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I've accepted an answer, but sadly, I believe we're stuck with our original worst case scenario: CAPTCHA everyone on purchase attempts of the crap. Short explanation: caching / web farms make it impossible to track hits, and any workaround (sending a non-cached web-beacon, writing to a unified table, etc.) slows the site down worse than the bots would. There is likely some pricey hardware from Cisco or the like that can help at a high level, but it's hard to justify the cost if CAPTCHA-ing everyone is an alternative. I'll attempt a more full explanation later, as well as cleaning this up for future searchers (though others are welcome to try, as it's community wiki).

Situation

This is about the bag o' crap sales on woot.com. I'm the president of Woot Workshop, the subsidiary of Woot that does the design, writes the product descriptions, podcasts, blog posts, and moderates the forums. I work with CSS/HTML and am only barely familiar with other technologies. I work closely with the developers and have talked through all of the answers here (and many other ideas we've had).

Usability is a massive part of my job, and making the site exciting and fun is most of the rest of it. That's where the three goals below derive. CAPTCHA harms usability, and bots steal the fun and excitement out of our crap sales.

Bots are slamming our front page tens of times a second screen scraping (and/or scanning our RSS) for the Random Crap sale. The moment they see that, it triggers a second stage of the program that logs in, clicks I want One, fills out the form, and buys the crap.

Evaluation

lc: On stackoverflow and other sites that use this method, they're almost always dealing with authenticated (logged in) users, because the task being attempted requires that.

On Woot, anonymous (non-logged) users can view our home page. In other words, the slamming bots can be non-authenticated (and essentially non-trackable except by IP address).

So we're back to scanning for IPs, which a) is fairly useless in this age of cloud networking and spambot zombies and b) catches too many innocents given the number of businesses that come from one IP address (not to mention the issues with non-static IP ISPs and potential performance hits to trying to track this).

Oh, and having people call us would be the worst possible scenario. Can we have them call you?

BradC: Ned Batchelder's methods look pretty cool, but they're pretty firmly designed to defeat bots built for a network of sites. Our problem is bots are built specifically to defeat our site. Some of these methods could likely work for a short time until the scripters evolved their bots to ignore the honeypot, screen-scrape for nearby label names instead of form ids, and use a javascript-capable browser control.

 

lc again: "Unless, of course, the hype is part of your marketing scheme." Yes, it definitely is. The surprise of when the item appears, as well as the excitement if you manage to get one is probably as much or more important than the crap you actually end up getting. Anything that eliminates first-come/first-serve is detrimental to the thrill of 'winning' the crap.

 

novatrust: And I, for one, welcome our new bot overlords. We actually do offer RSSfeeds to allow 3rd party apps to scan our site for product info, but not ahead of the main site HTML. If I'm interpreting it right, your solution does help goal 2 (performance issues) by completely sacrificing goal 1, and just resigning the fact that bots will be buying most of the crap. I up-voted your response, because your last paragraph pessimism feels accurate to me. There seems to be no silver bullet here.

The rest of the responses generally rely on IP tracking, which, again, seems to both be useless (with botnets/zombies/cloud networking) and detrimental (catching many innocents who come from same-IP destinations).

Any other approaches / ideas? My developers keep saying "let's just do CAPTCHA" but I'm hoping there's less intrusive methods to all actual humans wanting some of our crap.

Original question

Say you're selling something cheap that has a very high perceived value, and you have a very limited amount. No one knows exactly when you will sell this item. And over a million people regularly come by to see what you're selling.

You end up with scripters and bots attempting to programmatically [a] figure out when you're selling said item, and [b] make sure they're among the first to buy it. This sucks for two reasons:

  1. Your site is slammed by non-humans, slowing everything down for everyone.
  2. The scripters end up 'winning' the product, causing the regulars to feel cheated.

