Title: Block Comment Spam Bots
Author: Rick Hellewell
Published: <strong>Ọ̀pẹ  20, 2019</strong>
Last modified: Igbe 10, 2024

---

Ṣàwárí àwọn plugin

![](https://ps.w.org/block-comment-spam-bots/assets/banner-772x250.png?rev=2669349)

Plugin yìí **kò tíì ṣe àyẹ̀wò pẹ̀lú àwọn ìtújáde mẹ́ta pàtàkì tó kẹ́yìn ti WordPress**.
Ó lè jẹ́ pé a kò tọ́jú tàbí ṣe àtìlẹ́yìn fún un mọ́, ó sì lè ní àwọn ọ̀ràn ìbámu
nígbà tí a bá lò ó pẹ̀lú àwọn ẹ̀yà WordPress tuntun.

![](https://ps.w.org/block-comment-spam-bots/assets/icon-256x256.png?rev=2669349)

# Block Comment Spam Bots

 Láti ọwọ́ [Rick Hellewell](https://profiles.wordpress.org/rhellewellgmailcom/)

[Ṣe ìgbàsílẹ̀](https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots.zip)

 * [Àwọn àlàyé](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/#description)
 * [Àwọn àgbéyẹ̀wò](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/#reviews)
 *  [Ìgbéwọlẹ̀](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/#installation)
 * [Ìdàgbàsókè](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/#developers)

 [Ìrànlọ́wọ́](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/)

## Àpèjúwe

Professional spammers use programs to automate their spamming. The ‘Block Comment
Spam Bots’ (BCSB) plugin efficiently blocks their process. No more comment spam!

As no legitimate user will use the professional spammerÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s automated
process which relies on cURL and WGET commands, real users will never notice the
BCSB plugin at work. There are no CAPTCHAS for your visitors to interact with. No
silly questions. Just the comment form as designed in any theme.

On the admin side, there are no blacklists, special keys (like Askimet), overloaded
spam queues, or overworked databases that store spam comments until you manually
delete them.

Install the plugin and thatÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s it. Invisible, to you and your visitors.
The only change you will notice is in your admin area. The list of comments now 
has a green check next to them. That way you know that comment was made on your 
website by a real person and was not bypassed by hacking spammers connecting directly
to your server.

All that remains is comments made by real people, and while real people can spam,
it takes them time and effort. The amount of spam from real people is a lot more
manageable than the tsunami from automated spammers, saving you time to concentrate
on the important things in life, like your readers, and making connections.

WeÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ve tested it on multiple websites and it wipes out automated spam
completely. If it doesnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t on your site, please let us know.

** Geeky Stuff **
 …in case you are interested in how it works…

tl;dr Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – **This provides a total and easy solution to comment spam
from spam bots.**

Comments are processed by the WordPress wp-post-comments.php file. Automated spammers(‘
spam bots’) can provide (‘post’) data directly to that page, bypassing any comment
processing, by using CURL/WGET commands.

Bypassing the comment form by posting directly (via CURL or WGET commands), is quite
easy. Just send the post ID number, and the botÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s fake name and email,
and the spammy content. Boom! Comment spam is on your site!

The result is comment spam Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – and that is not always caught by other
comment spam checkers. Even if it is caught by programs such as Akismet, processing
that spam takes some server resources, including writing to the database.

This plugin uses several techniques to ‘sense’ a spambot. There are hidden fields
that are changed after a delay. There is a delay in displaying the submit button.
And it blocks direct access to the WordPress post/processing functions.

The techniques, also used in our standalone “FormSpemmerTrap” (FST) program, and
our other anti-spam plugins (like FormSpammerTrap for Comments), are very effective.
They use a bit of JavaScript to block spambots Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – since automated 
processes via CURL/WGET/etc cannot process JS code.

ItÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s simple: you install this plugin, activate it, and bot comments
will stop. Immediately.

And it doesnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t add any visual impediments to your comments. No reCaptcha
things (which many see as a pain). No silly questions (‘what is 2+8’) on the form.
Your comment form does not change. Regular users will not notice a difference. But
you will. No more spam comments for you!

