  TSI Gabe Premium,VIP join:2007-01-03 Chatham, ON | Happy Birthday! YAY!  | |
|  |   TSI Gabe Premium,VIP join:2007-01-03 Chatham, ON
| Re: Happy Birthday! Spammy |
Just have a look at this... | |
|   Hazy Arc
join:2006-04-10 Greenwood, SC | Honestly... ...how much of a problem is spam? It is very rare that a spam message finds its way to my Gmail inbox or my work e-mail inbox. Spam filters are quite competent at catching 99% of spam that it has basically become a non-issue. | |
|  |  void_of_Ligh
join:2005-12-27 Nacogdoches, TX
| Re: Honestly... According to Cisco about 90% of all email is spam. So for every 1 email you get 9 were blocked as spam. Think of the time money and resources that must be used to deal with this problem. If nothing else think of how much faster the net would be if we got rid of all this crap. I say we kill all the spam filters for a month, including the ones for government. I bet something would be done then. | |
|  |  |   Jason Levine Premium join:2001-07-13 USA
| Re: Honestly... A couple of years ago, our spam filter at work broke over the weekend. I signed in and saw about 500 messages in my inbox. Only about 20 were valid e-mails. The rest were spam. And this was years back. Nowadays, I'd probably have 5,000 spam e-mails for every 20 valid messages. -- -Jason Levine Support a children's charity. Buy a calendar and/or a photo book. Shooting For A Cause | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   wifi4milez Big Russ, 1918 to 2008. Rest in Peace
join:2004-08-07 New York, NY
·Verizon FIOS
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·RoadRunner Cable
·BroadVoice
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by Nightfall :Whats the solution here? Besides an overhaul of the email system OR implementing a new system, there is no easy solution. Any major overhaul will require a lot of money in retooling what everyone else has. Every mail server will need to be patched. This is just me thinking on the surface here. Until we make a change to the system itself, these problems won't go away. They will only get worse. The government's attempt to curb this problem did nothing. Bottom line, there is no easy answer to the SPAM problem. -- Комитет государственной безопасности
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|  |  |   Packeteers Premium join:2005-06-18 Forest Hills, NY
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by Nightfall :Bottom line, there is no easy answer to the SPAM problem. actually, there is... charge money to send every email. | |
|  |  |  |   bent not broken Premium join:2004-10-04 Loveland, CO clubs:
·Comcast Formerly ..
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by Packeteers :said by Nightfall :Bottom line, there is no easy answer to the SPAM problem. actually, there is... charge money to send every email. SHHHH!! Don't give ISPs any bright ideas. -- »www.lp.org/issues/family-budget
"That government is best which governs least" - Thoreau | |
|  |  |  |  TheWickerMan
join:2002-04-09 Enola, PA
| said by Packeteers : actually, there is... charge money to send every email. And since a lot of spammers use hijacked machines to send their crap out, that will accomplish nothing. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   anon32bat
@rr.com | Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... no charge for sending more then (insert number here) messages a second or smiler | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   Jason Levine Premium join:2001-07-13 USA
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... So you don't charge people for sending more e-mail? Wouldn't that let spammers off the hook entirely?
Or maybe you meant no charge for sending less than X messages per second. In this case, the spammers will just space out their messages. Suppose I'm a spammer. I have a zombie network of 10,000 machines at my disposal. If I have each machine send out 1 spam message every minute over 8 hours, I've sent out 4.8 million messages. As my zombie network grows, I can send out even more spam messages without triggering the "e-mail charge" system. And if I do trigger it, what do I care? The people who would be paying would be the owners of the zombied systems, not me.
Then there's the whole question of who gets the money. Charging per e-mail is not the solution. -- -Jason Levine Support a children's charity. Buy a calendar and/or a photo book. Shooting For A Cause | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  TheWickerMan
join:2002-04-09 Enola, PA
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by Nightfall : Think about it, if we were to overhaul the system and put in one that required 1/10th of a penny to send an email, wouldn't it work pretty well? How does that address the issue of spammers using hijacked machines? And that's not a "what if." That's something that's actually happening. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   Nightfall My Goal Is To Deny Yours Premium,MVM join:2001-08-03 Grand Rapids, MI
·Site5.com
·AT&T Midwest
·Comcast
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by TheWickerMan :said by Nightfall : Think about it, if we were to overhaul the system and put in one that required 1/10th of a penny to send an email, wouldn't it work pretty well? How does that address the issue of spammers using hijacked machines? And that's not a "what if." That's something that's actually happening. With an overhaul of the system, it would mean that there would be no more hijacked machines. You would have some kind of secure login or other means of authentication. As I said here, just thinking outside the box. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   meh37
@verizon.net
| CAN-SPAM wasn't designed to eliminate spam; it was designed to merely establish guidelines to be followed by those who send it. And that's all it's done. Those "high profile" cases were about spammers who violated the 'restrictions' (and I use the term loosely). As was said, making ALL spam opt-in would be a great first step. (Yeah, that'll happen.) | |
|  |  |   Jason Levine Premium join:2001-07-13 USA
| Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... The problem with those guidelines is that spammers by and large don't follow them. Every so often, the government will trot out a spammer to make an example of them, but ten other spammers rise to take his place. The government threatens fines and the spammers collectively shrug their shoulders. Many are overseas and thus outside of US jurisdiction. CAN-SPAM has been a complete failure. -- -Jason Levine Support a children's charity. Buy a calendar and/or a photo book. Shooting For A Cause | |
|  |  |  |   mod_wastrel
join:2008-03-28
·magicjack.com
1 edit | Re: Well, something will need to be done eventually.... said by Jason Levine :...CAN-SPAM has been a complete failure. except for legitimizing a large percentage of spam (failure of design or failure of purpose? I wonder). I guess you could classify them as "spammers", versus the "scammers" who don't follow the guidelines (the ones who use bots/botnets to spew forth their crap into the world, the ones with no accountability for whom charging real money for sending email would have no effect whatsoever)--but they aren't even located in the U.S. (for the most part), so CAN-SPAM can't even touch them.
What a wicked web we weave. | |
|   mod_wastrel
join:2008-03-28
·magicjack.com
| Spam: A real boon... to all of the companies that sell anti-spam tools for commercial/business organizations, universities, govt. entities, etc. I wonder... would they lobby to eliminate spam now? (even if our govt. representatives were listening to "the people"?)
Yes, you Can Spam... all you want to. | |
|  DSLdewd
join:2004-06-05 Denver, CO | LOL at article title  | |
|   Determined
@cnc.net
| Some success SPAM is a crime and I feel buying software to block it just ignores the crime. I fight it first-hand: I wrote a program that stores the delivering IP address in a database; another program captures from my logs the IP addresses blocked by Spamhaus; once a week, another program generates Cisco ACLs for blocking ranges of addresses. Blocking key ranges makes a huge dent in the SPAM I receive.
To answer the person who asks if SPAM filters have made SPAM a non-issue, SPAM still consumes a lot of the bandwidth all of us are paying for, and it consumes server resources (plus power, space, hardware, software, support).
I'd like to know exactly why the opposite of Spamhaus - a list of known good e-mail servers - never went forward.
I'd like to see the US - the world's largest SPAMmer - require that ISPs include in Whois certain details about how their IP ranges are used. If a pool is strictly dial-up, or is used for DHCP, any mail delivered from those IPs could not be from a legitimate mail server and could be blocked.
Unlike Spamhaus, I never remove an address from my filters. I think that if this became common, the ISPs would not find customers for these tainted addresses when the SPAMmers released them. Then they'd find a solution to the SPAM problem pretty quick. | |
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