A seemingly obvious solution is to create some hoops for your users to jump through before placing their order, but there are at least three problems with this:

  • The user experience sucks for humans, as they have to decipher CAPTCHA, pick out the cat, or solve a math problem.
  • If the perceived benefit is high enough, and the crowd large enough, some group will find their way around any tweak, leading to an arms race. (This is especially true the simpler the tweak is; hidden 'comments' form, re-arranging the form elements, mis-labeling them, hidden 'gotcha' text all will work once and then need to be changed to fight targeting this specific form.)
  • Even if the scripters can't 'solve' your tweak it doesn't prevent them from slamming your front page, and then sounding an alarm for the scripter to fill out the order, manually. Given they get the advantage from solving [a], they will likely still win [b] since they'll be the first humans reaching the order page. Additionally, 1. still happens, causing server errors and a decreased performance for everyone.

Another solution is to watch for IPs hitting too often, block them from the firewall, or otherwise prevent them from ordering. This could solve 2. and prevent [b] but the performance hit from scanning for IPs is massive and would likely cause more problems like 1. than the scripters were causing on their own. Additionally, the possibility of cloud networking and spambot zombies makes IP checking fairly useless.

A third idea, forcing the order form to be loaded for some time (say, half a second) would potentially slow the progress of the speedy orders, but again, the scripters would still be the first people in, at any speed not detrimental to actual users.

Goals

  1. Sell the item to non-scripting humans.
  2. Keep the site running at a speed not slowed by bots.
  3. Don't hassle the 'normal' users with any tasks to complete to prove they're human.
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  • 1
    I think you have contradicting goals: Keeping the experience exactly as it is but get rid of the bots. I think you can't get the one while not sacrificing a part of the other.
    – max
    Feb 7, 2009 at 8:57
  • It's a community wiki, so feel free to take a stab, but I was mostly trying to cover every point as clearly as I could considering there are obvious things to try that we'd already tried and discounted. Feb 9, 2009 at 23:54
  • Why not just cache repeated offenders, simply don't update whatever page they're repeatably requesting. IPv4 and MAC addresses are 32 + 48 bits in total. That's 10MB for 1 million users, shouldn't be a problem. The combination IPv4 and MAC should help you track all kinds of users more accurately Feb 13, 2009 at 7:42
  • 5
    I don't really understand why you need to let anonymous users see the crap sale. Why not only offer it to users who are logged in? If you do that, you wouldn't have unknown users hitting the page too often and then could ban bad users.
    – Ryan Guill
    Feb 13, 2009 at 14:48
  • 2
    I think some people are missing a key factor here: these bots are set up to log in and purchase too. They DO know a valid account and CAN be logged in. Also, real people that use woot sit there the minute an item is going to come up and hit F5 to reload every 2-5 sec. That is valid normal human use. Feb 13, 2009 at 15:58

129 Answers 129

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My Opinion as a longtime WOOTer

I would be happy to have a CAPTCHA on ordering, turned on only for the BOC. I think most wooters would agree. Plus, 99.9% of the time you don't even get to the order screen because it sells out so fast, so hardly anybody would even know!!

If you make the CAPTCHA a really hard math problem, I'll be able to finally explain to my mom the practical benefit of so many years of studying math.

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I don't see why IP address filtering HAS to be prohibitively expensive. With IIS you can build an ISAPI filter to do this in native code. I am sure apache has similar interfaces. Using the IP address of the client, you can write a simple rate-limiter for HTTP requests that does not depend on a banned list or other such nonsense.

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  1. Tarpit. Limiting page views to 1 per second won't bother human users.
  2. Links via JavaScript. Simple bots don't dig that. as of usability, statistics show, that less then 1% of users doesn't use JS. 2a. hard-core version of above. Links in Flash.
  3. parameters stored in session, rather then in query string. Most bot are stateless.
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Never thought I'd recommend flash for anything, but what about flash? Let your server send down asynchronous, encrypted content to the flash file signaling if it's deal time or not. As long as the response is the same size deal or no deal, the bot can't tell which it is.

At a more general level, you need to focus on the resources a human plus a browser have that a scripted bot doesn't and take advantage of things that are easy for humans/browsers and hard for bots. Captcha is obviously a simplistic attempt at doing this, but doesn't suit your site as you say. Flash would weed out a ton of bots, leaving only the (slower) ones that drive a real browser. The solution could be much simpler than captcha if it just requires the user to click in the right spot.

Take advantage of humans' massively parallel image processing power!

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Make scanning the site expensive.

There is no way I know that can keep a bot out of your site. I even know a service, where there are humans that scan sites for you. How would you handle that?

