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Are you getting Strava kudos or follow requests from bots?

What is the company doing about the issue?

For several years now, Strava users have been receiving kudos, follow requests and requests to join clubs from spam profiles. For the most part, it’s little more than an irritant, but it’s still one that many would like to see resolved.

Posting on the road.cc forum last week, Yorkshire Wallet asked whether others had ever been given kudos by complete strangers with odd profiles. The user who had given Yorkshire Wallet kudos had uploaded a run in which they had apparently covered 19 miles in 19 minutes.

Yrcm was one of the first to confirm that random kudos is far from unheard of on the social site. “I had kudos on two successive days for my commutes on a 16kg hybrid from busty young women capable of running at 60mph. They also happened to be short of sportswear judging from their profile pics and said they were looking for love. So you're not alone.”

“I've had the same,” added mrml. “Briefly got me to HR zone 3.”

A Strava spokesperson said only: "Strava is aware of the issue and investigating."

6 reasons to use Strava

A March 19 post on the Strava Support pages says: “We are aware that a new group of spam accounts has been created, and is giving kudos. These profiles are in the process of being deleted, and the kudos they left will also be deleted.”

A statement elsewhere asks that users get in touch whenever they encounter an account they suspect of being spam.

It reads:

We take any fraudulent activity seriously at Strava and we work constantly to prevent such activity that violates our terms and affects the user experience. As is the same for any open social network, it is not possible to block spam, bots, unwanted solicitations and fraudulent activity entirely. However, we are at your service to help whenever possible. Please reach out to us directly with any further questions and to report fraudulent or spam activity.

To report content, we offer the following tools:

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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4 comments

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alansmurphy | 6 years ago
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Can you forward her my way...

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A440 | 6 years ago
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After my last ride, I recieved a kudo from an attractive young woman who wanted me to _her.

I said "huh" and dismissed it.

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Kelpie66 | 6 years ago
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At one stage I was getting people with no activities following me and commenting on my activities with porn links, I would delete the comment and block the person and log it with strava with the athleteID.

Another Issue is the privacy locations, Strava crops your activity at the start and end and not the middle, meaning if go and do a ride from home (private location) and happen to forget something and go back home to get it and go back  out for your ride and come back home your activity will show you going to your home.

To put it simply your ride is a piece of string, strava just cuts off the ends of the string !!

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joules1975 replied to Kelpie66 | 6 years ago
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Kelpie66 wrote:

Another Issue is the privacy locations, Strava crops your activity at the start and end and not the middle, meaning if go and do a ride from home (private location) and happen to forget something and go back home to get it and go back  out for your ride and come back home your activity will show you going to your home.

To put it simply your ride is a piece of string, strava just cuts off the ends of the string !!

 

This, and the issues raised in the article are why I do record my rides on Strava, but they are private by default, and I have all the privicy settings on.

If there was an offline alternative for logging the rides, I'd use that instead, but yet to find one.

Unlike many others it would seem, I'm happy in the knowledge that I'm ridden my bike and I don't need everyone else to know about it.

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