Reporting Spam
No one likes spammers, including the Khoros Community team! Here are some methods for reporting spam on our community. Spam in Private Messages: Did you receive a suspicious Private Message from another user? To report this issue to our team, click on the gray three-dot menu at the right side of any message and choose Report Message, and we'll handle the abuse as soon as possible. Please include the username and content of the message you received. Spam in Posts: If you spot a forum post, question, or blog comment that appears to be spam, please flag it to the Khoros Community team by clicking the grey gear icon at the top right of a post and select "Report". Be sure to note that the post appears to be spam. Thanks for your help in keeping the Khoros Community spam free! If you are looking for information on how to handle spam on your own community, we recommend that you read our Tips on combatting spam and check out our documentation on the new spam management tools. Please note you'll need to be a customer or partner to view these articles, including having the respective roles on Atlas. Reach out to communityhelp@khoros.com for assistance.20KViews9likes7CommentsAbout Aurora Email Notifications
As a community member, you receive email notifications for different types of activity across the community. To manage your email notification preferences, see Manage Follow and Notification preferences for your account. Email notification triggers Email notifications may be sent in a variety of situations. Some may require action while others may be purely informational. Below are descriptions of the notifications you may receive. More email notification types will be available in future releases. Community member notifications Notification Description New Accepted Solution A post is marked as a solution on a topic a community member is following Accepted Solution Reminder Reminder to check answers on content and to mark applicable posts as solutions Answer Accepted as Solution A post is marked as a solution on a topic a community member created New Follow (Digest) Daily or weekly digest that provides updates from the community member’s followed content New Follow (Immediate) Immediate notification that provides updates based on the community member’s email notification settings Group Email Invitation Member or non-member is invited via email to join a Group Group Join Request Group owner is notified that someone has requested to join their closed Group Group Membership Accepted Community member is notified that they have been accepted into a Group Group Membership Denied Person is notified of being rejected entry into a Group. Group owners can add an optional description explaining the reason the person was rejected. Group Private Message Invitation Community member is invited to join a Group. They receive a private message invitation to join and an email notification for the new private message. New Private Message Community member receives a new private message in their Inbox Private Message Sent Admin is notified when a broadcast private message is delivered Private Community Invitation Person is invited to join the community by email and receives instructions on how to register via email New Like Community member receives a like on their content New Content Mention Community member’s content is mentioned by another user Member Mention Community member is mentioned by username by another person Email Address Change Confirmation Community member attempts to change their email address (non-SSO authentication) Forgot Password Community member begins the Forgot Password flow Confirm Registration When registered, community member confirms their email address in this notification to complete the registration process (non-SSO authentication) Email Verification Required to Publish Content Community member attempts to publish content when their email address is not verified Email Address Verification Community member requests the verification email to be resent Rank Change Community member achieves a new rank Event Email Invitation Member or non-member has been invited to an event Event Private Message Invitation Member or non-member is invited to an event. They receive a private message invitation and an email notification for the new private message. New Badge Community member is granted a new badge Admin-only notifications Notification Description Abuse Report Notification Admin or moderator receives a report of abusive content, private messages, or member profiles. Related topics: About Notifications629Views1like0CommentsAbout Aurora Moderation
It is important for your community to be a positive space where members feel welcome, safe, and engaged. To foster this environment, moderators constantly monitor community activity by reviewing content for appropriateness, based on the guidelines you’ve put in place for your community. Using the Moderation tab in the Content Management dashboard, moderators can quickly review and process large volumes of member-generated content. Depending on how you’ve set up your moderation process, content can be reviewed either before or after it is published to the community. From the Moderation tab, you can moderate forum discussion posts and their replies, ideas and their comments, as well as comments on blogs, knowledge bases, and events. Also, you can view the posts or private messages that are rejected as spam, abuse, or for other reasons and take further action on these posts or private messages. Moderation process You can set the moderation mode at the board level. Required: Moderators must moderate content to make it available in the community. (This was previously known as pre-moderation in Communities Classic.) Selective: The content is published, but moderators can moderate it after publication. (This was previously known as post-moderation in Communities Classic.) Auto-approved: Content does not require moderation and is approved automatically. Learn more about configuring moderation modes for various content types. When members post content on the community, the content is immediately routed to the Moderation, based on the moderation settings for that board. Note: When a board is set to Required moderation and members post content on this board, a confirmation message is displayed on the post indicating that post will be published as soon as it is approved from moderators: View Moderation tab Members with elevated permissions (Admins and Moderators) can access the Moderation tab in the Manage Content dashboard. Note