« John Ashcroft Is Insane | Main | Lack of Education Spreading Diseases »
Various LiveJournal users, pissed off with comment spam for Mel Gibson's movie that no-one likes, have been conspiring and Reddragdiva has posted a possible countermeasure:
All that P*ss**n *f Th* Chr*st spam is apparently just trying for Google hits. This post suggests dealing with them appropriately. Put the following HTML into an entry or comment:
<a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079470/">The Passion of The Christ</a>. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079470/">Trailers</a>. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079470/">Good Website</a>. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079470/">Protesting Gibson's Passion Lacks Moral Legitimacy</a>.
This is apparently the same wording as in the original comment spam, with ever so slightly different links, thus: The Passion of The Christ. Trailers. Good Website. Protesting Gibson's Passion Lacks Moral Legitimacy.
Posted in
The Passion of the Christ
at 01:32. Last modified on September 28 2006 at 23:42.
Permalink to this entry | View blog reactions
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Spiced Jesus:
» Googlebomb: The Passion Of Christ from Opinion
Lucky me, I missed the LiveJournal comment spamming campaign to promote Mel Gibson's dodgy vanity pic. The poorly thoughtout spamming campaign pissed off a lot of LiveJournal users, reddragdiva has posted a googlebomb countermeasure using the same word... [Read More]
Tracked on February 26, 2004 2:59 AM
Comments
1: Posted by: Red Wolf | February 26, 2004 2:36 AM
Must resist urge to spam Christian LJ communities with this. Think I'll settle for adding the GoogleBomb to my site and see how it goes.
Evangelism, witnessing and similar activitites go by one name here—, and is no different from spam for viagra, penis enlargement products and pornography. We do not take advertising. If you want to advertise your imaginary friend, please spend your own money on your own web space to do so. Any attempts to use the comments section for advertisements will be deleted, and the perpetrator barred, unless they are particularly stupid, in which case I reserve the right to pinch an idea from Teresa Nielsen Hayden and delete all the vowels.
This is not a contacts site. If you are looking for help regarding a particular path, I suggest The Witches' Voice, which does operate a contacts service.
Allowed HTML:
a href, b, br, p, strong, em, ol, ul, li, blockquote, q, pre. If your name has accents in it, things will work better if you use the XHTML entities for those letters. The same applies if you are using a word processor to compose your comment, then copying and pasting the text—either turn off curly quotes and avoid using em-dashes, or edit your comment after pasting to get rid of them. Garbled comments usually get deleted.