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I've spent most of my professional life as a writer, editor, and intolerable pedant. Fortunately, SuperMedia has given me a way to channel these abilities constructively. As Brand Content Manager, I work with the rest of the Marketing team to make sure our online content is accurate, engaging, and current.
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Copyright © 2013 SuperMedia, LLC
Putting Your Blog on a Spam-Free Diet
You know the feeling. You get the notification that someone has commented on one of your posts. Excited that one of your visitors was willing to take the time and energy to respond to your brilliant insights, you click over eagerly to see what they had to say. And there it sits, mocking your childlike enthusiasm.
“This is good you have written that I agree. You have hit the nail on this. Let’s healthy.”
What Is Comment Spam?
Taking its name from the inexplicably popular canned meat, the word “spam” has come to refer to any unsolicited bulk messages sent electronically. Back in the olden days, when hobbits roamed the earth, plastering links indiscriminately in the comments sections of blogs was one way to help a website rank better in the search engines. Google eventually caught on to this little trick and began penalizing websites for using this particular tactic. Unfortunately, because spamming requires little in the way of expense or effort, a lot of marketers still do it.
How Can I Recognize Comment Spam?
Since the spammers are sending their comments en masse to thousands of blogs covering a variety of topics from tax laws to knitting, they try to make them as generic as they can. Their hope is that the comments will slip through unnoticed and remain on these blogs, providing thousands of links back to their own website. Therefore, most comment spam messages will be vague and/or nonsensical.
In addition, comment spam often contains links to sites that are totally unrelated to the topic at hand. If your blog deals with auto repairs and somebody posts a comment with links to “cheap ugg boots,” then you can probably write it off as spam.
Finally, most comment spammers are inherently greedy. They might get away with one or two spams on a blog, but for some reason they often open the floodgates and post the exact same comment, word-for-word, across as many pages as they can.
How Can I Prevent Comment Spam?
The only method of comment spam prevention that’s 100 percent effective is to disable commenting on your blog. However, that’s sort of like killing a fly by running over it with your car. If your blog is being inundated with spam, here are some things you can do to minimize the problem.
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