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this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
567 points (96.2% liked)
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Keep Lemmy small. Make the influence of conversation here uninteresting.
Or .. bite the bullet and carry out one-time id checks via a $1 charge. Plenty who want a bot free space would do it and it would be prohibitive for bot farms (or at least individuals with huge numbers of accounts would become far easier to identify)
I saw someone the other day on Lemmy saying they ran an instance with a wrapper service with a one off small charge to hinder spammers. Don't know how that's going
The small charge will only stop little spammers who are trying to get some referral link money. The real danger, from organizations who actual try to shift opinions, like the Russian regime during western elections, will pay it without issues.
Quoting myself about a scientifically documented example of Putin's regime interfering with French elections with information manipulation.
Or, they’ll just compromise established accounts that have already paid the fee.
Yeah, but once you charge a CC# you can ban that number in the future. It's not perfect but you can raise the hurdle a bit.
I’m doing my part!
Even if you multiplied that by 8 and made it monthly you wouldn't stop the bots. There's tons of "verified" bots on twitter.
Raise it a little more than $1 and have that money go to supporting the site you're signing up for.
This has worked well for 25 years for MetaFilter (I think they charge $5-10). It used to work well on SomethingAwful as well.
Creating a cost barrier to participation is possibly one of the better ways to deter bot activity.
Charging money to register or even post on a platform is one method. There are administrative and ethical challenges to overcome though, especially for non-commercial platforms like Lemmy.
CAPTCHA systems are another, which costs human labour to solve a puzzle before gaining access.
There had been some attempts to use proof of work based systems to combat email spam in the past, which puts a computing resource cost in place. Crypto might have poisoned the well on that one though.
All of these are still vulnerable to state level actors though, who have large pools of financial, human, and machine resources to spend on manipulation.
Maybe instead the best way to protect communities from such attacks is just to remain small and insignificant enough to not attract attention in the first place.
That's a significant constraint and it's probably possible to reuse a lot of the costs in developing a both for another platform.
Yeah, making identities expensive helps. But...you note that the bot that OP posted clearly had the bot operator pay for a blue checkmark there. So it wasn't enough in that case.