Does the serial voting script need retuning to keep up with the times?
I mentioned this in passing a few months back, but we've been collecting data on this for a few years now.
The technique used by the active scripts is pretty similar to the one you devised, albeit with much more conservative thresholds. The one used by the silent data-collection system is much more sensitive... But more importantly, it doesn't forget: I can go back three years and pick out a vote that was flagged as easily as I can look up votes from yesterday.
Which creates both an opportunity and a quandary:
The big problem with the active scripts is that a sufficiently-motivated voter can readily learn to work around them: keep trying different voting patterns until their votes stop getting invalidated. The scripts then become ineffective... But that history remains, and chances are the silent system keeps tracking suspicious votes long after the active script gave up.
There are a LOT of suspicious votes. 5-6% of all votes are flagged. Most of these are not particularly problematic; that time you downvoted two answers from the same person back-to-back could easily have been warranted. If we went & invalidated all of them... Well, I did that a while back on a smaller site - it didn't go too badly, but convinced me to back to work on reducing false-positives.
There's also a third system... This is the one that brings specific users to the attention of moderators due to outlandishly unusual voting patterns. It uses a similar technique to the first system (and your script), but is much less conservative than both (however, it limits itself to the most blatant offenders). The data collected by the second, silent system is currently being used to reduce false-positives in the third system.
And then there's a fourth... Well, ok, it's not really a system so much as it is a collection of tools that I and the Cogro Ops team use when moderators escalate certain forms of fraud to the team. It's essentially everything I've learned about this in the past 5 years, codified in SQL and JavaScript. It's crazy-thorough, able to identify fraudulent votes that all of the other systems miss, and rarely has false-positives... It's also crazy-slow, because SQL sucks at doing things like traversing undirected graphs (and I suck at writing SQL).
Modern times
Now, the obvious next move here is to take the data from that second system, establish some thresholds, and start automatically invalidating votes much more aggressively. The problem with doing that is two-fold: there'd be a lot more complaints about false-positives and it would immediately teach dedicated fraudsters how to avoid that system as well - thus making the third system less effective.
The more effective route is probably to automate what we're doing today: wait for the number of suspicious votes between users (as detected by the second system) to reach a critical level, then - let's say weekly or even monthly - invalidate them all at once. This would reduce false-positives and make it prohibitively time-consuming to work around.
However... There's another concern: if we make it too difficult to figure out what you're doing wrong, we also make it too difficult to stop doing it entirely. Right now, nearly half of all users who get votes invalidated by the automated systems don't cause further voting anomalies while still remaining active on the site.
Interpersonal skills
Tim Post came up with a theory years ago that a sizable number of the folks engaging in this are simply trying to "fit in" to a group; they feel pressured socially to vote for their friends, co-workers, teachers, boss... Seeing those votes invalidated gives them an out - an excuse to not vote for this group when otherwise they'd come off like an ass if they refused.
In other words, the same behavior that makes the current system suck at stopping determined frausters also makes it effective at stopping casual fraud. It keeps mostly-honest people mostly-honest. We... Probably don't want to lose that.
One idea we've tossed around for a while is just implementing a simple warning: if the system notices that most of your recent votes have gone to the same person, ask you nicely to stop doing that.