Our Recommendation

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Have hijacking my blog by an SBI! Coach (subject)

Last week one of my websites was undesirable. What is unusual about this, right? One of my blogs receives more than 50 spam comments daily. But what is curious is how is - and who has done.

Due to the volume of spam, I've set my Word Press blogs so I can moderate all comments first. If I there would be thousands of advertisements of drugs and designer boots. On a blog, we receive legitimate comments 2-4 per day.

If last week, I received a new comment. Pretty standard. Then 3, then 5 more. Ultimately, received 15 comments from the same person. First of all, it was just commenting on posts, adding pieces. Comments progressed, that person has obtained more courageous and began to be critical content and suggest that readers find out his site for more information. They came over a period of 2 hours, with a large amount of text in each.

It has clearly been done manually - but it is an attempt to misuse any how you look at it. Of course, Word Press comments create a link to the Web site or blog the commentator. Used correctly, it is an interesting feature. But this blatant of attempt to siphon off my traffic was not so easy to use. The obvious goal was my blog with links to its site of floods.

And I find it so odd about the thing that was done by a SBI! Coach. SBI - or site it build - is a company that sells Web site skeletons as an opportunity for business. I am curious if this attack is standard corporate policy, or if this 'coach' going rogue.

I approved some comments to publish, but removed all the links. But most I just removed. Most were simply unnecessary style link-drop feedback.

How about you? How would you have handled this? East-ce-ce never happened to you before?

Latest articles | Newsletter | Facebook | Bryan on Twitter | Bryan on LinkedIn

No comments:

Post a Comment