So some spam signups just happened (all [email protected] format e-mail) This caused bounced mail to increase, causing Mailgun to block our domain to prevent it getting blacklisted.
So:
- Mail temporarily doesn’t work
- I closed signups for now
- I will ban the spam accounts
- I will check how to prevent (maybe approval required again?)
Stay tuned.
Edit: so apparently there is a captcha option which I now enabled. Let’s see if this prevents spam. Registrations open again.
Edit2 : Hmm Mailgun isn’t that fast in unblocking the domain. Closing signups again because validation mails aren’t sent
Edit 3: I convinced Mailgun to lift the block. Signups open again.
I ran into the issue on my instance as well, but checking the Captcha option in admin settings, stopped the signups for me.
can’t have anything nice nowadays
deleted by creator
How about adding a captcha? I was surprised there was none when I signed up.
Yes the devs should do that. We’re currently discussing the the Lemmy matrix chat.
Captchas are laughably easy to get around but they do work against dumb script kiddies which seems this attack is originating from.
I’m down as long as its privacy friendly and doesn’t use non-free javascript
And accessible
I love how transparent you are with the management of this instance. Kudos!
This, Refreshing 😀👍
Sounds frustrating. Thanks for doing what you do and letting us join your server! Hope the captcha works out.
Those usernames are so unimaginative. Who would pick a name like that?
I know, right? That’s the kind of thing an idiot would have on their luggage!
12345 is the code to my luggage
Now, can you tell me where your luggage is?
At least Samus is a badass.
Like Mary Poppins!
yea! gosh! who would just randomly generate a username? The nerve…
Last time a website I was managing was bombarded with spam signups, I set up a regular expression to check for the incredibly distinctive format the spammers were using… then it reports success but doesn’t actually create the account or send an email. Spam problem over.
Very clever, only problem is it’s not a general solution.
Until you get someone with a email that matches the expression
I solved this problem once. What you do is have a custom captcha that you code yourself. It can be as simple as “What is 2+3?” and have 10-20 questions that you rotate between. Most spammers will be too lazy to update their spambot.
Don’t just include it as text though. Rather, present the question as text in a picture.
This is very effective but also blocks people who spend on screen readers
The solution there is to provide a voice over of the captcha.
I made one that phrased it as “The sum of 2 and 3”. Weeds out bots and less sophisticated people.
fwiw - there’s always an arms race between spammers and people trying to not get spammed. It’s often better to use off-the-shelf captcha’s or something as there are people who are able to put a LOT MORE resources into it (like Google, who has billions of dollars on the line to prevent ad-fraud and identify bots)
I used a custom captcha for my personal WordPress blog. It eliminated all the spam. (Fun fact: The spammers know how to work around most anti-spam WordPress plugins. If you roll your own, they aren’t going to update their spambot for one blog.)
I also used a custom captcha at work. We couldn’t use 3rd party filters because it was marking our customers’ comments as spam! The custom captcha also eliminated all the spam.
There’s also a problem with using 3rd party spam services. You have to give them all your data. You also usually have to pay for it, which can be a problem when you’re working for people with a tiny budget.
This! I wonder if Lemmy has such feature…
Uff, that’s annoying. Thank you for the warning. I have re-instated a signup application for my instance to prevent this.
I was trying to open my account just when lemmy.world was closed earlier. When I pressed the button to create it I only got and enless “charging” animation. But when it reopened, I just started the process again, and was as easy as a breeze and extremely fast. Glad to be here! (and this is my first post)
Thanks for the tip- I’m having the same issue. How do I ban those accounts? I can’t even tell who my users are
I did it in the database, so if you can access your database I can assist.
My instance also experienced this. I’m the only active user (I made it a day ago), but the user count is up to 2K now. It stopped after I enabled captchas, but I want to remove these spam accounts so they don’t cause issues in the future.
I don’t even have a slight clue as to what I should look for in my database.
Contact me via Matrix if possible @ruud:h-y-p-e-r.space
If you haven’t figured it out yet or got a response yet, hop onto the instance admin group on matrix for Lemmy (details are on the GitHub or join Lemmy page somewhere I believe) and one of the many other folks running instances can probably walk you through it
Wow that was quick, amazing job as always!
Becareful with this. There’s a clear trend of massive amount of bot accounts flooding lemmy as a whole
Becareful with this. There’s a clear trend of massive amount of bot accounts flooding lemmy as a whole
I am not sure there’s anything in that that denotes “massive amount of bot accounts”. Seems more like “a lot more people made lemmy accounts than stuck around” which is unsurprising.
Why would a bot account show up in one of your graphs and not the other?
they’re waiting to use the bots when the community is large, over a long period of time. This way it’d be hard to detect the bots.
I take my comment back, you are totally right. There are a few ghost town instances with 80k users. Super obvious if you look at the active users vs users, or users vs comments. My bad -_-
Lucky me, I guess, since I use a masked email address that looks fake too (anon addy). I really dislike to give my email address when testing Reddit alternatives.
Just buy a cheap domain to point to anonaddy or simplelogin so you dont need to use one of their domains