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Maggie Tsai

No spamming allowed - 81 views

spam

started by Maggie Tsai on 14 Feb 08
  • Maggie Tsai
     
    Don't post anything non-related to the topics of this group. Any violation will cause your diigo user privilege permanently removed
  • Maggie Tsai
     
    Re-iterate:

    While we encourage knowledge sharing, for any Diigo public group, please exercise good judgment when posting bookmarks to a group. Don't post anything non-related to the topics of the group. Any violation will change your status as a spammer, and cause your diigo user privilege permanently removed
  • yuppi c
     
    I don't know where to put this - I just want to warn other group admins...

    Banned a group member that's using diigo as a self promotion tool - Personally I find this attitude anti-social :
    This user's submitted bookmarks, all belonging to the same website, to many groups.

    SOCIAL: "behaviours which take the interests, intentions or needs of other people into account (in contrast to anti-social behaviour)"
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social
  • Mark Nelson
     
    I keep getting a ton of off-topic stuff in this group. Most of it is coming from Paul Reyes Fournier. I'm not saying he's a spammer. He may well be a perfectly upstanding member of the community who just doesn't quite understand the tool yet. Could the collaboration group admin or a Diigo staffer talk to him?

    Thanks!


    Maggie Tsai wrote:
    > Re-iterate:
    >
    > While we encourage knowledge sharing, for any Diigo public group, please exercise good judgment when posting bookmarks to a group. Don't post anything non-related to the topics of the group. Any violation will change your status as a spammer, and cause your diigo user privilege permanently removed
  • yuppi c
     
    Some seem to just follow the advice from SEO websites, where they explain as tips that you can use social bookmarks to promote yours websites. They explain it as if it's the MUST thing to do... =(
  • Mark Nelson
     
    Yeah. I actually have no problem with that, *IF* it passes the relevance criteria, in which case it's collaborative behaviour, but if it doesn't , I agree, it's not just anti-collaborative, it's anti-social, anti-community.

    3spots c wrote:
    > Some seem to just follow the advice from SEO websites, where they explain as tips that you can use social bookmarks to promote yours websites. They explain it as if it's the MUST thing to do... =(

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