We had a chat about Twitter spam yesterday and would like a points
based approach to user ranking or spam rating. For those of us working
on 3rd party applications, having a spam score to be able to make
quick decisions on with regard to searches would be very useful.

For example, a new user would have a higher 'spam-rating' than a long
time user. Someone with a huge follow:follower ratio similarly. Given
how spam is used on Twitter, there are several categories which could
be dealt with at run-time on a server but less easily on a live
application.

BTW I worry that to join the abuse team one has to "have what it
takes". Does that mean they hand out large amounts of abuse ?-)

On May 18, 7:12 pm, Doug Williams <d...@twitter.com> wrote:
> We have a team dedicated to controlling the number of spam messages and
> accounts in the system. The number of accounts, sophistication, and
> techniques are constantly growing. The team is doing a great job of
> isolating known attack vectors. Obviously there is still work to be
> done. The abuse team is hiring. If you think you have what it takes, please
> apply:http://twitter.com/jobs
> Thanks,
> Doug
> --
>
> Doug Williams
> Twitter Platform Supporthttp://twitter.com/dougw
>
> On Sat, May 16, 2009 at 8:14 PM, sillyt...@googlemail.com <
>
> sillyt...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>
> > I'm working as part of the #twumpet team and as part of our project
> > we're developing an application as well as running some Twitter events
> > - the first having been Eurovision earlier today.
>
> > As we hit the top trend, #twumpet got - and is still getting -
> > enormous amounts of spam. Spammers are signing up, blitzing messages
> > through one immediately after another, and then moving on to the next
> > account.
>
> > Does anyone know if Twitter are going to stop users firing tweets off
> > one after another so blatently like this? I just checked on a couple
> > of top trends and all I can see is spammers tonight.
>
> > Also, as a developer working on a project which will be dealing with
> > trending topics and popular searches, I need a quick way to throw out
> > spam messages.
>
> > I have a couple of ideas for strategies but would be interested in
> > discussing them, and perhaps a group effort which used Twitter itself
> > for rapid short term spam classification & reporting [through Twitter
> > search or a further API]. The one thing about spammers is they appear
> > and disappear extremely quickly so any lists would be very short and
> > 'live', at least for now...
>
> > @newretro

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