The Comments Conundrum

A little while ago I introduced a field on my weblog’s comments form asking users to simply enter my first name. I did this, following Andrew Wooster’s suggestion, as a simple but amazingly effective anti-spam measure. Unfortunately, I think it’s been a little too effective: since I introduced it I’ve gotten noticeably fewer comments, as well as some confused emails. With this in mind, I just wanted to take a moment to clarify that this field is not meant to be some sort of riddle or exclusivity test: when it asks “What is Buzz’s first name?” it’s looking for “Buzz.”

Since this does seem to be a consistent source of confusion, however (and I can see how it would be, since “Buzz” is actually a nickname), I’m definitely going to change the wording to something clearer. Apologies for the ambiguity.

10 Responses to “The Comments Conundrum”

  1. Dan Dickinson Says:

    With this in mind, I just wanted to take a moment to clarify that this field is not meant to be some sort of riddle or exclusivity test: when it asks “What is Buzz’s first name?” it’s looking for “Buzz.”

    So since you put it in the quotes: is that with a period or without? ;)

  2. Matt Gemmell Says:

    I guess it does kind of look like a “close friends and family only” sort of thing, though I’ve never thought so until I read this post. Serves you right for having such a nickname. :p On other blogs I’ve seen wording such as “Enter the word ‘matt’ here”, or whatever.

    For the record, my Address Book naturally continues to list you as Mary-Louise “Buzz” Andersen.

  3. Chucky Says:

    I figured out the answer to the question!

    What do I win?

  4. ssp Says:

    Not that it would have kept me from trying but that was exactly the question I asked myself when I saw the question.

    Unless your surname is Lightyear, Buzz just won’t sound like a natural first name…

  5. Cameron Hayne Says:

    Have a look at the elaboration of this “skill-testing-question” approach used by Rob Griffiths in his blog: http://www.robservatory.com/
    Note the inline explanations.

  6. Matt Henderson Says:

    I introduced the same thing on my blog (”What color is an orange?”). Yes, I’m also getting fewer comments. But, do you *really* want comments from those that can’t answer such a question? ;-)

  7. stevenf Says:

    Over on Movable Type, there is a plugin called MT-Keystrokes. All it does is set a flag in the comment form if an actual keypress is detected in the comment box, using a JavaScript event handler.

    I was skeptical — I mean, it’s absolutely trivial to work around. But I’ve had only maybe… 2? 3? spam comments since installing it. It’s the single most effective thing I’ve ever done to stop comment spam. I kind of can’t believe it.

  8. Matt Says:

    Try out Akismet, it’s bundled with WP 2.0+. (You should really upgrade, too! Ping me if you need help.)

  9. Scott Says:

    Funny, I assumed it was some kind of test that I wouldn’t be able to pass.

    I think you could make it as simple as “Type Buzz in the box”, to get past the automated comment spammers.

  10. Flyguy Says:

    The question should be: What is the square root of 16?

    That way, it would not only weed out ‘bots, but also stupid people! ;-)

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