that you must enable content moderation at the community level to view the Moderation tab. Members will see the Spam, Abuse, and Moderation tabs. The Moderation tab is where you can review content. By default, the Moderation tab is displayed with the list of unmoderated posts, where the Moderation status is set to unmoderated. The Moderation tab lists: Title: title of the post, reply, or comment Author: authors of the posts and replies Date: the date on which the post or reply is sent for moderation. Status: the publication status (Published or Unpublished) of the posts and replies. Number of views, likes, and comments for each post, reply, or comment. Note: You can sort this list based on the Date. From the Moderation tab, moderators evaluate the posts and replies. They can then approve or reject them, and also message authors about their content. When approved, posts are published in the community or remain in the community based on the moderation settings at board level. They are then removed from the Moderation tab. When rejected, the posts are removed from the community. The posts that are rejected as spam can also be viewed in the Spam tab. Learn more about approving or rejecting posts sent for moderation. To view the rejected posts or private messages, go to Filters and set Moderation Status as Rejected. From the Moderation tab, you can: Open any post to view the content Search and filter posts Approve or reject posts Message members on moderation actions about their posts Review the posts or private messages that have been rejected as Spam, Abuse, or other reasons Refer to the Khoros Communities Moderation Essentials course for training on this feature.598Views0likes0CommentsAbout Khoros Aurora Single Sign-On (SSO)
Khoros Single Sign-on (SSO) enables you to integrate your sign-in and registration system with your Khoros community member system. To create a seamless sign-in experience for community members, the Khoros SSO solution enables your user system to: Create a new member account in your community Sign in a member to the Khoros system Change a member's personal profile parameters in the Khoros system by assigning a role Change a member's permission levels in the Khoros system Members sign in as usual through your main site. After they sign in, they are forwarded to the Khoros site and are automatically signed in or registered in the Khoros system. To integrate with Khoros SSO, the client system must: Be able to create Khoros SSO tokens from its user system Have the Khoros SSO libraries installed Have a client-specific C encryption key installed SSO workflow diagrams Khoros supports cookie-based and parameter-based workflows. Cookie-based Khoros SSO Parameter-based Khoros SSO SSO Sign-Out Flow The flowchart below shows where members are directed upon sign-out. Khoros (Lithium) SSO libraries Khoros issues the Khoros SSO libraries (Java, .NET, or PHP) and a unique encryption key for each deployment. Information for all three versions is provided in the attached SSO Guide. Additionally, you can refer to the attached flowchart for a diagram that explains how SSO works with the Khoros Platform. Note: When using the .NET library, you must have the .NET Framework, not just .NET Core available for all requests to operate properly. Related topics: Khoros Aurora auto-sign in Configure SSO settings for the community499Views0likes2CommentsAbout Aurora SEO
Your community page appearance in web search results is the first impression you make, an important factor in attracting more visitors to your site, and a way to get higher search engine rankings. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is a series of techniques to improve your community's visibility and search engine ranking. Unlike paid search, SEO optimizes your site to get the best results based on the ranking criteria used by various search engines.About Aurora Analytics
To have a successful community, you need to know what’s working and what needs improvement. Aurora provides a robust set of analytics so you can get actionable insights to drive traffic and member engagement. You can determine what kinds of content needs improvement, what your members steer away from, and what they want more of from your community. These metrics help you learn where your members come from, what type of content they engage with, and where to focus on to reach new people. Having clear data enables you to plan towards community goals and make informed decisions to change course when things aren’t working. Aurora Analytics provides visual dashboards and interactive reports to provide you with high-level and detailed data on how your community is performing. Note: Currently, users can see the metrics up to the previous day in Aurora Analytics.. Data is reported in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Accessing Aurora Analytics To access Aurora Analytics, open your Account menu and click Analytics. Note: Members must have an Admin or Analytics role to access Aurora Analytics From the Analytics page, you can access Dashboard and Reports. The Dashboard provides you with an “at-a-glance” view of the activities that best indicate the overall health of your community and member engagement across your community. You can customize Dashboard settings to your requirements and get the most out of your data analysis. Reports present you with key metrics on content, boards, categories, and members in a tabular format. Related topics: Accessing Analytics Dashboard Dashboard Settings Aurora Analytics Metric Definitions Aurora Analytics Reports Refer to the Khoros Communities Analytics Essentials course for training on Communities Analytics.498Views3likes0CommentsAbout Aurora content filters
