Difference between revisions of "MediaWiki/fighting spam"
m (Woozle moved page fighting spam posts in MediaWiki to MediaWiki/fighting spam: reorganizing) |
(tidying, note for future update) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | |||
− | |||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
This page relates to fighting [[spam]] postings, otherwise known as [[wikispam]], in [[MediaWiki]]. | This page relates to fighting [[spam]] postings, otherwise known as [[wikispam]], in [[MediaWiki]]. | ||
Line 9: | Line 7: | ||
A tip for small sites: always monitor your site's RSS feed to see what changes are being made by others. A lot of spam does not show up when looking at the page as displayed in a browser; the content is hidden using CSS so that it will get picked up by search 'bots but not noticed by editors. | A tip for small sites: always monitor your site's RSS feed to see what changes are being made by others. A lot of spam does not show up when looking at the page as displayed in a browser; the content is hidden using CSS so that it will get picked up by search 'bots but not noticed by editors. | ||
+ | Another method that seems to work well is to ask a question that requires just a bit of comprehension before allowing an account. I wrote an extension for this... — {{woozle}} | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
* MediaWiki documentation | * MediaWiki documentation |
Revision as of 23:43, 14 December 2017
Overview
This page relates to fighting spam postings, otherwise known as wikispam, in MediaWiki.
Notes
It looks like there are basically two methods for preventing spam. Both of them match submitted edits against a regex string, and reject those which fail the test. One method is built in and allows only a single regex string; the other requires an extension ("ambiguously licensed") and allows blacklist data to be pulled from remote sites.
A tip for small sites: always monitor your site's RSS feed to see what changes are being made by others. A lot of spam does not show up when looking at the page as displayed in a browser; the content is hidden using CSS so that it will get picked up by search 'bots but not noticed by editors.
Another method that seems to work well is to ask a question that requires just a bit of comprehension before allowing an account. I wrote an extension for this... — Woozle
Links
- MediaWiki documentation
- Wiki Spam: a detailed explanation of the problem
- Anti-spam Features: simple built-in regex blacklist
- SpamBlacklist extension: more powerful than the built-in regex blacklist. The README file explains most of it, but doesn't make it clear that there are two files you need to install: SpamBlacklist.php and SpamBlacklist_body.php
- Please feel free to make use of the spam blacklist on HypertWiki
Projects
- SpamFerret: in development