The worst thing for bots is, when a site changes. After a while it gets to expensive or to boring to keep the bot running. There might be updates on the your site that look like a new product, but actually are not. If you update unregularly and undpredictable things are getting realy hard to the bot.

Banning IPs might be a countermeasure, as long as it is a known IP. The offender needs to use a proxy. The proxies I know work well, but slow you down a lot.

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My thoughts (I haven't checked all the others, so I don't know if it's novel)

Dealing with swarming:

  1. Convert the front-page matter for each day's stuff to be a flash/flex object.

    • Yes, some people will complain, but we're looking for the common case here, not the ideal.
    • You should also randomize the name of your flash objects, so they aren't in any predictable pattern of names.
  2. Using Akamai or another CDN, deploy this flash object in advance to the outside world. Akamai produces what appears to be random URLs, so it makes it hard to predict.

  3. When it is time for a new sale, you just have to change your URL locally to refer to the appropriate object at Akamai, and people will go fetch the flash object from them to discover if the deal is a BoC or not.

End-of-the-day - you now have Akamai handling your swarms of midnight traffic

Dealing with auto-buy

  1. Each of the flash objects you create can have lots and lots of content hidden inside - images, links, arbitrary ids, including 'bag of crap' in a thousand places. you should be able to obfuscate the flash as well.
  2. When the flash object "goes live", people will start to attack it. But there are so many false positives that a simple string scan is useless - they'll have to simulate running the flash locally.
  3. But the flash doesn't write text. It draws lines and shapes. Shapes in different colors, all connected to timers that make them appear and disappear at different times.
    • If you've seen the Colbert Report, you know how the intro has hundreds of words describing Colbert. Imagine something like that for your intro, which will always include Bag O Crap.
    • Now, imagine that the intro takes an arbitrary amount of time - sometimes a few seconds, sometimes as long as a minute or more (make it funny)
    • Meanwhile, "Bag O Crap" is constantly showing up, but again, clearly as part of the intro.
    • Finally, the actual deal of the day is revealed, with an active 'shimmer' effect that makes it difficult for any single snapshot of the canvas to reveal the actual product name. This is floating above an animated background that still says 'bag O crap' and is constantly in motion
    • again, all of this is handled with lines and shapes, not with text strings

End result - your hacker is forced to take lots of image snapshots of the deal, figure out how to separate all the false positives and identify the actual deal. Meanwhile, humans just look at it, and between eye fatigue and our ability to fill in gaps in the text, we can read the deal as is.

This won't work forever, but it would work for a while.

Another idea is to simply restrict people from buying BoCs unless they've bought something before with that account, and to never let them buy a BoC again.

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  1. Identify bots via IP or a suit of other mechanisms.

  2. Always serve those identified as bots the normal front page.

Real people falsely identified as bots will not get the specials, but they won't notice anyway.

Bot owners won't realize you've identified them, so they will stop adapting their scripts.

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My solution is a combination of marketing changes and technology changes.

Currently the technical side of sellng portion of bags of crap promotions are handled as a normal woot sale. The sale starts, people race to buy, all items are sold. The same statistcal charts used for daily sales are used bag of crap sales.

There are several market goals involved:

  • Get customers to visit the site once every day (impluse purchasing). The possiblility of a seeing a bag of crap sale is the reason/reward.
  • Network/viral/gossipy effect where a customer sees a bag of crap sale is on they will IM/EMail/Telephone their friends.
  • There is also what I'd call general "good will". Woot is a really cool place because it occasionally rewards its customers with amazing sales (bag of crap that included a flat panel tv)... AND its done in a fair "first comes first served" manner.

The first 2 seem to be the most important. The sheer number of visitors has an effect on how fast normal deals sell (or sell out). New customers have traditionally been attracted pretty much by word of mouth, and having customers sending their friends to woot.com is a win.

So... my solution is to change the promotion delivery into more of a lottery.

Occasionally users can do something fun to see if they are eligable for a bag of crap. The something fun could be a silly flash game along the lines of "punch the monkey" or Orbitz mini-puts, baseball, hockey. The goal here is game that a bot can't script so some considerable care will be needed. The goal is also not to only award bag of crap to game winners... but to all game players.

