はてなキーワード: âgeとは
Different in many ways
As so were those
In World War II
Combat soldier was twenty-six
N-n-n-n-nineteen
The heaviest fighting
Miles northwest of Saigon
N-n-n-n-nineteen, nineteen
N-nineteen, nineteen
In Vietnam, the combat soldier
Typically served a twelve month tour of duty
But was exposed to hostile fire almost everyday
N-n-n-n-nineteen
N-n-n-n-nineteen
In Saigon, a US miltary spokesman
Said today, more than 720 troops
Were killed last week in
2,689 soldiers
All those who remember the war
They won't forget what they've seen
Destruction of men in their prime
Whose average age was nineteen
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
According to a Veteran's Administration study
Half of the Vietnam combat veterans suffer
From what psychiatrists call
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Many vets complain of alienation, rage, or guilt
Some succumb to suicidal thoughts
Eight to ten years after coming home
Almost eight-hundred-thousand men
Are still fighting the Vietnam War
None of them received
A hero's welcome
S-s-s-s-s-Saigon
Nineteen, s-s-s-s-Saigon
N-n-n-n-n-nineteen
表現の自由戦士と生成I規制派の対立ポーズが激しく、その一環で栗下ageの山田赤松sageが盛んに行われている
先日から話題にのぼった「コレクティブ・シャウト」について栗下善行(立民)は海外で関連記事の憂き目にあった記者とのやりとりや、当該団体アカウントのスクリーンショットをXに掲載して問題の啓発をしている
それらを受けて付記したような発言が出てきたのだが、件の発言は議員・非議員の立場の違いを考慮せずになされている
栗下が発言する分には「政治活動はしているが国会議員の権限はないので発言の責任と力は一般人と同じ」なのに対して、国会議員が同じことやったら「議員の権限を背景にした圧力をかけられる」……という事を表現の自由戦士は松戸の交通安全キャンペーンに対する全国フェミ議連(現役議員)の公開質問状によってよく思い知らされた
なので「コレクティブ・シャウト」という具体的組織が発見されても、なんらかの手続きがないのであれば軽率に発言・発信が出来ない立場であり、たとえ当該団体による表現規制がかなり疑わしくとも事前の手続きもなくいきなりSNSで「ここが表現規制をしています!」と言ったら議員としての大きな責任問題が出る
先日支持者らが勝手に山田がやってくれたと勘違いして盛り上がったVISAの公取委処分についても、8月に関係者レクが控えているのに加えて上述の理由から「無関係宣言」も出せないのではなかろうか
https://x.com/r18rensyu/status/1948539599464399084 https://archive.md/qfWNa
https://x.com/r18rensyu/status/1948540629761634486 https://archive.md/S9J2e
各種報道機関の『政治的な公平に配慮する』って、国民に悪政を敷きそうな政党が悪印象に見える「事実」を『悪印象にならない』ように報道する事なの?
ageられる部分よりも優先的に、sageられるべき部分や人をageて見せて伝えるのは政治的公平なの?
最初から、与党でも良いところは良いって伝えてほしいし、野党でも悪いところは悪いって伝えてほしいよ
印象としてはもうずっと、与党の悪いところ と 野党の良いところ ばっかりを主な情報として出されて、 「じゃあ野党が良いのか」と託しても改善が見込めないし、「やっぱり与党か」と信じても飛び抜けて良くなるわけでもないし
各党から追加情報として時々出されるのはスキャンダルとか、政治家の人柄の面に関する印象がほとんどで、してない仕事とかまだ出来てない仕事の情報とその他のsage情報だけ増やされても、聞き手側は、政治的にどうしていいのか、どうして欲しいのかはわかんないよ
そのせいで、声が大きくて自己アピールの上手い危なっかしい人達だけがそれなりにたくさんの信頼を得て、「真実」や「正しさ」を見出されたような感じで台頭していってね、
現状打破にいちばん厄介そうな選択肢の数だけ増えていっても困るよね
取捨選択の時代と言ってもさあ、我々ももうそろそろ、いまは要らないだろっていう情報を受け取ってどうしたらいいのか分からないよね
Different in many ways
As so were those
In World War II
Combat soldier was twenty-six
N-n-n-n-nineteen
The heaviest fighting
Miles northwest of Saigon
N-n-n-n-nineteen, nineteen
N-nineteen, nineteen
In Vietnam, the combat soldier
Typically served a twelve month tour of duty
But was exposed to hostile fire almost everyday
N-n-n-n-nineteen
N-n-n-n-nineteen
In Saigon, a US miltary spokesman
Said today, more than 720 troops
Were killed last week in
2,689 soldiers
All those who remember the war
They won't forget what they've seen
Destruction of men in their prime
Whose average age was nineteen
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
According to a Veteran's Administration study
Half of the Vietnam combat veterans suffer
From what psychiatrists call
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Many vets complain of alienation, rage, or guilt
Some succumb to suicidal thoughts
Eight to ten years after coming home
Almost eight-hundred-thousand men
Are still fighting the Vietnam War
None of them received
