators (night in the U.S.), so I'll tend to search back for these in the morning.

Keeping the accounts around generally doesn't do much, as they tend to be hard-blocked from posting after their initial post is destroyed as spam, but I've occasionally seen spammers revisit old accounts to use them to work around First Posts review. Most spammers tend to move on to new throwaway accounts at different locations once each has been spam-flagged.

As CRABOLO points out, many accounts like this are automatically deleted after six months.

Looking at things now, I think it makes sense to automatically delete an account immediately if the only post or posts they have made are all destroyed by either 6 community spam flags or 1 hard moderator spam flag. That would save us a little time, and maybe a little follow-on spam. This automatic deletion would not apply to an account that had any posts that were not destroyed in this manner, so as to avoid possibly removing any accounts that had any value or to avoid malicious coordination of spam flags.