The technical core of the game is that at the end of the game a request is made to a server that does an "instant lottery" to determine if the user has won a bag of crap sale opportunity. The server request will need to include something calculated by the game itself (roughly speaking "hash cash"... a complex, CPU cycle consuming, calculation, and hopefully one that is difficult to reproduce). This is to prevent a bot from repeatedly entering the lottery just be querying the lottery server/service.

The game itself can change over time. You can do special event games for halloween, christmas, valinties, easter, etc. There's lots of room for fun marketing ideas that can match woot's "wootiness".

If the user wins they can purchase N bags of crap (in a time limited window)... but they can also send N friends a time limited invitation to purchase a bag of crap (good for 24 hours). This provides a super strong network effect... customers will definately tell their friends. Or you could also do it as "buy 1 give 1"... let customers buy up to a total of N but force every second one to be shipped to a friend. The key here is to make the network/gossip effect an full fledged part... help the customer tell the world about the wonderfulness of woot.

The promotional material arounnd bag of crap sales concept will also need to be revamped. The graphs of how quickly a bag of crap sold out are no longer relevant. Something along the lines how frequently through the month people had the opportunity to purchase. How many people told their friends. The marterials should subtley emphasize the point that a daily woot visit is a good idea.

You can also promote the heck out of why bag of crap sales are changing. Especially that you hired the best bag of crap consultants available for free.

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Honestly, I think your best solution is to make items during a Woot-Off only be visible to logged in users, and limit each logged-in user to one home page refresh every 500ms or so. (Or possibly make only a picture of the item be visible to unauthenticated users during a Woot-Off, and make sure you don't always use the same picture for Random Crap.) I think Woot users would be willing to accept this if you sell it as a measure to help them get their Bowls of Creaminess, and you can also point out that it'll help them check out quicker. Anything else--even using captchas--is subject to your typical arms race.

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Build a better bot

The market place is telling you something. They want to get that bag o crap. So rather than fight the scripts (RIAA v file-sharing anyone?) Build a better bot.

Offer everyone an installed app that is just as good or better than anything a script kidee could put together. The user installs your branded app and every time the bag of crap is offered. The app will automatically try to buy it. If the current b-o-c is missed, the app has a "ticket" to give it a better chance for the next b-o-c sale. So if a user rolls their own script, they don't get the "ticket" in line for the next b-o-c sale, while users of the official app do.

Between b-o-c sales the app can show the current item for sale. Hell, make it so that the user can tell the woot app to look for "memory sticks"

Who will build their own script, when the official woot b-o-c+ script app is just as good or not better?

Additionally, woot gets another way of connecting to the customer.

Your customers are telling you what they want.

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Give the user a choice between the original price and a much higher price. You will have to find some way to associate the buttons with their respective prices - colour, position, perhaps "emotional connotation" of the button - something difficult to programmatically determine but which only needs the user to connect a button to a price. Easy, intuitive and hassle free for the user, difficult and, more importantly, risky for the scripter - especially if you vary the method of association.

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If you are willing to make javascript mandatory, you can use a hashcash scheme to require, for example, ~30 seconds worth of client-side computation for each request. (Of course that might be 5 min on an iPhone or 1 second on a botnet of 30 computers: a significant drawback.)

You can also make scraping more difficult by generating the page with (obfuscated) javascript or (gag) flash.

You can also troll for bots with invisible (via CSS and javascript) random crap links.

You can detect 'bot-like' IP addresses (by rate and by visits to honeypot links) and redirect them to a special server (e.g. one with extra CC verification such as 'verified by visa' -- or merely one with a captcha.)

But really, it's an arms race. :) And one you may very well have to eventually escalate even beyond captchas.

Which brings me to: Why not change from a first-come, first-serve model to a lottery model where bots don't have such a large advantage over real shoppers?

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Okay, I have a couple of questions more than an answer because I have no experience with the technology to know if it could/would work or would help.

With the following goals:
1. Sell the item to non-scripting humans.
2. Keep the site running at a speed not slowed by bots.
3. Don't hassle the 'normal' users with any tasks to complete to prove they're human.