A hero's welcome
S-s-s-s-s-Saigon
Nineteen, s-s-s-s-Saigon
N-n-n-n-n-nineteen
毎日お酒飲んで好きなもの食べて、ご飯のお供にカップヌードルをプラスしてたらやっぱりひどい数字になってる。
Chappy曰く、今の数字が肝臓へのダメージが不可逆になるかどうかの瀬戸際らしい。そういえば、ここ最近お酒が受け付けないなー、美味しそうだと思わないなーってタイミング増えてたけど習慣で飲んでた。生活習慣病ってふわっとしたイメージだったけど、これでデッドラインが見えたのでもうとてもはっきり意識できるようになった。分かりやすい。3ヶ月7%減して回復目指そう。みんなも不可逆なダメージなる前に数字チェックして!
---
163cm/67.5kg
AST, ALT: 67H, 140H
Γ-GTP: 83H
尿酸値: 7.9H
アニメや漫画などのフィクションを見る→✕(暇空などオタクが陰謀論にハマった例は結構ある)
ムーなどオカルトをあえて見る→✕(ムーの編集長が参政党ageポストをリポストしてる)
どうすりゃええねん
Different in many ways
As so were those
In World War II
Combat soldier was twenty-six
N-n-n-n-nineteen
The heaviest fighting
Miles northwest of Saigon
N-n-n-n-nineteen, nineteen
N-nineteen, nineteen
In Vietnam, the combat soldier
Typically served a twelve month tour of duty
But was exposed to hostile fire almost everyday
N-n-n-n-nineteen
N-n-n-n-nineteen
In Saigon, a US miltary spokesman
Said today, more than 720 troops
Were killed last week in
2,689 soldiers
All those who remember the war
They won't forget what they've seen
Destruction of men in their prime
Whose average age was nineteen
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
D-d-d-d-d-destruction
According to a Veteran's Administration study
Half of the Vietnam combat veterans suffer
From what psychiatrists call
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Many vets complain of alienation, rage, or guilt
Some succumb to suicidal thoughts
Eight to ten years after coming home
Almost eight-hundred-thousand men
Are still fighting the Vietnam War
None of them received
A hero's welcome
S-s-s-s-s-Saigon
Nineteen, s-s-s-s-Saigon
N-n-n-n-n-nineteen
Hey everyone. I don't know where else to post this. I need to write it down before I convince myself I was just hallucinating. I’m a grad student in Japan, doing fieldwork on forgotten local folklore. That's why I was out in the absolute middle of nowhere in Gunma prefecture last night.
My plan was to visit a tiny, dying village called Yomi-touge (not its real name) that supposedly has some unique traditions. Of course, my phone lost signal hours ago, and my car's GPS, which I bought in 2015, decided to have a total meltdown. The sun went down. The mountain roads are narrow and winding, and a thick, soupy fog started to roll in. The kind of wet, heavy air that makes you feel like you’re breathing water. I was completely, hopelessly lost.
After what felt like an eternity of driving at a crawl, I saw it. A light. A single, brutally bright rectangle of light cutting through the fog. A convenience store. One of those big chains you see everywhere, a FamilyMart or a Lawson, I couldn't tell which at first. I’ve never felt so relieved in my life. I parked the car and practically ran inside, the little door chime sounding way too loud in the dead silence.
The inside was… normal. Too normal. The lights were humming with a high-pitched buzz that drilled into my skull. The shelves were perfectly stocked. The air smelled of cheap air freshener and something else… something sweet and hot, like ozone or burnt sugar.
He was a young guy, maybe my age. Pale, drenched in sweat, with dark circles under his eyes like bruises. He moved with a painful stiffness, like every joint was rusted. He muttered a "Irasshaimase…" without even looking at me, his eyes fixed on the counter. His arms were covered in these intricate, dark tattoos, winding from his wrists up under his sleeves. I figured he was just sick, or on a rough shift. I felt bad for him.