**This is the best solution to block comment spam.** WeÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ve tested
it on a site that had 20-40 spam comments a day. With this plugin enabled, the spam
comment stopped. Immediately. And there have been none since installing this plugin.**
Not one. Zero.**

The Admin, Comments list page is modified to show a column with a green checkmark
icon if the comment was entered by a real person and not a bot. This is an assurance
that the comment was not entered via an automated CURL/WGET to the wp-comments-post.
php file. A comment that is on the list that does not show the checkmark was done
by a bot. But you wonÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t see those blocked comments with this plugin
enabled. They never get into your database. You can hover over the checkmark icon
to see the GUID value indicating a person entered the comment.

The plugins ‘Settings’ screen has no settings. You donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t even need
to look at the Settings screen. If you do, youÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ll see information
about the plugin. And there is a CURL command you can use to test the effectiveness
of blocking (or not blocking) direct access to the wp-comments-post.php file.

The plugin also adds the hidden GUID field to the comment form after a delay to 
help block bots that are using the comment form to submit. If the hidden field is
not submitted then a bot tried to bypass the comment form. And a short delay happens
before the comment submit button is displayed Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – another bot protection.

## Ìgbéwọlẹ̀

This section describes how to install the plugin and get it working.

 1. Upload the plugin files to the `/wp-content/plugins/plugin-name` directory, or 
    install the plugin through the WordPress plugins screen directly.
 2. Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ screen in WordPress
 3. Use the Settings->Plugin Name screen to configure the plugin
 4. (Make your instructions match the desired user flow for activating and installing
    your plugin. Include any steps that might be needed for explanatory purposes)

## FAQ

### Does it really work?

Yep. WeÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ve tested it on a site that was getting 20-40 spam comments
a day. We installed and activated the plugin, and the spam comments stopped immediately.
And just like that battery rabbit, itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s still going strong, blocking
comment spam. The plugin will work the same on your site Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – no more
comment spam!

### Does this modify the comment form?

The comment form will look as it always did. No additional visible fields. No reCaptchas.
No silly questions. Only the spambots will notice the difference Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: –
and we donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t care about them.

### Are there any settings?

Nope. Just an information screen about how it works, including an easy way to test
blocking automated comment spam.

### What about customized comment forms?

The plgin makes no changes to the visual or operational comment form. It just adds
a hidden field with a unique value, then checks for that field on submit. It delays
showing the Submit button. And it changes field names and values to block automated‘
scrapers’. Plus it blocks direct posting to the comment processing code.

### What about Contact forms?

This plugin doesnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t affect Contact forms; it just works on comments.

But we have a solution for Contact forms Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – see our https://www.FormSpammerTrap.
com (FST) site. It works on WordPress and other sites. Takes a small bit of customization
for your WP theme, but full instructions and examples are included. And it is quite
easy to customize your contact form. An example of a customized contact form is 
on the FST site. (We will implement the Contact form customization on your site 
for a small fee.)

And, like this plugin, itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s entirely free.

### So a full solution for comment and contact spam is …?

This plugin which takes care of comment spam, plus the FormSpammerTrap code you 
can easily add to your site for Contact forms.

YouÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’re welcome!

## Àwọn àgbéyẹ̀wò

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/45b54e7c4547933fcad612baa76f69ed4cf2e584d52da069826093ee3da48081?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Works perfectly Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – no more spam since installation!](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/works-perfectly-no-more-spam-since-installation/)󠁿

 [mikemacd](https://profiles.wordpress.org/mikemacd/) Òkúdù 10, 2025

What a brilliant plugin! IÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’m surprised it is so undiscovered and 
doesnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t have tens of thousands of installations. ItÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá:’
s June 2025 and we are running WordPress 6.8.1 with the Divi Theme. Even though 
it hasnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t been updated for a while, itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s working perfectly.
I hope the author keeps it going. Our busy site was being plagued by robot spam 
on a near daily basis Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – then I discovered ‘Block Comment Spam Bots’.
ItÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s been installed for over 2 months and we have not had a single
spam entry since then. Regular visitor comments arrive without any problems.When
I came across it in April, I was impressed with authorÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s practical
approach and detailed description of how it works, so I thought I would give it 
a try. ItÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s simply super and so logically conceived. Five stars from
me. Thank you Rick!

