RE: Steemcleaner Report for December 15, 2017
I'm somewhat unsure as to the effectiveness of STEEMCLEANERS, moreover if there is any consistency as to what is categorized as spam. I would think that certain abusive activities would fit the bill per the published code of conduct here:
https://steemit.com/steemcleaners/@steemcleaners/tag-spam-and-high-frequency-posting-guide
In regards to abusive activities, I would be under the impression that posting 1500+ (growing by the hour) stolen Youtube videos to STEEMIT would fall into that category as can be found here:
I commented in regards to it using the SteemCleaners tag and was chastised back into peasant status for daring to utilize the tag by (I guess a steemcleaner) member here:
https://steemit.com/steemcleaners/@pawsdog/steemcleaners-useful-fallacy-or-wasted-effort
So I did what any good STEEMIAN would do and wrote an article about it here:
https://steemit.com/steemcleaners/@pawsdog/steemcleaners-useful-fallacy-or-wasted-effort
That said I would welcome so commentary or clarification as to what conduct is or is not acceptable.
They are in line to be added to @mack-bot. If you will check out his post:
https://steemit.com/spaminator/@mack-bot/flag-report-12-17-2017
He's a little overwhelmed right now. I'm trying to find someone to lease me more SP. These are the accounts that are currently posting more than 8 hours a day every 5 minutes:
We've excluded the posting of youtube videos & memes from the @steemcleaners scope as they are inherently meant to be shared.
I'm in the process of redoing my queries so that I have two separate lists for spaminator & mackbot. Currently they share the same list. @mack-bot is a pre-flag and @spaminator follows up with a flag 12 hours before payout to remove rewards.