I grabbed a can of coffee and went to the counter. "Sorry to bother you," I started in Japanese, "I'm pretty lost. Could you tell me where I am?"
He looked up, and his eyes didn't seem to focus on me. It was like he was looking at a screen a few inches in front of my face. "We do not provide directional information," he said, his voice a flat, rehearsed monotone. "Will that be all for you?"
Okay, weird, but whatever. Maybe it's store policy. As he reached for my coffee, his sleeve slid up. The tattoos on his arm… they weren’t just pictures. For a split second, I swear to God, the lines of ink shifted. They writhed, like tiny black worms under his skin, and a patch of his forearm glowed with a faint, sickly red light. He flinched, a sharp intake of breath, and quickly pulled his sleeve down.
I just froze. I couldn’t have seen that, right? I was tired, my eyes were playing tricks on me.
The person who walked in… I don’t know how to describe them. It was a man, I think. He was tall and wore an old, soaked trench coat. But his face… it was like my brain refused to process it. It wasn't that he had no face, it was that my eyes would slide right off it. It was a blur, a glitch, a 404 error in human form.
The clerk didn't seem surprised. He didn't even seem to see him as strange. His posture just became even more rigid. The red glow on his arm pulsed again, brighter this time, visible through his sleeve.
The faceless man didn't speak. He just stood there. The clerk, without a word, turned. But he didn't go to the coolers. He kept his back to the man, and held out his left hand, palm up. I heard a soft, wet, squelching sound. From a small, dark slit in the center of his palm that I hadn't noticed before, a small carton of strawberry milk, the kind you give to kids, just… emerged. It was produced out of his hand. It was wet with a clear, viscous fluid.
He placed it on the counter. "Here is the requested product," the clerk said, his voice straining. "The transaction is complete."
The faceless man picked up the strawberry milk. He put it in his coat pocket. And then he just… faded. He didn’t walk out the door. He dissolved into the humming air, like heat haze. A second later, he was gone.
The clerk let out a long, shuddering breath and swayed on his feet. He leaned heavily on the counter, his face sheet-white. He looked utterly, existentially exhausted. He saw me staring, my mouth hanging open, the can of coffee still in my hand.
For the first time, a flicker of something real, something human, crossed his face. It was pure, undiluted terror.
"You… are not a regular customer," he whispered, his voice trembling. "Your… concept is too stable. Please. Leave."
I didn't need to be told twice. I threw a 500 yen coin on the counter and ran out of there so fast I think I broke the sound barrier. I didn't even take my coffee. I just got in my car and drove, I don't know in which direction, I just drove.
I'm at a service station now, about 100km away. The sun is coming up. I can't stop shaking. It wasn't a dream. I know it wasn't. Because when I was fumbling for my keys, I realized I had accidentally grabbed the receipt from the counter.
It’s not for my coffee. It’s for the other transaction. It just has one item listed. It doesn't say "Strawberry Milk." It says:
ITEM: CONCEPTUAL SALVATION (FLAVOR: CHILDHOOD NOSTALGIA) - 1 UNIT
PRICE: ¥0
METHOD: ANNULMENT
Has anyone seen a store like this? What the hell is happening in the mountains of Gunma? What did I see? And God, that poor kid working the counter. He isn't in trouble. He's a part of it. He's the machine.
現時点の他のガンダムで言うと
閃光のハサウェイが3.6とかです
単純な平均点じゃないらしいですが
あと放映が終了してしばらくしてからアマプラに追加されるような作品はそもそもファンしか見ないからか評価高い感じで
さらに当時の感覚とズレてる気がします(制作期間の足りなさが如実に現れてたSEED Destinyが4.6だったり、OOと鉄血はよく話題に上がるのに完全スルーされたりするAGEが4.2だったり)
On the Life and Thought of Leon Trotsky
Leon Davidovich Bronstein—better known as Trotsky—was a revolutionary who embodied the fierce conflict between ideals and reality throughout his life. Born in 1879 in Kherson, Ukraine, he demonstrated exceptional intellect and talent in languages, mathematics, and science, becoming deeply involved in politics from a young age. During his university years, he immersed himself in revolutionary activities, enduring arrests, exile, and escape. Over time, he refined his revolutionary theory and eventually advocated for the “permanent revolution,” a concept that argued for a chain of revolutions beyond national borders. This idea stood in stark contrast to Stalin’s doctrine of “socialism in one country” and became a crucial dividing point between them.
