How can I detect (with regular expressions or heuristics) a web site link in a string of text such as a comment?
The purpose is to prevent spam. HTML is stripped so I need to detect invitations to copy-and-paste. It should not be economical for a spammer to post links because most users could not successfully get to the page. I would like suggestions, references, or discussion on best-practices.
Some objectives:
- The low-hanging fruit like well-formed URLs (
http://some-fqdn/some/valid/path.ext
) - URLs but without the
http://
prefix (i.e. a valid FQDN + valid HTTP path) - Any other funny business
Of course, I am blocking spam, but the same process could be used to auto-link text.
Ideas
Here are some things I'm thinking.
- The content is native-language prose so I can be trigger-happy in detection
- Should I strip out all whitespace first, to catch "
www .example.com
"? Would common users know to remove the space themselves, or do any browsers "do-what-I-mean" and strip it for you? - Maybe multiple passes is a better strategy, with scans for:
- Well-formed URLs
- All non-whitespace followed by '.' followed by any valid TLD
- Anything else?
Related Questions
I've read these and they are now documented here, so you can just references the regexes in those questions if you want.
- replace URL with HTML Links javascript
- What is the best regular expression to check if a string is a valid URL
- Getting parts of a URL (Regex)
Update and Summary
Wow, I there are some very good heuristics listed in here! For me, the best bang-for-the-buck is a synthesis of the following:
- @Jon Bright's technique of detecting TLDs (a good defensive chokepoint)
- For those suspicious strings, replace the dot with a dot-looking character as per @capar
- A good dot-looking character is @Sharkey's subscripted · (i.e. "·"). · is also a word boundary so it's harder to casually copy & paste.
That should make a spammer's CPM low enough for my needs; the "flag as inappropriate" user feedback should catch anything else. Other solutions listed are also very useful:
- Strip out all dotted-quads (@Sharkey's comment to his own answer)
- @Sporkmonger's requirement for client-side Javascript which inserts a required hidden field into the form.
- Pinging the URL server-side to establish whether it is a web site. (Perhaps I could run the HTML through SpamAssassin or another Bayesian filter as per @Nathan..)
- Looking at Chrome's source for its smart address bar to see what clever tricks Google uses
- Calling out to OWASP AntiSAMY or other web services for spam/malware detection.