I was recently applying my limited SQL skills to poke through a list of users with many answers, all of which exceed some minimum score. While this query highlights some really awesome contributors (50 answers, all with score 3+!), I also identified what I suspect to be a spam ring. Normally I would raise a custom moderator flag, but (in the spirit of a recent meta post) since the potential ring is quite extensive and I've already done a lot of digging, I wouldn't be able to capture all the details in a flag message, so I'm posting the details on meta for community and moderator review.
The first product of concern is a (non-free) service to connect to dedicated Mac virtual machines. The following users promoted this service in one or more answers (in all cases upvoted to 3 or higher at the time of writing this post, with no mention of affiliation to the products):
- Rachel Henderson: Answer 1 (Alex Stevens has a 7 score comment agreeing) ; Answer 2 (Steven Holt has a 3 score comment agreeing) ; Answer 3 (Alex Stevens has a 3 score comment agreeing) ; Answer 4 (mentions alternatives but specifically promotes the product of concern; Art A. and Steven Holt have 3+ scored comments agreeing)
- Alex Stevens: Answer 1 ; Answer 2 ; Answer 3 ; Answer 4
- Steven Holt: Answer 1
- Art A.: Answer 1
The other three products of concern are all (non-free) debuggers (for JavaScript, VBScript, and ASP Classic). The following users promoted one of these three products in one or more answers (in all cases upvoted to 3 or higher at the time of writing this post, with no mention of affiliation to the products):
- Rachel Henderson: Answer 1 ; Answer 2 ; Answer 3
- Alex Stevens: Answer 1 ; Answer 2 ; Answer 3 (also recommends free alternative) ; Answer 4 (also recommends free alternative) ; Answer 5 ; Answer 6 (also recommends alternative)
- Steven Holt: Answer 1 ; Answer 2 (Art A. has a 3 score comment agreeing) ; Answer 3 ; Answer 4 ; Answer 5
- Art A.: Answer 1 (mentions free alternative) ; Answer 2 (mentions alternative)
- Art Aroustamoff: Answer 1 (mentions free alternatives; Alex Stevens has 4 score comment agreeing) ; Answer 2
- Paul Stanton: Answer 1
- Angelo Di Varro: Answer 1 (Art A. has a 3 score comment agreeing)
For all seven users I have listed, at least half of their answers promote the four products of concern. There's additional evidence linking the four products -- the three debuggers share the same website and all four websites have an auto-playing video that seems to me to be the same person. There's also some additional evidence linking some of the users -- Art A. and Art Aroustamoff have similar usernames, and non-promotional answers (all 3+ scored when I wrote this post) by Alex Stevens, by Steven Holt, and by Art A. seem virtually identical.
To me, this all seemed quite suspicious, but it's worth noting that one of the users explicitly denied being a developer for one of the debuggers of concern. As a result, I wanted to know if moderators could further investigate to determine whether or not this is a spam ring and, if it is, to take appropriate measures. I think it would be important to remove the indicated answers if they are found to be spam, especially because some are on high-volume questions -- in total the associated questions have more than 1.4 million views.