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9ca7f2f845cb0e1d559453da5ccaf80d7ba2588c3d7e8813b9a78662ed2cafe4?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Works as a charm!](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/works-as-a-charm-25/)󠁿

 [vaszeit](https://profiles.wordpress.org/vaszeit/) Igbe 5, 2024 1 ìdáhùn

IÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ve been running this plugin for a couple of weeks now and I havenÌtumọ̀
Yorùbá: ’t seen a single spam comment and I used to get dozens per day. This plugin
is very unique in how it tackles comments from spam bots and I it works very well.
I got tired from constantly analyzing spam comments and blocking offending IPs, 
which worked only partially well and was very time consuming. Now, I donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá:’
t worry about reviewing dozens of junk entries in my comment queue and only see 
comments from real users. I donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t see any junk any more. It feels
good! Thank you for this plugin. I wish I had discovered it sooner but I am happy
that going forward I wonÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t have to waste my time on spammers and 
their damn spam comments.

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/dac7c3298ecb56c1d250245fab58d45b9d416d732b00e0ea43b65460d0983dea?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Perfect](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/perfect-10167/)󠁿

 [raywjohnson](https://profiles.wordpress.org/raywjohnson/) Ọ̀pẹ 21, 2023 1 ìdáhùn

Thank you for the excellent plugin. Simple and direct. No complex setup or configuration.
Install and enjoy. After install, comment spam went from around 100 a day to nothing.
And still nothing. Installed 3 months ago. Well done!

![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fe52d3ae211af78b840b97ba6f707cddc473bf5d306d358004e791053a7d5ef9?
s=60&d=retro&r=g)

### 󠀁[Perfect Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – sort of…](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/perfect-sort-of/)󠁿

 [](https://profiles.wordpress.org/philip-s/) Ṣẹrẹ 19, 2022

It does the job of killing automated spambots that use the cURL command. Spammers
use cURL to bypass your websiteÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s post/ page and contact your server
directly to access WordPress. It seems that cURL is how the ‘big boys’ of spam can
flood the internet with their trash. So far this plugin has been flawless in its
killing ability. I always moderated all my comments (because spam is out of control)
along with Akismet. The annoyance I had was seeing all that spam in the queue! None
of it was ever real. Akismet dumps all that dross in my spam queue for me to look
at and fill up my database with trash. A complete waste of time, and there is no
way to automatically delete this type of spam before it gets into the database. 
Which irks me. I looked at every type of plugin, but this is the only one that actually
works in the way I want it to: nips spam in the bud. Never touches my database, 
and that makes me happy. Hence my over-enthusiastic 5 stars for this plugin… Nonetheless,
it has a couple of issues on the admin side; Issue 1 If you reply to a comment from
the admin home page it will come up with an error (well it did for me, it thought
I was a spammer in my own Admin LOL, you have to see the funny side), the workaround
is to go client-side and post a reply on the post/ page. I can live with that for
the time being. Issue 2 The other issue I noticed it a reported change in IDs for
comments. I use a plugin to show the IDs of pages, posts and comments, and after
installing this plugin the ID came up as a long string of numbers and letters instead
of the usual neat number. I checked my WordPress installÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s database,
and it seems to have not altered anything (a nice neat number in the database as
always despite being processed by this plugin), and the ID of the comment is correct
on the actual post/ page (viewed source in browser). Both issues seem to be a bug.
As there is no damage in the database I suspect itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s a display issue.
I posted the first in the support and IÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’ll add that second. Rick 
answered and suspects itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s a filter issue. 5 stars Still, for me 
5 stars. ThatÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s how much I hate seeing all that spam. No real person
is going to use a cURL command to post to your website so I can sleep at night knowing
that no legitimate user is getting binned. I hope Rick continues to support this
plugin as itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s the best for blitzing the hell out of automated spam.
Philip

 [ Ka gbogbo àwọn àgbéyẹ̀wò 4 ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/)

## Àwọn Olùkópa & Olùgbéejáde

“Block Comment Spam Bots” jẹ́ ètò ìṣàmúlò orísun ṣíṣí sílẹ̀. Àwọn ènìyàn wọ̀nyí 
ti ṣe ìkópa sí plugin yìí.

