Car Ad On Craigslist Has Hidden Paragraph On Hitler
Our commenter Zorantor discovered a weird, uh, can you call this an Easter egg?, buried at the bottom of a Craigslist post last night:
I was poking around craigslist tonight, to see if I could find a gift for a friend of mine who's interested in World War II. I didn't find much that caught my eye. That is, until I tried searching "Hitler."
This is the very first post that came up: http://worcester.craigslist.org/ctd/1179587946.html"
It's an advertisement for an Internet-based car dealership. It wasn't immediately apparent to me what a 2009 Toyota Corolla had to do with the führer, I did a ctrl-F to search for the term.
What I discovered is that at the bottom of the page, beneath the ad and in white text (so as to be invisible until highlighted) was an incomplete paragraph about Hitler's rise to power, written in such a way that it could be praise depending on how the paragraph ends.
I thought it was traditional to use George Washington and Abraham Lincoln to sell cars, but I guess in this economy people are willing to try anything.
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Comments:
I help out a lot on the CL help forums, and this is a tactic spammers use to get by the spam filters that prevent you from posting duplicate ads. They copy the ad they want to post (usually all HTML, which is also absolute flag bait on craigslist), and then they copy a few random sentences off of wikipedia or some other place at the bottom so the ad is just different enough to get through the spam filter and post. Using this tactic, spammers manage to post dozens, sometimes hundreds of ads all over the country. All of which are equally prohibited for spamming and should be flagged accordingly.
I see it a lot in cars/trucks, pets, real estate (RE agents/brokers are some of the worst offenders, actually), jobs, jewelry, electronics, etc. Pretty much all over the site.
The reason you see those odd bits of text at the bottom of postings is that spammers (and scammers) use automated programs which post thousands and thousands of ads to Craigslist at a time. The text at the bottom is a couple sentences of random text taken from a larger storage that is appended in an effort to defeat Craigslist multiple post detection. Same reason why you see ads with pictures of text rather then just text.
When a post gets flagged for deletion and then removed - the automated program just puts it back up again. Whenever you see such a Craigslist add with the odd text appended to it at the bottom you can be assurred that it is a scam being run by a shady person - run away.
Some Commentary - these sorts of things did not happen when Craig Newmark (the founder) was running the show down there. As many of you know he sold a large percentage of Craigslist to eBay and then moved on to other things - as is his right.
Craigslist used to be a little haven on the web - after the eBay takeover ...well we all know that Craig's is increasingly less useful due to spams and scams. Oh ...and who is (or was ) Craigslist the biggest of? That's right, eBay.
Bye bye Craigslist - you were nice while you lasted. :(
Of the millions of ads placed, a couple crappy ones show up. Out of the billions of responses generated, a couple hail from Niger. (shrug)
To be fair, CL has grown a bit as well. It's no longer something even a staff of people could easily manage.
That said, I hope they get some programming wizzes, or social networking (perhaps on a Wiki model, with "blessed" admins w/ insta-kill privs) to nip this in the bud.
There was a time when eBay could have been saved as well. And Craig's people are like a gajillion times smarter than Meg and her people.
Did anyone think that maybe, just maybe their page had been hacked? It happened to my church's web page a few months ago - everything looked normal but in a search on any major search engine some rather pornographic phrases popped up in the search results. Someone had gotten access to our page through our providers shared server - they kept the page in tact but left rather nasty and raunchy bits that we would have otherwise missed.
@Cupajo: I haven't, but I have driven my friend's Tercel a couple times. Driving it does remind me a little of Mussolini.
@menty666: When friends from out of state come to visit, I like to pronounce it "Wor-chest-er" and then laugh at them when someone corrects them.
@Trai_Dep: "Of the millions of ads placed, a couple crappy ones show up. Out of the billions of responses generated, a couple hail from Niger."
Perhaps you are not hunting for a job! If you are, you would see quickly that "crappy" is not nearly a strong enough word to describe the number fraudulent job ads one must wade through.
Not sure what you mean by the "Niger" remark. Are you referring to Nigerian scams? I have yet to come across anything from Nigeria while looking for jobs, let alone Niger. Doesn't surprise me if Nigerian scammers have found a home on Craigslist, though. I don't even use Craigslist any more for job hunting- got tired of weeding through the junk ads.
@bcsus83: Yup, alot of hidden text in the spam-istic listings for dating too. Fun to read in the the smaller craiglist cities which do not have an active flagging community or are only now understanding how it works...
@Trai_Dep: You've never sold anything on craigslist if you say a couple of responses in a billion hail from Nigeria/et al. Just ONE car for sale ad alone will generate a couple of scam responses from the "over pay you and send me the rest" fake check scammers ...
@jrlcopy: it also makes it easier to find the listing by unrelated searches. i suspect there was nothing malicious by posting this, just some deception to increase the number of visits and, like you said, ensure the post was unique.
@econobiker: Always a laugh to get an offer to buy an old beater you're getting rid of from overseas somewhere.
@Audiyoda:
How do you hack craigslist? Not likely. Especially considering that these texts are known ways to circumvent spam filters, and that they usually show up on spam/overpost listings.


















I don't think this seller can be trusted. At all.