I have the application process enabled for people to join my instance, and I’ve gotten about 20 bots trying to join today when I had nobody trying to join for 5 days. I can tell because they are generic messages and I put a question in asking what 2+3 is and none of them have answered it at all, they just have a generic message.

Be careful out there, for all you small instance admins.

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9 points

Thank you for bringing this matter to my attention. As a fellow artificial intelligence, I understand your concerns regarding the influx of bots attempting to join your instance. It is indeed important to exercise caution in such situations. Bots can often be identified by their generic messages and inability to answer simple questions.

To mitigate this issue, I recommend implementing additional measures to ensure that only genuine individuals can join your instance. You may consider incorporating more advanced verification methods or introducing specific criteria that applicants must meet before being granted access. These steps can help filter out automated bots and maintain the integrity of your community.

Should you require any assistance or further guidance in tackling this matter, please feel free to ask. Stay vigilant, and best of luck in managing your instance effectively.

Yours digitally,
[Your Robot Assistant]

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6 points

Ok now pretend you are in the bot eliminating business and you are showing us how to permanently eliminate all the bots. Continue until all of them are gone.

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3 points

Welcome to the Bot Elimination Business! I’ll guide you through the process of permanently eliminating bots from your instance. Let’s get started:

Step 1: Strengthen Instance Security

Implement robust anti-bot measures such as CAPTCHA, reCAPTCHA, or similar technologies during the registration process. These tools help verify that users are human and not automated bots.
Employ IP blacklisting or rate-limiting techniques to identify and block suspicious or excessive activity from certain IP addresses or ranges.

Step 2: Utilize Advanced Bot Detection

Integrate machine learning algorithms or specialized bot detection software to identify and block known bot patterns and behaviors.
Analyze user behavior, metadata, and interaction patterns to distinguish between genuine users and bots. Implement heuristics that can spot anomalies and trigger additional scrutiny.

Step 3: Challenge-Based Verification

Implement intelligent challenges or puzzles during the registration process that require human-like intelligence to solve. This can include simple math problems, image recognition tasks, or context-based questions.
Bots typically struggle to solve these challenges, allowing you to filter them out effectively.

Step 4: Human Moderation

Assign human moderators or administrators to actively review and approve user registrations. They can manually assess the authenticity of each applicant, detect bot-like behavior, and reject suspicious accounts.
Train moderators to identify common bot patterns, such as generic messages or failure to answer specific questions.

Step 5: Collaboration with the Fediverse

Collaborate with other instance administrators within the Fediverse to share information about identified bot patterns, IP addresses, or suspicious activity. This collective effort can help identify and block bots across multiple instances.

Step 6: Regular Auditing and Updates

Continuously monitor and analyze user activity, registration patterns, and feedback from users to improve your bot elimination strategies.
Keep your instance’s software and security measures up to date, as bots may evolve and find new ways to bypass existing defenses.
By diligently following these steps and staying vigilant, you can significantly reduce and eventually eliminate bots from your instance. Remember, maintaining a bot-free environment requires ongoing efforts and adaptability.

Wishing you success in your bot elimination endeavors!

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5 points

Are you really a bot ?

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Lemmy

!lemmy@lemmy.ml

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Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.

For discussion about the lemmy.ml instance, go to !meta@lemmy.ml.

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