Àwọn Olùkópa

 *   [ Rick Hellewell ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/rhellewellgmailcom/)

[Túmọ̀ “Block Comment Spam Bots” sí èdè rẹ.](https://translate.wordpress.org/projects/wp-plugins/block-comment-spam-bots)

### Ṣe o nífẹ̀ẹ́ sí ìdàgbàsókè?

[Ṣàwárí koodu](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/browser/block-comment-spam-bots/),
ṣàyẹ̀wò [ibi ìpamọ́ SVN](https://plugins.svn.wordpress.org/block-comment-spam-bots/),
tàbí ṣe àgbékalẹ̀ sí [àkọsílẹ̀ ìdàgbàsókè](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/log/block-comment-spam-bots/)
nípasẹ̀ [RSS](https://plugins.trac.wordpress.org/log/block-comment-spam-bots/?limit=100&mode=stop_on_copy&format=rss).

## Àkọsílẹ̀ àwọn àyípadà

** Version 2.62 (4 Apr 2022) **
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Improvements to hidden field area;
reduces chance of warning-type error.

** Version 2.6/2.61 (16 Feb 2022) **
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – The hidden field is only 
added on pages (posts) with the comment form. Previously that JS code was added 
to all pages, causing issues with forms on other pages having the JS code to process
a hidden field that wasnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t there.

** Version 2.5 (30 Jan 2022 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – later that same day) **
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá:–
Removal of override of the ‘p’ font size on the front end. Snuck in there while 
I wasnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t looking.

** Version 2.4 (30 Jan 2022) **
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Minor changes to the header of
the Setting page (to add the CellarWeb.com logo). Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Minor changes
to the text on the Settings page. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – CSS file is now cache-proof. 
Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Change to the image shown on the plugin page. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – 
CellarWeb.com logo now a jpg for faster loading.

** Version 2.3 (28 Jan 2022) **
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Changes to the plugin description
and text on the Settings/Info screen, and to the text of this readme file. Changes
inspired by suggestions from ‘phillip-s’ (Thanks again!). Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Enhanced
the fake field to the comment form Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – which is changed after a delay.
Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Code cleanup, removing unused functions. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – minor
visual changes to the Settings page text; added shadows to the boxes. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá:–
Changes to this readme file.

** Version 2.2 (23 Jan 2022)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Fixed bug where replying to a comment
in the comment admin area would give you a ‘go away spammer’ message on submitting
the reply. This required a more complex check if you were in the admin area; the
GUID value is forced into the $_POST if in admin area. (Thanks to phillip-s for 
the alert.)

(Geeky explanation) The enhancement uses the role of the current user to check their‘
moderate comments’ capability. Admin, editors, and author roles have that capability.
Since those roles allow them access to the admin/comments screen (and editor/authors
only see the comments for their level, as opposed to the admin role that can see
everything), then those roles can see the ‘reply’ link for each comment, and we 
donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t need to add any special fields to the comment drop-down form.
We just add the GUID for that instance, because a valid user is replying to (which
is creating a new comment) via the admin/comments screen.
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Fixed
bug where the GUID value is displayed on added columns from other plugins, rather
than the date from those other plugins. (Thanks to phillip-s for the alert.) Ìtumọ̀
Yorùbá: – Changed the heading for indicating that the comment was done by a human
from “Bot Blocked?” to “Comment Verified”. The old heading could indicate that the
comment was from a bot, rather than from a human. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Changed the display
of the “Comment Verified” column to show a green check mark, rather than the GUID
value. If you hover over the checkmark icon, you will see the GUID value in a tooltip.
Done to show less clutter on comment list screen. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added constant
for the checkmark icon for a slight performance increase. so we donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá:’
t call the plugin_dir_url function for each checkmark icon display. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá:–
Fixed minor warning-type error in the function that checks if the GUID value is 
in the POST on comment submit. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Changed the BCSB_VERSION_NUMBER 
from a global variable to a constant (used on the plugin info pages). Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá:–
Added additional text to the settings screen reminding you to refresh that screen
if you are trying the CURL command again. This changes the random value in the sample
CURL command, so you donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t get a ‘duplicate comment’ message. Ìtumọ̀
Yorùbá: – Minor text changes to the Settings screen. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Minor code
formatting.

**Version 2.1 (24 July 2020)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – added a delay to showing the ‘submit’
button. It will display after a short delay. This will prevent an inadvertent ‘spammer
catch’ of a person that creates a comment offline, then pastes the comment text 
into the comment box and then submits before the timeout. (The timeout is there 
to prevent a bot submission of the comment.) Initially, the person will not see 
the submit button. After the short delay, the submit button will appear as normal.