My questions are:
-. Would a Flash application, or Java applet, or Silverlight or anything similar reduce the ease of screen scraping enough to decrease the impact of the bots?
I'm curious if these are as wide open to external manipulation as typical javascript/html. While it is not standard for web development and may not be 'good' from an SEO point of view, it sounds like search visibility isn't your problem if you have millions of users. I believe that any of these could still offer a very good looking interface so your humans wouldn't be put off by the design.

-. Could you put all of your information in an Image? I've never seen the part of woot you are referring too, but what I'm suggesting is to place any text that a human needs to know in a human friendly image instead of a bot-friendly textbox.

Oh, and to second something alluded to in some of the other responses. Don't miss the big opportunity you have: You have LOTS of Demand from Bots, and those people with Bots really buy right? Do you still want their money? (Cause if not, I'll take it.)

Do these people with the Bots have any alternative to buy from you? Separate out your bags of crap.

Have a woot subsite built for bots, geared towards bots and let the scripters have lots of fun AND pay you money for it. Sell them crap and let them challenge themselves against other scripters. It's a whole separate market available to you.

If they have an alternative where they can win something AND get bragging rights about it, they might be a little less inclined to beat up on the little old human.

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Forgive me if this answer was already submitted. There are a lot of answers to try to read & understand all of them.

Why couldn't you just change your purchasing API every once in a while? Wouldn't that be completely transparent to the human users and pretty much kill most of the bot purchasers?

One implementation would be to change the names of the fields that the user has to fill in and submit on the page after hitting the "I Want One" button. How many times a year do you actually sell BOC? Not that often. So this would not be a huge programming burden to have a different purchasing API programmed, tested and ready for use every time a BOC goes on sale.

Just make sure the bots that are using the old and incorrect API don't bring your server down. Maybe host the BOC purchase API on a different server each time too. That way the bots can bring down a server that is not actually being used by us human BOC purchasers.

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If I understand right, your biggest problem is with the screen scraping, not the automated purchase itself.

If so, your most effective step would be to defeat screen scraping by randomly encoding the page so that it look the same (kind of) but is always different at code level. (use hex codes, java encoding, pictures, change surrounding code structure...)

That would force them to constantly rewrite their scraping code and therefore make it that much more expensive for them to buy your "crap" automatically. If they can manage. They would probably continue to hit your website for a while until they realize they can't gain anything from it and drop it.

The downside of confusing the hell out of bots is that it will also confuse the hell out of search engine crawlers.

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use concurrent connection limiting per IP address via either iptables on the server (if it is Linux based) or use a dedicated "router"

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You should have some record of the users who have purchased BOC most often, why not just ban those accounts or something. Sure legit users will be banned in this process but you are a business providing a product and if your are being abused by a group of users and such you have the right to refuse service to them. You have a lot of info on your users including paypal and bank accounts, you could ban those accounts forcing the bot users to get new accounts. Certainly I could come up with a script to buy BOC all the time or just download one from the net, but I have better morals than that. Never actually having successfully purchased BOC, I know the frustration of legit users who would like to receive a BOC in the hopes of getting a great deal. Perhaps instead of offering a BOC as an individual item every once and awhile, you could just give it to random users every day. When they receive an item they get a little note and and an additional item saying they also received a BOC. Then the only way someone could get a BOC is if they legitimately purchased something that only an actual human would have wanted. There would be nothing better than purchasing a coffee maker or something and also receiving a 42" tv or something in addition to your legitimate purchase. I think the majority of script kiddies would no longer be interested in your site if in order to get a BOC they would also have to commit to a purchase of more than 10 dollars.

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Why not make the front page just an image-mapped graphic (all one picture with no labels, tags, etc)? Easy for a human to read and understand on pretty much any device, but impossible for a bot to interrogate. In essence make the whole front page a captcha.

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You will make enough on the lights today to pay for the CAPTCHA program from Cisco!! We are all used to them from buying concert tickets and other things.. It only seems fair. The way it is being done today is upsetting some and raising questions about a lottery or sweeps. I am sure you checked into that before you tried but it is not really a fun way to buy BOCs... It takes all the excitement out!