Brilliance and Contradiction as a Revolutionary
Trotsky’s turning point came during the first Russian Revolution in 1905, where he served as chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, organizing workers and soldiers and leading uprisings. His strategic brilliance also shone in the October Revolution and the subsequent civil war. Under his leadership, the Red Army broke through the quagmire of battlefronts and defended the revolutionary regime. By integrating political and military command through the political commissar system, he created a strategic masterpiece that still resonates in revolutionary history.
However, his radical methods and authoritarian command style caused frictions both inside and outside the party. His insistence on state control over trade unions put him at odds with Lenin. The iron grip he proposed to defend the revolution also entailed the silencing of freedom—exposing the first contradiction in his ideology.
The Balance Between Ideal and Power
After Lenin’s death, Trotsky faced a stark conflict between his ideals and the reality of power succession in the Soviet Union. His emphasis on class emancipation and democratic socialism clashed with Stalin’s push for centralized control. This tension culminated in Trotsky’s expulsion from the party in 1927. His idealism cannot simply be deemed “correct”—it was pitted against the gritty realism of political survival.
Though he continued to advocate world revolution as a theorist, Trotsky lost his grip on the Soviet political machinery. His life in exile became a stage for theoretical reconstruction and ideological struggle, but his voice no longer moved the core of the revolutionary leadership.
Even in exile, Trotsky continued writing and lecturing, criticizing Stalinism and initiating the Fourth International. The clash between democratic socialism and authoritarian Stalinism became one of the most striking confrontations in 20th-century ideological history. Yet Trotsky’s theories and organizational efforts remained disconnected from the revolutionized Soviet state, and he ultimately failed to leave a substantial historical legacy.
In 1940, Trotsky was assassinated by an NKVD agent in Mexico, maintaining his integrity as a thinker to the end. Though erased from Soviet history under Stalin’s regime, he remains a symbolic figure of ethical and responsible revolution. Today, Trotsky is increasingly re-evaluated as a vital figure in intellectual history.
📝 英作文問題(Essay-style English Composition Questions)
Q1.
What were the main differences between Trotsky’s “permanent revolution” and Stalin’s “socialism in one country”?
→ Write a short explanation in English (around 80 words) comparing their views on international revolution.
Q2.
Why did Trotsky lose political influence after Lenin’s death, even though he had contributed greatly to the revolution and civil war?
→ Write a short paragraph (60–100 words) discussing Trotsky’s leadership, idealism, and political failure.
Q3.
Do you think Trotsky’s exile diminished the value of his ideas? Why or why not?
→ Write your opinion in English (about 100 words), supporting it with at least one historical or ideological reason.
On the Life and Thought of Leon Trotsky
Leon Davidovich Bronstein—better known as Trotsky—was a revolutionary who embodied the fierce conflict between ideals and reality throughout his life. Born in 1879 in Kherson, Ukraine, he demonstrated exceptional intellect and talent in languages, mathematics, and science, becoming deeply involved in politics from a young age. During his university years, he immersed himself in revolutionary activities, enduring arrests, exile, and escape. Over time, he refined his revolutionary theory and eventually advocated for the “permanent revolution,” a concept that argued for a chain of revolutions beyond national borders. This idea stood in stark contrast to Stalin’s doctrine of “socialism in one country” and became a crucial dividing point between them.
Brilliance and Contradiction as a Revolutionary
Trotsky’s turning point came during the first Russian Revolution in 1905, where he served as chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, organizing workers and soldiers and leading uprisings. His strategic brilliance also shone in the October Revolution and the subsequent civil war. Under his leadership, the Red Army broke through the quagmire of battlefronts and defended the revolutionary regime. By integrating political and military command through the political commissar system, he created a strategic masterpiece that still resonates in revolutionary history.
However, his radical methods and authoritarian command style caused frictions both inside and outside the party. His insistence on state control over trade unions put him at odds with Lenin. The iron grip he proposed to defend the revolution also entailed the silencing of freedom—exposing the first contradiction in his ideology.
The Balance Between Ideal and Power
After Lenin’s death, Trotsky faced a stark conflict between his ideals and the reality of power succession in the Soviet Union. His emphasis on class emancipation and democratic socialism clashed with Stalin’s push for centralized control. This tension culminated in Trotsky’s expulsion from the party in 1927. His idealism cannot simply be deemed “correct”—it was pitted against the gritty realism of political survival.
Though he continued to advocate world revolution as a theorist, Trotsky lost his grip on the Soviet political machinery. His life in exile became a stage for theoretical reconstruction and ideological struggle, but his voice no longer moved the core of the revolutionary leadership.
