That's really what it comes down to. A parameter like "sensitivity to other users' ignore/mute/hush decisions" would allow a user to, say, auto-ignore/auto-mute any user that had been ignored or muted by 1-2-a dozen users. Set the threshold lower, see more muted/ignored comments. Set the threshold higher, miss it. You're right, taxonomy isn't the solution to this particular problem, more an end-run around the problem. /r/feminism gets a lot more spam than /r/twoxchromosomes for the simple reason that an auto-search finds "feminism" faster; however, /r/reportthespammers shut down recently because the very nature of "spam" has changed. I just want better taxonomy because it's important.Will every thread contain 20 spam comments with the rest of us acting like it isn't happening because we don't see it? Should new users be expected to spend their first hour of being here ignoring & muting every spammer or finding the more obfuscated tags? I'm sure the team has considered this.