Getting the BOC first or a great product even by being on the sight draws people to Woot. If there is no reason to hang around and buy tons of stuff you don't need while waiting for the random BOC to come up, sales will drop off. The CAPTCHA may be the only way to defeat these people and still keep the excitement of Woot.

I was one of the first to get it to order a BOC last time and my first order was taken dumped with the million shipping and the second went through but was taken out of my account later. I was upset. I left Woot and have not purchased items like I did in the past on other days. I was willing to try it again, this way, today. I doubt I will in the future without a CAPTCHA for the fun stuff.

There are many sites trying to be like Woot. Of course they are not up to your level. I find myself reading a product description, not because I want the product, but I check in even for a laugh. I would hate to see someone come in with a fairer program and take away most of your business.

Just my opinion. I know almost nothing about bots and computers since I am a nurse.. But my vote is to upgrade to the higher level... The guys with the bots would just have to get in line with the rest of us and that is the way it should be:) Lori

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As for CAPTCHAing everyone, why not use the Google solution of only requiring CAPTCHAs from IPs you suspect as being bots, or even just users that hammer the site? I'm sure asking someone for a CAPTCHA when they purchase isn't so bad if they've been hammering the site anyway, its just about the same as staying up and hitting F5 repeatedly. That or maybe require a periodic CAPTCHA when hammering, say every hundred (maybe smaller?) or so refreshes, to stop alarm-bots from working. You need some sort of CAPTCHA to prevent botting, but you also need to account for the fact that your real users will act like bots.

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As a long time (4 year) user of Woot.com and purchaser of a few bags of crap, amongst the many other items now taking up space in my garage, it seems that the solution should be part of the overall Woot theme.

Use captcha, but in a humorous vein. Much like the $1,000,000 promotion, make a game out of identifying yourself as a person. This has, in the past delayed the "sell out" of the BOC for a reasonable amount of time, while people, like myself, scramble to figure out the fairly simple but humorous puzzle to enter a coupon code.

Also, while people complain endlessly about the server errors, they don't stop coming back. Part of the thrill of a BOC in my opinion is the fact there are a gazillion other people trying to get one. If the servers throw an error, or a funky page, it's a sign that I'm somewhere in a group of way too many people trying to get one of 1500 products.

If you put as much creativity into building the puzzle, and it is original enough, it will delay the bots long enough to give everyone else a chance. Incorporating a random word that's captured as a code, putting an interim page between the "I Want One" and the purchase page, that requires some uniquely human interaction, you've stopped the bots there, until they figure out what needs to happen.

• You haven't implemented a boring, and sometimes painfully difficult to read captcha • you've made the process more fun, • you've reduced the load on the actual secure purchase server • You'll train the users that they will need to "DO" something to get a BOC • You'll stopped the bots at the interim page, delaying their purchases until most people have at least had a chance to try and figure out the funny, but not terribly difficult puzzle.
• Since being random is what a BOC is all about, a random, and changing puzzle/task would fit in simply with the whole pitch of a BOC.

As you experiment, the technology behind the interim page can become more advanced, with random information that can be captured for use in the purchase page. Since

I have purchased, without the aid of bots, or any scripts other than wootalyzer, which I feel is an acceptable aid, 7 BOC's since 5/31/05. The best one, which I didn't get, was the Please Please Me BOC. The B&D batteries were also fun, but I'm guessing didn't stump the bots, only frustrated the regular users.

Sometimes the best solution for a technology issue, isn't more technology.

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A potential solution to your particular problem (and not the general one) would be to require users to be signed in if they want to see the 'crap'. Only display the crap prizes to users that happen to be logged in. All other items can remain viewable to non-logged in users as they always have been. Then your loyal users are given first priority to the crap.

You'd obviously have to notify your users of this, perhaps with a notification that this is being done to increase the chances of real users finding the crap.

If your specific problem is bots harvesting for one particular type of item, then take the least restrictive alternative and only defend against that particular attack. This option would then prevent captchyas and the userability hit that you're concerned about.

If the bots log in and start spamming, you could force their log out and lock the account.

If they're only there to get the bag o' crap, they will leave fairly quickly and your page won't be taking the massive hits. Forget the highly technical solutions.