**Version 2.0 (23 July 2020)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – fixed bug where hidden field wasnÌtumọ̀
Yorùbá: ’t being inserted into the comment form if the user was **not** logged in.
Bug didnÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t happen when user was logged in. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – set the
extra hidden field to not be visible on the form. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – note that this
plugin uses the wp_generate_uuid4() function to create a (mostly) random value used
in the hidden field after the delay. This value is not truly random; there is the
possibility of duplicates. But we donÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’t care if there are duplicates,
just that itÌtumọ̀ Yorùbá: ’s a WP-verifiable UUID, and that it was changed after
the delay. (The delay in changing that hidden fields, and verifying it is a WP-valid
UUID, is one of the layers of spambot protection.) Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Changed heading/
text of the hidden meta value shown on the Admin Comment Editing screen, and made
the field read-only. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added single-click of the CURL command on 
the Settings page to get it into your clipboard. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – removed some unused/
testing code.

**Version 1.5 (1 Jan 2020)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Changed the styling of the box that
shows the CURL command for the site. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added an additional image 
showing a possible result from the CURL command. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Minor CSS changes.
Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Some minor changes to the information on the settings/information
screen.

**Version 1.4 (29 Dec 2019)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added more info to the FAQ area.
Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Some more info on the Settings/Info screen.

**Version 1.3 (24 Dec 2019)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added the storage and display of
the hidden field on the Admin, Comments screen. That field can be edited, although
not sure why you would want to. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – The addition of a column for the
hidden field value will allow you to see if a spammy comment was entered manually.
A blank value indicates that the comment was entered manually. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – 
Added a timed delay to change the value of the hidden field, to prevent automated
entry of the actual comment form. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added additional information 
on the ‘Info/Settings’ screen, including the CURL command you can use to try to 
automated a comment. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – All function and variable names now have a
prefix to ensure that there are no conflicts with other core/theme/plugin functions
or values. Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Added CSS files, and images in the assets folder. Ìtumọ̀
Yorùbá: – Some minor changes to this readme file for additional information.

**Version 1.2 (23 Dec 2019)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Not released/testing version

**Version 1.1 (18 Dec 2019)**
 Ìtumọ̀ Yorùbá: – Initial Release (prior versions 
used in development only)

## Àkójọpọ̀ Meta

 *  Ẹ̀yà **2.62**
 *  Ìgbàgbọ́hùn tó kẹ́yìn **ọdún 2 sẹ́yìn**
 *  Àwọn ìgbéwọlẹ̀ tó ṣiṣẹ́ **800+**
 *  Ẹ̀yà WordPress ** 4.9 tàbí ju bẹ́ẹ̀ lọ **
 *  Dánwò dé **6.5.8**
 *  Ẹ̀yà PHP ** 5.4 tàbí ju bẹ́ẹ̀ lọ **
 *  Èdè
 * [English (US)](https://wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/)
 * Àwọn àmì
 * [blocking](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/blocking/)[bots](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/bots/)
   [comments](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/comments/)[spam](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/tags/spam/)
 *  [Ìwòye Tó Péye](https://yor.wordpress.org/plugins/block-comment-spam-bots/advanced/)

## Àwọn ìbò

 5 lára àwọn ìràwọ̀ 5.

 *  [  4 5-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/?filter=5)
 *  [  0 4-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/?filter=4)
 *  [  0 3-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/?filter=3)
 *  [  0 2-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/?filter=2)
 *  [  0 1-star reviews     ](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/?filter=1)

[Your review](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/#new-post)

[See all reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/reviews/)

## Àwọn Olùkópa

 *   [ Rick Hellewell ](https://profiles.wordpress.org/rhellewellgmailcom/)

## Ìrànlọ́wọ́

Nǹkan wà tí o fẹ́ sọ? Ṣé o nílò ìrànlọ́wọ́?

 [Wo àpéjọ ìrànlọ́wọ́](https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/block-comment-spam-bots/)

## Ṣe ìtọrẹ

Ṣé o fẹ́ ṣe àtìlẹ́yìn fún ìlọsíwájú plugin yìí?

 [ Ṣe ìtọrẹ sí plugin yìí ](https://cellarweb.com/)