The Newest Front in the Anti-Spam Wars

Published: 9 September 2003 y., Tuesday
As spammers dream up new strategies for slithering into e-mail inboxes worldwide, their counterparts, anti-spam software developers, are always on the lookout for new ways to stop them cold. A bevy of companies think they may have a good answer in challenge-response technology . The tactic is a simple one, requiring an e-mailer to verify his or her identity before being added to a "white list" that enables him or her to send e-mail unrestricted in the future, but the technology is not perfect yet. Some anti-spam advocates fret that the technique is too cumbersome or not entirely effective. However, amid a surge of user desperation nearly as powerful as the flood of spam sweeping across the Internet, the tactic's growing popularity speaks for itself. Will challenge-response emerge as the next big spam killer? The most common method of stopping unsolicited e-mail in its tracks is filtering, which lets individuals and IT administrators cull legitimate messages from the ever-growing sea of spam. Challenge-response works differently. Rather than using a multitude of rules to determine what may or may not be spam, the software takes the approach of a club bouncer to keep undesirables out. When e-mail arrives from an unknown sender, challenge-response software sends back a message asking the sender to identify himself. If the sender is legitimate, he then types a one-word response and is allowed through the barrier for good. With most challenge-response programs, a single verification in a given domain is enough to let a sender transmit messages to anyone within that domain.
Šaltinis: E-Commerce Times
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

Hackers Limit Disruption To Small Internet Sites

A battle among hackers erupted on the Internet yesterday as some factions disrupted a loosely coordinated effort among other groups trying to vandalize Web sites around the world more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Denmark stops import of IT specialists outside normal rules

It will no longer be possible for Danish companies to automatically employ foreign IT specialists as an exception to the ordinary strict rules on residence permits more »

Over 200m European internet users by 2004, survey

Europe's online population reached 184m by the end of 2002 and will surge beyond 200m by the end of 2004 more »

IDC: OVER ONE MILLION INTERNET USERS IN CROATIA BY END OF 2003

It is possible to expect that by the end of this year there will be over one million Internet users in Croatia more »

Microsoft Enters Identity Management Fray

Microsoft rivals have been staking out a claim to the identity management space -- a critical component of Web services more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

ICANN comes to terms with country domains

Internet overseeing organisation ICANN has backed down in its battle with the rest of the world more »

The new banking software

Deutsche Bank S.p.A Italy Augments Service and Profitability via ACI's BASE24-es Software more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »