Spam is pesky because there is often a food chain between the actual spam and the ultimate beneficiary. Often, the money trail is hard or even impossible to follow. The following attempts to draft up a hierarchy from low-hanging to possibly impossible-to-reach fruit.
TL;DR: My conclusion is to go after the web site hoster. This is a resource which they are paying for each month, and (to the extent that they ever have returning customers) one which they probably want to keep. Email accounts, open proxies, and zombie computers are an expendable, consumable resource which they fully expect to lose and replenish on a regular basis.
Also, before we proceed, never ever expose yourself to the actual spammer - they will often regard even negative feedback as a sign that their campaign is working; and if they don't, they might have a nasty desire to retaliate.
As the underground economy develops, we are seeing an increasing specialization, which serves two purposes. On the one hand, outsourcing parts of your operation is simply good economy on the part of the shady marketer. On the other, using intermediaries offers you plausible deniability - up the food chain, at every stage, you will find operators saying "yes, we hired those guys, but they assured us they would not stoop to spamming". A third benefit is that if one piece of the downstream gets taken down or just decides to quit, it can quickly be replaced.
At the top of the food chain, you have the operation with a product or service to market. They will sometimes outsource the marketing to a spam specialist, who in turn might use a (possibly legitimate) mailing list management software or service, email address database, and/or email delivery service. Even if they don't, they might well pretend to be doing this, again to achieve plausible deniability.
(Because of spam, email in this day and age is error-prone and murky. There used to be a time when you could be sure that an email message was either delivered to a mailbox, or you would receive a bounce message indicating an error. Not so any longer. Spammers have poisoned every well, and the email industry has sometimes responded with countermeasures which did not work out so spectacularly. This created the opportunity for a completely new service, the email deliverability experts.)
Web site / blog / forum spam is governed by the same economics as email spam; though some details will differ, the general picture is similar. You might have a crawler bot which brings up new sites or pages to post spam to, and a script or even a network of human users who post the individual spam messages, but the general game play looks the same - smack one, and another will pop up faster than you can say "whack a mole".
With this background out of the way, my recommendation follows.
If the spam has a link to a web site, complain to the network owner.
For example, searching Metasmoke for online
+ training
currently brings up the following incidents from the last week:
(The domain names link to a MetaSmoke search for the domain name itself; not all of them use "online training" in the title, though that seems to be quite predominant at the moment.)
As of right now, sunitlabs.com
, suryaonlinetraining.com
, and 123trainings.com
all resolve to 23.229.226.4. Reverse DNS identifies this as belonging to secureserver.net
, which (if I am reading this correctly) is Go Daddy. whois
for all three domains seems to bear this out. Googling for the phone number brings up some additional web sites which appear to be part of the same operation, as well as a number of warnings and spam complaints, which (it would seem) ought to be enough to persuade their ISP to take complaints seriously.
There is an abuse contact form at https://supportcenter.godaddy.com/abusereport where you can click the "spam" option and select the radio button "I wish to report unsolicited comments on a forum, blog or in an instant message". They are asking for your name and your email address in the next step of the form. They require a screen shot; I gave them the Metasmoke query results which I link above, and the URL of this post.
If you could find the IP address of the client which posted the spam to Stack Overflow, you could complain to the ISP who administers that part of IP space. But more often than not, this doesn't get you anywhere - ISPs are much too busy to police individual users, who are possibly hopping from one IP address to another via mobile roaming etc. Frequently, the IP address turns out to be a member of a zombie network - an innocent broadband customer has had their computer hijacked by malware, and co-opted into a secret spam and malware distribution network while the owner continues to use (what is left to them of) their computer for legitimate work. And anyway, the IP address of another user is not visible to us mortal users.