Communities are meant to be a safe space where members should feel welcomed and engaged. Sometimes, members post objectionable content that may offend other members and negatively impact the community’s overall health. Objectionable content can include inappropriate language or any other terms you might not want to see in the community. Aurora offers content filters as part of its moderation tools to prevent objectionable content from appearing in posts, replies, tags, private messages, profile information, and member registration. When members use inappropriate words across the community, content filters identify them and prevent the content from being published or replacing the words with pre-defined replacement terms. In other cases, content filters just record the objectionable content posted across the community without taking any action. Content filters can also be used to ensure that the correct words are used across the community to improve content consistency. For example, you could create a content filter to replace old product names with the correct product name. Aurora includes several default filters that can be triggered when someone registers, posts, adds a tag, sends private messages, or updates their profile information. Default Filter Applies to Filter action Smut Posts and replies Prevents objectionable language from appearing in posts. Replaces offensive terms with neutral or slightly humorous ones, if configured to do so. Remember, you don’t want to prevent members from posting messages; you just want to keep the language clean. You may want to have your moderators keep an eye out for members who repeatedly use filtered language. Keyword Posts and replies Manages specific words or phrases. Content for this filter may include product and company names—both your own and those of competitors. When filtered keywords are used in content, moderators are notified. Optionally, the terms are replaced with more appropriate or the correct term. Login User signups (Registration page) Prevents people from registering to the community with an inappropriate username or profile info (system default action). Note: The Login filter is not applied if you are using an SSO implementation that passes the person’s username to the community. You must have a system on your side to deal with this situation. Tag Tags added in posts and replies Prevents members from tagging posts with objectionable words. Replaces with an alternate tag if configured to do so. You can add terms to these default filters or edit default filters as needed. You can also add new filters to perform these actions when the filter terms are identified in the community: Do not allow: Prevents members from posting content or replies, registering to the community, adding tags, updating profile information, and sending private messages till the filter term is removed. This more heavy-handed approach runs the risk of either challenging members to find a way to defeat it or alienating them. When filter term is identified, the following error message is displayed: Replace term: Replaces the offensive term with another term. This is the most common way of handling smut filter infractions. You can configure what term to replace words that match this filter in the Replacement term field. When the filter term is identified, it is replaced with the configured term after you post the content. Check inline HTML and do not allow: Prevents the members from posting anything that contains a filtered term after ignoring inline HTML. For example, the term “crap” written in inline html format, “c<b>r</b>a<br>p” in any new post is identified as the filter term after ignoring the inline html. Take no action: Does not take any action on the filtered terms that appear across the community, but records in Content Filters dashboard to notify moderators about these terms used across the community. Tip: Replacement terms are often a better management strategy versus preventing members from posting, as some people might take it as a personal challenge and invest tremendous effort in attempting to circumvent your filters. Another way these members may try to circumvent your filters is by using variations of banned words. For that reason, you may want to plan ahead for possible misspellings or other variations when creating your content filters. Note: Content filters are not case sensitive. For example, to filter for “Test,” “test,” and “TEST,” you need to enter only the term “test” while creating the filter.403Views0likes13CommentsAbout Aurora Communities spam management
Khoros Community spam management tools run in the background, where each new message is logged and tested for spam. Additionally, our system learns about your site content as it monitors all your boards and forums, enabling it to improve its content filtering over time.399Views0likes0CommentsAurora: Manage Follow and Notification preferences for your account
You can manage your follow and notification preferences for the community. Open the Account menu, and then click My Settings. Click Follows & Notifications. The page is divided into different areas for managing your follows and notifications: Follows You can filter the items you follow by clicking the drop-down menu (by default, All is selected) and choosing from among All, Content, Boards, Categories, Groups, or Tags. Once you’ve chosen your filter, you can hover your cursor over the followed item you want to manage, click the options menu, and Unfollow. Email Notifications To adjust your email notification preferences, Get Email Notifications must be turned on in your settings. When this is enabled, additional settings (Receive email notifications when…) appear that enable you to indicate the desired cadence for receiving email notifications. For all settings (except Edits are made to an article within a category or board I follow), you can select Never, Immediately, Daily Digest, or Weekly Digest from the drop-down menu. For the Edits are made to an article within a category or board I follow setting, you can choose from Never, For all edits (includes minor edits), or For all but minor edits. If you select any option but Never, email notifications for this setting are sent immediately. For settings on which you’ve selected Daily Digest or Weekly Digest, applicable notifications are bundled and sent together in one daily or weekly email, respectively. All settings indicate the feature area of the community to which they apply, such as All boards or KB articles and blog posts. Settings related to content apply to all content that you follow in the area indicated. Advanced Settings The following settings, which apply to both in-app (bell icon) and email notifications, enable you to personalize when you receive certain notifications. Select an option from the drop-down menu for each setting. When I’m following a Forum Discussion, notify me about New topics and replies New topics only Send me notifications on posts I have already read Never Always Related topics: About the member Profile page Manage community preferences for your account Manage security settings for your account399Views2likes0CommentsAurora: Enable content moderation and set content moderation defaults
