Tag Archive for: spam

Beating The Bad Bots: Identify and Block Spam Traffic To Boost Your Google Ranking


Advancements in technology have helped us propel forward, changing the way we work and live our daily lives. However, its rapid adoption has led to less sombre means. We have all seen and participated in those various bot tests that some websites carry out, where we have to select the picture tiles which have particular objects. The measure is taken by sites to reduce spam traffic.

(Source: Statista)

Spam traffic is used in some cases by cybercriminals to commit scams and fraud and has become a tool for a phishing scam and malware spread. It is problematic as it is inexpensive to create and send. In 2020, spam messages accounted for a colossal 58.71% of email traffic as the graph above indicates. 

It also has a negative impact on your Google ranking. No body like spam traffic, including Google. Once the search engine leader identifies increasing bot traffic on a particular website, it starts penalising and push ranking down.

What is Bad Bot?

There are a range of different bots that you find on the backend of the internet carrying out different types of tasks. Some are harmless such as search engine bots used by Google and Bing, which help the service specifically by browsing the internet to help make available content that can be useful to users based on search queries.

However, bad bots are used in an entirely different way to serve a different purpose. These include. Searching sites and scraping data of it to benefit other sites or sell on and steal information and repost it under a different identity.

Bad Bots also can disturb site metrics as they inflate search results and increase website traffic unnecessarily, leading to slower loading times and unnecessary investments in hardware to maintain the website infrastructure. As we can see from the graph below, in 2019, 24% of traffic emanated from the movement of bad bots.

(Source: Imperva)

They are also able to perform malicious acts on-site, which lead to damaging networks through things such as distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. These attacks flood sites with data higher than a level that it can handle. 

Bad Bots are mostly organised on botnets which are a collection of internet-connected devices that have been…

Source…

Cookie-stealing Android trojan likely used for spam distribution campaign – SC Magazine

Cookie-stealing Android trojan likely used for spam distribution campaign  SC Magazine
“android security news” – read more

Reputable sites swept up in FB’s latest coronavirus-minded spam cleanse [Updated]

Photoshopped image of a housekeeper with a Facebook logo for a face.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)

As of press time, there is a chance that if you share this very news article on Facebook, its headline will trigger an eventual takedown with a “spam” tag and no further explanation.

On Tuesday, social media users began sharing scattered reports with a confusing issue in common: links from reputable news outlets they’d shared—either publicly or in private, friends-only groups—were marked as violations of “community guidelines” and automatically taken down, and many—but not all—had “coronavirus” mentioned in either the headline or in the article’s body. Other hot topics in the automatic-takedown spree include recent Democratic Party primaries in the United States… and the recent YouTube viral sensation of penguins running free in a Chicago aquarium.

A YouTube video of penguins going free in a Chicago-area aquarium, flagged and taken down by Facebook.

A YouTube video of penguins going free in a Chicago-area aquarium, flagged and taken down by Facebook.

This seemed to affect posts going back as far as five days, and it includes content from established newspapers and sites such as Politico, The Atlantic, USA Today, Vice, Business Insider, Axios, and The Seattle Times. Also caught in the net are the more open-ended blogging platform Medium (which runs a series of staffed and edited sub-sites) and the crowdfunding site GoFundMe. As of press time, compiling a complete list of affected sites and topics is admittedly difficult, thanks to the anecdotal nature of how these takedown notices are being reported and circulated.

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Biz & IT – Ars Technica