Even in exile, Trotsky continued writing and lecturing, criticizing Stalinism and initiating the Fourth International. The clash between democratic socialism and authoritarian Stalinism became one of the most striking confrontations in 20th-century ideological history. Yet Trotsky’s theories and organizational efforts remained disconnected from the revolutionized Soviet state, and he ultimately failed to leave a substantial historical legacy.
In 1940, Trotsky was assassinated by an NKVD agent in Mexico, maintaining his integrity as a thinker to the end. Though erased from Soviet history under Stalin’s regime, he remains a symbolic figure of ethical and responsible revolution. Today, Trotsky is increasingly re-evaluated as a vital figure in intellectual history.
📝 英作文問題(Essay-style English Composition Questions)
Q1.
What were the main differences between Trotsky’s “permanent revolution” and Stalin’s “socialism in one country”?
→ Write a short explanation in English (around 80 words) comparing their views on international revolution.
Q2.
Why did Trotsky lose political influence after Lenin’s death, even though he had contributed greatly to the revolution and civil war?
→ Write a short paragraph (60–100 words) discussing Trotsky’s leadership, idealism, and political failure.
Q3.
Do you think Trotsky’s exile diminished the value of his ideas? Why or why not?
→ Write your opinion in English (about 100 words), supporting it with at least one historical or ideological reason.
ファースト→勧善懲悪じゃないロボットアニメのゾルトラークっぷり
ZZ→第1話やOPの「ふざけすぎだろ!」な空気、終盤の「重すぎだろ……」な空気
ポケ戦→逆シャアまでやってから0080に戻るという時系列。プチジークアクス状態
0083→上に同じく。アクシズ落としてからZの設定補強が始まるのマジで謎
F91→企画が縮小されて映画になったけど結果的にキレイに収まったこと
G→ガンダムシリーズ終わったな感。
08→一年戦争が部隊だけどUC作品の中ではかなりの若手ってこと
∀→「これ大丈夫なの?ハゲもうヤバイのでは?」からの評価反転
SEED→W以上の拒否反応と「まあガンダムってもうなんでもありだしな」という諦観
DESTINY→ファンが次々アンチに反転していく地獄絵図。ガンダムアンチブームの本格的な始まり。
イグルー→今は完全にネタ扱いされがちだけどヅダもビルドルブも硬派扱いでしたよ最初は割と。
00→最初期の超強烈なバッシング。その反動により割と高めに収まる最終評価。
ユニコーン→当時の基準だと映像がマジでヤバイぐらい凄い。この辺りからガンプラがデフォでどんどん高くなりだす。
AGE→今どういう扱いされているのかが分からん。新規履修の話を聞かないんだよなあ。
Gレコ→めちゃムズ。映画版で分かりやすくなった所から解説記事とかも増えたけど当時は意味不明ですよね記事ばかり。
オリジン・サンボル→ガンダムまじでオッサンコンテンツやんけ。実は若手の入口を兼ねていた説に皆少しずつ気づく。
オルフェンズ→汚名返上した一期から、二期で完璧に汚名挽回で伝説に。今はもう予備知識0で見るの無理そう。
水魔女→毎週見てる時はタケモトピアノとかクソ面白かったけど通しで見るとダレてる感じがあるの不思議よね。
ナラティブ→ナ・ニ・コ・レ?公式のバカ組体操画像による汚名は挽回できていたのか?
ハサウェイ→このアニメ、風評被害が凄かったんだねえ。フラットなイメージで見れる人達が羨ましいよ。
ドアン→え?→意外と面白かったね。の流れって今も一緒なのかな?
SEED FREEDOM→ガンダムSEEDが20年前?フェルン、それは流石に嘘だよ。←リアタイ組、全員これです。アラサー含めてボケジジイしかおらん
貴重な光景だ…
注目エントリ
What age is senior discount on Delta?
What are the cheapest days to fly on Alaska Airlines?
What is the best day to buy Alaska Airlines?
Is it cheaper to buy Breeze tickets at the airport?
[FAQs-Help]How to Quickly Speak to a Disney Cruise Line Representative?
[FAQs-Help]How can I speak to a Disney Cruise Line representative fast?
[FAQs-UrgentCall]Do you get your money back if you cancel a cruise?