Community moderators review and process large volumes of member-generated content. Moderation is an important part of keeping a community a safe and engaging space for your members to participate. When Content moderation is enabled (from the Settings > Features > Moderation area), members with appropriate permissions can review content from the Content Management dashboard. Depending on how you configure the moderation settings, content can also be auto-approved and skip the moderation process. The moderation process depends on the defaults you set for various boards. Admins can set these moderation defaults for forum discussions and replies, blog comments, ideas and their comments, and knowledge base comments at the community, category, and board levels. Auto-approved: The content is auto-approved and made public without going through moderation review unless flagged. Recommended for trusted areas that are self-regulated by a small group of members. Selective: The content is made public to the community without going through moderation. However, moderators can selectively review this content later, and based on the review, the content stays or is removed from the community. Required: The content must go through moderation for review, and based on the moderator's evaluation, the content is either published or removed from the community. By default, Selective moderation is set for all boards. Understanding the different moderation options Before configuring the content moderation defaults, you must understand the benefits and risks of each option: Auto-approved: Set Auto-approved for places that are designed for open discussions without any need for regulating the content posted by members. Use this option in places that are self-regulated by a small group of members who are accountable for their actions. However, we still recommend you implement the moderation process within the community to avoid spreading inappropriate information. Selective: Similar to Auto-approved, the Selective moderation process also encourages open communication among members in that they can publish content immediately without prior review. Moderators can still review the published content to ensure the posted content is appropriate and adheres to the community’s principles. Use this option in places where members expect fast-paced and live interaction without having to wait long for the moderation process to complete. However, when moderation is delayed, there is the potential risk of inappropriate content (abuse or spam) being posted that impacts readers and disrupts the community. Compared to the Required moderation process, this process is less effective in avoiding spam and abusive content. Required: Required moderation is the best way to combat spam and abusive content because the content is sent to the moderation before it’s made public in the community. This also protects your community’s reputation and creates a safe space for your members by ensuring the appropriate content is posted in the community. However, this process relies on additional resources to review the content, which may delay making the content public. This can disappoint members who want their content to be made public quickly. Enable and set content moderation defaults at community level Sign in to the community as an Admin. Open the Account menu and go to Settings > Features. Click Moderation. The General settings page displays spam and content moderation settings. Here, you can set default moderation statuses for forum topics and replies, blog comments, event comments, idea and comments, and knowledge base comments. To enable content moderation, toggle on the Content moderation option. Note that you cannot moderate the content across the community if this option is not enabled. Under Content moderation defaults, set default moderation statuses for forum topics and replies, blog comments, event comments, ideas and comments, and knowledge base comments at community level. Let’s look at an example in which you want to moderate all forum topics and their replies in the community before they are published to the community. To enable this moderation workflow, set the Default Forum topic and reply status as Required moderation. Based on these settings, all forum topics and replies are sent to the Moderation for review and are published after the moderator’s evaluation. Similarly, you can set default statuses for other content types. Set content moderation defaults at category, group, or board levels The Content moderation defaults set at the community level are inherited to the category, group, and board levels. You can override these options at various levels as needed. Based on the inheritance, the settings applied at different levels are inherited to child places from their parent levels. For example, the content moderation defaults set at category or group levels are inherited to their child places. Learn more about setting inheritance. Let’s look at an example in which you want to set content moderation defaults at category level. To set content moderation defaults at category level: Open the Account menu and go to Settings > Community Structure. On the Community Structure page, click the category where you want to set the content moderation defaults. In the category settings, go to the Moderation section and set Content Moderation defaults as required. When you’ve adjusted a setting for a child place, a PARENT OVERRIDE indicator is displayed next to that setting for the child place to indicate that it overrides the settings of its parent. Similarly, you can set content moderation defaults at the group and board levels. Based on these board-level settings, when members post content on the community, the content is immediately routed to the Moderation for review. When a board is set to Required moderation and members post content on this board, a confirmation message is displayed on the post indicating that post will be published as soon as it is approved from moderators: From the Moderation tab, moderators can review content for appropriateness. They can then approve or reject it, and also message authors of the posts. Learn more about moderating content. Note: it is not possible to set different moderation levels for comments(or replies) and main posts Grant permissions to moderate content Moderation permissions should be granted only to roles assigned to trusted individuals. To manage this permission: Navigate to Admin > Settings > Users > Roles and Permissions. In the row of the role for which you want to manage this permission, click the Options menu and then Edit. In the Permissions area, below Moderation, locate Moderate Content. Select Grant or Deny as required.