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2 things:

server layer solution: mod_evasive (if you use apache)

http://www.zdziarski.com/projects/mod_evasive/

front layer solution: reverse captcha, or other non intrusive captcha

http://www.ccs.uottawa.ca/webmaster/reverse-captcha.html

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What if you randomized or encrypted the form names and IDs, randomized the order of the form fields, and made the form labels a random captcha image, that'd make a script attack a lot harder :-D

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Make the whole bloody page a CAPTCHA!
Sorta like Sesame Street... eight of these things, don't belong here...

Put 9 items, 9 HTML forms, 9 I WANT ONE buttons on the screen.
(9's just the number for the day... pick whatever number you want to make the layout still look good. 12 perhaps. Maybe customize it some for the resolution of the loading browser...)

And scramble them for each person.
Make sure the BOC has to be "seen" to know which one it is... of course this means the other 8 have to bee "seen only" also, to know they are NOT the item to buy.
Make sure you only use crazy-ass numbers to reference everything behind the scenes on the page's source. Fine, so the BOT sees its BOC time... but it'll be a wild guess to pick the right HTML form to submit back for processing.

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There is probably not a magic silver bullet that will take care of Bots, but a combination of these suggestions may help deter them, and reduce them to a more manageable number.
Please let me know if you need any clarification on any of these suggestions:

  • Any images that depict the item should be either always the same image name (such as "current_item.jpg") or should be a random name that changes for each request. The server should know what the current item is and will deliver the appropriate image. This image should also have a random amount of padding to reduce bots comparing image sizes. (Possibly changing a watermark of some sort to deter more sophisticated bots).
  • Remove the ALT text from these images. This text is usually redundant information that can be found elsewhere on the pages, or make them generic alt text (such as "Current item image would be here").
  • The description could change each time a Bag of Crap comes up. It could rotate (randomly) between a number of different names: "Random Crap", "BoC", "Crappy Crap", etc...
  • Woot could also offer more items at the "Random Crap" price, or have the price be a random amount between $0.95 and $1.05 (only change price once for each time the Crap comes up, not for each user, for fairness)
  • The Price, Description, and other areas that differentiate a BoC from other Woots could be images instead of text.
  • These fields could also be Java (not javaScript) or Flash. While dependent on a third-party plug-in, it would make it more difficult for the bots to scrape your site in a useful manner.
  • Using a combination of Images, Java, Flash, and maybe other technologies would be another way to make it more difficult for the bots. This would be a little more difficult to manage, as administrators would have to know many different platforms.
  • There are other ways to obfuscate this information. Using a combination of client-side scripting (javascript, etc) and server-side obfuscation (random image names) would be the most likely way to do it without affecting the user experience. Adding some obfuscating Java and/or Flash, or similar would make it more difficult, while possibly minimally impacting some users.
  • Combine some of these tactics with some that were mentioned above: if a page is reloaded more than x times per minute, then change the image name (if you had a static image name suggested above), or give them a two minute old cached page.
  • There are some very sophisticated things you could do on the back end with user behavior tracking that might not take too much processing. You could off-load that work to a dedicated server to minimize the performance impact. Take some data from the request and send it to a dedicated server that can process that data. If it finds a suspected bot, based on its behavior, it can send a hook to another server (front end routing firewall, server, router, etc OR back-end web or content server) to add some additional security to these users. maybe add Java applets for these users, or require additional information from the user (do not pre-fill all fields in the order page, making a different field empty each time randomly, etc).
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Why dont you just change the name and picture of the BOC every time you offer it? It would become part of the fun of wooting to see the latest iteration of the BOC.

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Create a simple ip firewall rule that blacklists the IP-address if you detect more than a max. number of requests coming in per second.

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You are making this way to hard. I will probably kick myself since I just won a BOC from the site today with a bot site, but just put the RANDOM CRAP text in captchas on the site main page. The bots all look for the text "RANDOM CRAP". So you basically just avoid triggering them in the first place. Anyone looking with their eyes will see that it says "Random Crap".

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A rather simple solution is to track the time difference between rendering the forms and getting the response: bots usually have extreme short response times of milliseconds, no user could do that; or extreme long response times of several hours.

There's a django snippet doing it, along with a more detailed description:

Alternative to Captchas (Without Human Interaction)

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