「注目エントリ」が英語の“Delta/Alaska Airlines”など旅行サイトのFAQsばかりになっているのは、荒らしではなく 英語圏のFAQ系自動投稿ボット が Hatena Anond にリンクだけ貼って宣伝スパムしているからです。
●仕組みの推測
海外旅行系Q&AサイトやクルーズFAQページ — たとえば
“What age is senior discount on Delta?”
“What are the cheapest days to fly on Alaska Airlines?”
“How to Quickly Speak to a Disney Cruise Line Representative?”
→ こうした英文のFAQsを、ボットが巡回して自動で投稿しています。
自動クロール+リンク貼り付け — 特定のキーワード(航空会社名や「FAQ」など)を拾って、自前のページURLやアフィリエイトリンクに誘導する目的で投稿するスクリプト型ボットです。
Hatena Anond のアルゴリズムで「注目」枠入り — アフィリエイトリンクやあまり読まれていない投稿でも、外部リンクや特定タグを含む投稿が「注目エントリ」枠に引っかかってしまう仕組みがあるっぽいです。
✅ 対応策
注目エントリの基準が変わるか、投稿数やブクマ数のしきい値が改善されれば、こういったボット投稿は目立たなくなる可能性があります。
つまり、迷惑な荒らしではなく、アフィリエイト誘導目的のFAQ系英語ボットによる自動投稿で、Hatena の注目枠の脆弱性がつけ込まれている状況です。
〇
Q,ゆうてこんなんアフィリエイトにならなくない?どういうこと?
→ SEO効果がなく、外部への誘導リンクとしての価値は激減。
→ 日本語ユーザーには読まれず、クリックもされない。商品が売れるわけがない。
リンク先もGoogle検索や企業サイトのFAQでアフィタグすらついていないことも多い
→ 仮にクリックされても、報酬発生に繋がる仕組みになっていない。
🤖 じゃあ何が目的なのか?
投稿→一定の反応を見る→「クリック率」「タイトル生成の傾向」「削除されるまでの時間」などをログに取る
Googleは一次リンクだけでなく、二次・三次リンク網も解析対象にしてるので、そうした**“スパムSEOファーム構築”**の一環の可能性
RedditやQuoraでも同様のボットがいて、「英語圏でバンされにくいけど注目を集めやすい」サイトとして、はてながターゲットにされてる可能性
🧠 結論:
金儲けというより、実験or構造破壊を目的とした投稿の可能性が高い。
昔の2chスパムみたいに、商業性が低くても「Botが回ってる状態を作ること」自体が目的のケースもある。
それか、他言語投稿でも「注目エントリに入る」という 脆弱性の可視化かもしれません。
何かしらの金銭的リターンではなく、
「ボットが弾かれない程度の分量でいける」
このあたりが主目的だと考えられます。正直、ちょっと気持ち悪いです。
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Q,この辺のbotはサイト運営側の規制でなんとかなるもんなの?
A,
結論から言うと、やる気があればサイト運営側で対処は可能です。
ただし、はてな匿名ダイアリー(Anond)のような匿名投稿制+老朽化した構造のサイトだと、以下の理由から完全対応が難しいか、遅くなる傾向があります。
✅ 運営側ができる対策(そして現実にはやってない/やりにくい理由)
Botの多くは海外IPや特定のBot用UserAgentを使う。
しかし:日本人がVPN経由で使ってる可能性もあるため、雑に弾くと正規ユーザーも巻き込む。
⇒ 最低限の日本語割合、閲覧数下限、はてブ数フィルタなどを加えれば一発で解決可能。
しかし:下手に改修すると正規ユーザーの目に触れる率が減る→運営へのクレームに繋がる懸念がある。
AIやLangDetectで「日本語じゃない」「FAQテンプレ構文」「外部誘導リンクのみ」の記事を弾く。
これは現実的だが、はてなは匿名投稿の自由を重視する風土なので、規制強化は避けがち。
→これは一番効果的だが、過去ログ検索機能が乏しい今のAnondに実装するのは工数が大きい。
海外の無料ブログサイト(たとえばTumblr、WordPress.com、Wixなど)はすでにこの手のBotを大規模ブロックしてます。
でも、「そこまでの深刻な被害じゃない」と認識されている限りは放置される可能性が高いです。
「注目エントリ」欄がスカスカになるよりは、Botでも埋まってた方が場が回ってる感が出る。
通報・苦情が一定数を越えない限り、“一部マニアが気づいてるだけの現象”として扱われている可能性が高い。
🧩 結論:
でもはてなは「匿名文化」と「運営の放任体質」のせいで Bot天国になりやすい設計。