This is the web log of Tim Bennett, web designer. He also runs Texelate, offering the best web design Leeds, Yorkshire has to offer

Spam prevention techniques

Wednesday, May 30th, 2007 at 8:27 am

On my various websites I get hundreds of Spam messages every day; it gets very annoying! I’ve tried several methods and in this post I will outline three. Soemtimes they works, sometimes they don’t. Some are more effective than others.

1. Captchas

Captchas are a random strings of text and numbers that a user must enter to be classed as non-spam. The letters and numbers are displayed as an image and usually over a pattern and are distorted to prevent bots from easily reading them.

Pros: Skewed text against noisy background can be hard for Spam bots to read

Cons: Can be difficult for humans to read, spam bots are getting better at recognising them

2. Hidden text fields

Create a text field in your form and hide it via your CSS (using display: none). When processing the form if the field has been filled out it is Spam.

Pros: Filters out around 75% of spam bots

Cons: Some bots check your CSS, those with CSS disabled still see the text field

3. Ask a question

Ask a question that doesn’t have the answer in the question. A popular one could be a maths question (e.g. what is 1 + 5). Even more effective would be What colour is the sky?

Pros: Filters out 99% of spam

Cons: Some foriegn users or those who struggle with spelling may get the answer wrong

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