Spam fighters need better tech

Published: 25 July 2003 y., Friday
A new approach to fighting spam includes the use of better technology to tackle the problem, according to a panel of government officials. Unsolicited commercial or bulk e-mail advertising, commonly known as spam, is annoying and offensive, wastes network resources and costs organizations money in lost productivity. It spreads viruses and perpetrates frauds and scams, several officials said during a spam discussion Wednesday at this year's National Conference of State Legislatures in San Francisco. Eileen Harrington, who leads the Federal Trade Commission's Marketing Practices program, said it's "highly likely" that some federal legislation regarding spam will be enacted before the year's end. But that won't solve the problem, officials said. Because spammers are becoming good at evading filters, a more comprehensive solution is needed, said Marketing Practices counsel for Microsoft Corp. Market-driven solutions, such as the use of sophisticated filters, rules-based systems and the creation of safe lists of legitimate senders can work, Ashworth said. But, he added, governments have to differentiate between legitimate commercial e-mail and spam, which espouses fraudulent or misleading claims, and impose stronger and more "meaningful" criminal and civil penalties on the latter. Spam costs U.S. corporations $8.9 billion annually, said California state Sen. Debra Bowen. She cited recent private sector research that concluded spam now represents more than 50 percent of all e-mail sent. And, by 2007, the average American will get 3,900 pieces of spam per year, she said.
Šaltinis: fcw.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

Telecom giants join forces against hackers

High-profile telecom and networking companies are banding together to crack down on hackers more »

CeBIT 2005 - End of the Show

End-of-show report for CeBIT 2005 (10 to 16 March) in Hannover/Germany more »

Sony Ericsson ROB-1 Bluetooth Motion Cam

Sony Ericsson announces at CeBIT the Bluetooth Motion Cam ROB-1 more »

Online Personal Video Recorder

German video streaming service company TV1 is launching at CeBit 2005 an online personal video recording service called shift.tv more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

China Retailers Adopting POS Terminals

China retailers are just starting to adopt electronic point-of-sale terminals, as the number of shipments is expected to surpass those to Germany, Europe's largest POS market, this year more »

News from Digital Certification Centre

On January 27, 2005 JSC “Skaitmeninio sertifikavimo centras” (Digital Certification Centre) presented an application for IVPC to register a company providing qualified certification services. The director of the company Mudrikas Dadasovas tells about the future plans. more »

GuruNet, Google get a little closer

GuruNet's stock fell back to Earth on Tuesday after the company revealed the extent of its tightening relationship with Google more »

Saddam Hussein 'death' photos used as worm bait

Photos of a "dead" Saddam Hussein are the lure for a new mass-mailing worm, Sophos warned on Thursday more »

IBM's SOA Service Sets Up Shop

Picking up where it left off in 2004 with its distributed computing plans, IBM introduced a new service to help companies build and deploy service-oriented architectures more »