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bvinc | 3 years ago

Might I suggest a spin on this: instead of blocking the IPs, consider serving up different content to those IPs.

You could make a page that shames their domain name for stealing content. You could make a redirect page that redirects people to your website. Or you could make a page with absolutely disgusting content. I think it would discourage them from playing the cat and mouse game with you and fixing it by getting new IPs.

discuss

order

hedora|3 years ago

One possibility: Serve different content, but only if the user agent is a search engine scraper. Wait a bit to poison their search rankings, then block them.

zhengyi13|3 years ago

... be careful with this.

Assuming you've monetized your content with ads, depending on your ads provider, this may have deleterious effects on your account with that provider, as they may then assume you're trying to game ads revenue.

beirut_bootleg|3 years ago

I've tried this with zip bombs, but I can't tell how well it worked out.

RektBoy|3 years ago

Wait what? Care to follow on this hypothetical topic please?

NicoJuicy|3 years ago

Did the same things for spam bots :p

nomel|3 years ago

> Or you could make a page with absolutely disgusting content.

Not if you value the people who might move to the real domain.

Mikealcl|3 years ago

You could do this without effecting normal traffic depending on uniqueness of ip doing the scraping.

Love the idea.

antifa|3 years ago

If those IPs are VPN services, you might be negatively affecting all VPN users in addition to the proxy.

sprior|3 years ago

"Or you could make a page with absolutely disgusting content." You've never heard of Rule 34, have you...

walrus01|3 years ago

obviously somebody too young to have seen the method of using an http redirect to the goatse hello.jpg for unwanted requests

edit: or when somebody embed-links your image inside some forum, replace the original filename with the contents of hello.jpg