Automated Comment Poster Software
Anyone with a wordpress blog gets spam comments that come from a spambot. I just looked up one of these spambot sales pages and you’d be amazed at the bs on this page.
So go and order extra large hosting packages right now - I’ll teach you step by step how to get thousands of visitors who will make you the money like crazy!
If you make a comment on a blog and link to a website or blog that is not related to your product, services, or topics, then that link has absolutely ZERO SEO value.
So What’s The Secret? Well, I’ll be honest with you - there is no secret. Really. If you will read ANY Search Engine Optimization related book or visit any SEO forum, you will see the only main requirement - to make your website successful, you MUST get as many incoming text links as possible. And if some “experts” sold you crap (e-books, stupid tools, etc.) claiming you will become a millionaire after purchasing their crap, you were scammed. So take your money back and get ready for next-generation tool.
Yet this guy is telling people that exact thing and anyone buying this junk should get their money back. Akismet, the wordpress plugin kicks out most of their crappy links and others are deleted by blog owners. SO you don’t get tons of backlinks and the ones you do get are worthless.
I’m sorry, but I’m not going to tell you how Comment Poster bypasses protection used against automated comments posting. If you don’t want to receive my automated comments - the only way to stop this madness is to remove your website from the Internet
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That statement right there should tell you that you should avoid this product and avoid doing business with these people. He is unethical in the way the bot posts comments and is scamming people into believing that these links will help you make money or build link popularity.
If they have no ethics in dealing with the people whose blogs his software posts on, what makes you believe they is ethical in what they tell you?
Nah, I’m not one of these scammers who use dirty tricks to get your money. Most of these dirty tricks used by scammers look like this one - “This software is worth $1000, but if you will order today, you will pay only $300 and I will give you free bonus of $2000 value”. Yes, it’s amazing how many people still believe in this trick and order junk products. But think yourself - what kind of idiot he should be if he is selling $1000 value software for $300? Also their “bonus” is nothing but 100% scam. Everything you will receive - some junk ebooks with links to their affiliate products.
I just love the way they tell you that everyone is a scammer, except them.
Seriously, if you believe that these automated spambots are going to help you make money or build link popularity, then you are too dumb to hold on to your money.

Around 1% of those comments still make it through Akistmet. Not much, but considering the scale of them spammers, it can be pretty annoying. And while this 1% is usually removed by blog owners manually, some abandoned blogs (there hundreds of thousands of them) can get really infested with this cr*p.
I personally believe that even the best trained spam classifiers can ‘t match a simple CAPTCHA
Comment by OLeg — December 21, 2007 @ 12:16 am
Yeah, I’ll have to get the captcha thing. You’re also right about the abandoned blogs. But still very few of those links end up as realtive links and therefore buying and using this software is still worthless.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of lazy people out there who want anything that promises to make you money without doing any real work and they will buy into any scam that makes those promises.
Comment by namecritic — December 21, 2007 @ 7:58 am
i read that captchas aren’t working either, but there is now something like a visual descriptive technique. don’t remember how it’s called
Comment by charles — April 27, 2008 @ 10:56 pm
Well, I use this tool and I can say it works. Call me a spammer, call me an a**hole, but this tool makes me the money.
Comment by LSD — May 27, 2008 @ 11:16 am
If the shoe fits . . .
Comment by Chris McElroy aka NameCritic — May 28, 2008 @ 7:03 pm