OP, are you OK? I hope you're ok. It sucks what you're going through and it is hard. You got this. ❤️
SerotoninSwells
Thank you.
It has to come from the C suite to be "AI". Otherwise it's just sparkling ML.
I feel you and feel for you. I really do hope you get a reprieve because dealing with this is nonsense.
👋
Hi, I really hope iocaine
works for you and I think it still might be wise to temper expectations. Some background, I work in bot detection and mitigation.
I quickly tried reading through their code and documentation but I don't see the main detection mechanism that determines human vs bot other than what you mentioned as an example. If it's user agent based, it is trivially easy to spoof as you already know. I am finding in my work that these companies do not keep the user agent they report in their documentation when challenged.
My second concern was the page the reverse proxy served when spoofing my user agent. The DOM was nowhere close to that of Lemmy and I think it's important to point out that a simple check for specific elements on the page will keep the bot from poisoning itself.
I admit I could be too close to this problem to see other solutions, and I really hope it works. It sucks that this is a problem. I wish there were more open source options too.
If for some reason this solution doesn't work, and if anyone is interested in help, I am more than happy to freely offer my knowledge.
Veritasium did a video on this topic a few days ago. I highly recommend it. There's a bit of nuance here, from what I understand, regarding PTFE which is the chemical composition that Chemours markets as Teflon. The video talks about PTFE being rather inert, passing through our bodies if we ingest it. The real issue is heating the substance above 350° C (662° in freedom units).
I'm not an expert but I think it's worth reading up on the subject. If there's anyone else more read up on the subject please let me know if I'm wrong here.
It can be both. Reddit has a history of fabricating conversations. The way they sell advertising implies a certain level of engagement from their user base which can lead to bots pushing products in the form of reviews or by mention.
I think it's worth noting that Reddit, at one time, did have third party bot protection; however, it only protected their advertising. I can only imagine what the rest of their traffic looks like, but I would not be surprised if they were using bots of their own.
Like you said, they can make some money selling your information but they can also control the narrative how they choose.
Reminds me of Adult Swim's Metalocalypse petition.
Thank you for the reminder. I donated 👍
"Those who control the present, control the past and those who control the past control the future."
George Orwell, 1984
Omg yes how do I throw money at you.
OP, was this on the 10 between Phoenix and Tucson?
OP, you're looking for something called "Bot as a Service". There are more and more companies that cater to those needing a bot infrastructure. Bright data, ScrapingBee, ZenRows, and Apify are some of the more common services I typically work against that offer what you're looking for.
*Edit: If you're just looking for performance testing, you can use services like Loadster.