How One Spam Leads to Another

Published: 9 July 2002 y., Tuesday
The quantity of e-mailed advertising pitches for different opportunities is about to increase dramatically, according to research by Bob West, an anti-spam activist. E-mail addresses are the currency in a financial shell game that involves rapidly moving consumer contact information from database to database while concealing where and how the data was collected, according to West's research, which he has documented in a map that painstakingly details all the dark and twisted paths that your e-mail address has been traveling. Spammers harvest e-mail addresses from websites and public posts on Internet newsgroups and bulletin boards and then sell the addresses to other spammers, or to unscrupulous marketing companies who pay a bounty fee per submitted name. These marketing lists may eventually be sold to legitimate companies who often believe they are purchasing a list of eager consumers' addresses. One end result of all this activity is, rather obviously, more spam showing up in already jammed inboxes. West said his research indicates that unless consumers complain publicly and loudly about the promiscuous passing around of their e-mail addresses, spam will make the mailboxes of most Internet users virtually unusable within the next six to nine months ... "a year if we're lucky." Other anti-spam activists agreed that spam is proliferating, but pointed out that West's "Spamdemic Map" doesn't indicate any concepts that aren't already widely understood.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Siebel Strengthens IBM, Microsoft Alliances

More than a year after it first revealed its "separate but equal" integration partnerships with Microsoft and IBM, Siebel says progress has been made in both endeavors more »

New Lawsuit Hits VeriSign and ICANN

A group of eight Internet domain name registrars has filed suit against the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and VeriSign more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Bill Gates Outlines Technology Vision to Help Stop Spam

Microsoft Outlines Policy and Technical Proposals Aimed at Helping Contain The Spam Problem, Including the Development of Caller ID for E-Mail more »

Towards to the leading IT positions

Infobalt Association Starts OUTSOURCE2LITHUANIA Project more »

Hi-tech criminals target UK firms

British businesses are under siege by criminals and vandals using technology for financial gain or to cause havoc more »

The new services

HP points new weapons against virus, worm attacks more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

W3C adopts DARPA language

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency this month announced that the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) approved a computer language based on DARPA Agent Markup Language (DAML) as an international standard more »

IBM to launch MS Office for Linux

Microsoft denies it is collaborating with Big Blue on Office migration more »