Spam+Blogs=Splogs — A Growing Menace to the Blogosphere

Posted on August 21st, 2006
By Gary Bivings in Blogs, Monitoring, Research, Search

Splogs are to blogs as spam is to emails.  It's a scam, a growing problem on the Internet, and splogs are threatening to pollute the blogosphere.   They seriously challenge efforts to monitor real conversations in the blogosphere.

There's a very good article in the September 2006 issue of Wired (in print, not yet online) by Charles Mann about the increasing menace posed by Splogs. Here are a few highlights for your enjoyment or disgust, depending on your perspective:

  • Some 56 percent of active English-language blogs are spam, according to research by Tim Finin at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County
  • He also found that splogs account for about 3/4(!) of the pings (or links telling the network that a blog has been updated) from English-laugage blogs
  • David Sifry of Technorati.com acknowledes that spam is doubling every six months
  • In Decemeber 2005, Blogger.com, the blog hosting site, was home to more than 100,000 sploggers (those who splog), according to Mitesh Vasa, a splog researcher
  • Vasa also found 10 million of the 12.9 million profiles on Blogger to be inactive, fertile ground for sploggers — and also good evidence of the overbound hype as to the size of the blogosphere
  • Examples of splog sites include debts.com, lasvegasvacations.com and photography.com (worth a visit, but watch out, each time you click on a link, you're helping the sploggers to make money)
  • 9 out of 10 comments on blogs are spam, according to investigations by the founders of WordPress, the software that powers this blog

Splogs are here to stay.  There's too much money to be made, especially since hyperlinks are now a form of currency.  Everyone, who should be, is alarmed and looking for solutions.  So far the solutions aren't that pretty; they inevitably take away the interactivity and openess of Web 2.0.  Quoting Mann from the artilce's final paragragh:

"Asked what impact he thinks splogging will have on the future of the Web, Some Title (a prominent splog) creator Goggins pauses.  'I'm just making my living,' he says. 'I guess I don't think about that kind of thing very much.'"

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Comments

  1. Hannah

    I was a bit confused about what exactly a splog would look like, as I was imagining a spam blog to be some extended version of the Nigeria scam emails or v1agr@ emails. So, for any other unsavvy readers, wikipedia says "Spam blogs are a type of scraper site, where content is often nonsense or text stolen from other websites. These blogs contain an unusually high number of links to sites associated with the splog creator which are often disreputable or otherwise useless websites."

    Read more - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spam_blog.

    Wikipedia also credits Mark Cuban with coining "splog" in 2005.

  2. Wow Precious Metal

    Nice article. I personally got way too curious about where some of the most common comment spam I get comes from and turned up entire networks of sites, including a slew of splogs scattered throughout various servers. I don’t intend to wipe it all out because frankly, I know that’s impossible. Nonetheless, I’ve foolhardily started reporting some of the splogs I find to their respective hosts because the spammers I’ve been tracking are often really stupid and provide links to their latest splogs with every post. It’s just one of the dumbest things I’ve ever seen.Oh, and it’s not just "splogs" anymore. I’ve just discovered spam wikis. What is that? A spiki?

  3. fgb

    Or a spliki? Good to know that spammers never tire of junking up other parts of the internet!  Jush heard about vishing, or voice phishing — offline telephone calls telling one to go to a website or give up identity info over the phone regarding some false credit alert or such.

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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