Direct Marketers Association Asks To Be Regulated 334
alanjstr writes "Recognizing that with all the spam out there, the legitimate messages don't get through, the Direct Marketers Association (DMA) has decided that they will no longer oppose federal anti-spam legislation, but that forged headers should be illegal."
And in further news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And in further news (Score:5, Interesting)
Not really. They just want a law that will shut down all of the small time spamvertizers so that the big boys will have the market all to themselves. They want the new Federal law, which would only forbid sending mail with forged headers but not other noxious practices like opt-out only lists- to superceed stronger state laws. IOW, they want a Federal law that specifically legalizes spam with a few trivial limitations. Don't think that this will result in you receiving any less spam.
Re:And in further news (Score:3, Insightful)
It is still a positive step... Without forged headers it is much easier to know who to boycott.
Re:And in further news (Score:3, Informative)
State laws could remain stronger. Federal law would only trump state law if for some reason the state law was more lenient than the federal. The CA medical marijuana case is a prime example of a state attempting to create a law that effectively legalizes activities federal law prohibits. Likewise states often enact laws that are more "severe", for lack of a better word, than their federal counterparts. Again drugs are a good example. Someone accused of, say, cocaine possession or distribution would likely do better in federal court than in many state jurisdictions. See Clinton, Roger, who served less than two years for a crime often netting 20 plus years in the crusader Arkansas state courts of the 1980s.
But I'm not a lawyer so your mileage may vary...
-dameron
Re:And in further news (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:And in further news (Score:3, Informative)
Example: prohibition revoked, booze becomes legal at the federal level ---> many counties in the south pass laws forbidding alcohol (dry counties). We could very easily have "wet" spam states and "dry" spam states.
Plus I wasn't talking about the article at all, but responding to the previous poster, who I quoted directly.
-dameron
Re:And in further news (Score:3, Informative)
Well according to the Renquist court states rights mean that States have the right to opt out of federal regulations whenever they choose but not to impose regulations of their own that are tougher than federal regulations.
The Bush administration are currently challenging the right of California to regulate vehicle emissions despite the fact that the federal act explicitly allows California (but no other state) the right to regulate emissions. This is over California's intention to regulate SUVs as cars rather than light trucks. So a Ford excurion won't be exempt from gas guzzler tax just because it weighs over 6000 lbs.
So yes you might have a point about states rights in theory but in practice judicial perogative would allow the SPAMers to trump state laws if they can persuade the reptiles in Congress to give them a green light.
The nightmare for the DMA here is that if Congress ever does something about SPAM they are quite likely to regulate DMA spam as well, like making do not call lists compulsory.
Targetting SPAM practices like fake headers makes a much more sensible strategy for DMA in this instance than attempting an NRA like 'absolutely no compromise at any cost'. Particularly since their members compete with SPAM.
Re:And in further news (Score:4, Insightful)
I have put "effectively" above in bold, because that's really the crux of the issue. The law legalising medical marijuana in California is not an effective one, because the federal government still cracks down on the medical marijuana industry. People believe that they now have the right to grow quantities of marijuana to sell to the authorised sellers, and they regularly get raided and arrested on federal charges [indymedia.org], and have property seized [sfgate.com]. Thus, I'd argue that the law is hardly "effective" at this time, since the federal government needs to alter its regulations as well to allow state governments to make the choice about what drugs are acceptable.
Re:And in further news (Score:3, Funny)
DMA: "Oh, spank us!! Spank us!! We've been ever so naughty!"
- MichaelRe:And in further news (Score:3, Insightful)
And Iraq has asked for weapons inspectors to return. One shouldn't take these things at face value. It's a tactical maneuver to avoid harsher penalties.
Re:And in further news (Score:2, Funny)
Because spammers always obey the law.
Re:And in further news (Score:4, Informative)
Libertopian cretins of the world unite! You have nothing to loose but your obsessive dogma.
Hate to burst your bubble here but the entire global car market has gone the same way as the US market so it is unlikely that US regulations are the issue. Further the US car market consolodated in the 1930s when there were no safety laws.
The cost of capital to develop new engines is immense. SAAB sold out to GM because they simply could not afford to design a new engine.
Even a company like Rolls Royce could not support itself as an independent company.
Aaaaaaaahahahahaaaaaa! (Score:4, Funny)
SOMEONE PLEASE STOP ME BEFORE I SPAM AGAIN!
Re:Aaaaaaaahahahahaaaaaa! (Score:5, Funny)
still doesnt solve much (Score:5, Insightful)
so the Direct Marketing Association is still a bunch of scumbags after all...
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:3, Funny)
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe some of these people have nice cars or swimming pools. If so, I'd like to make those part of my economic model.
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:5, Funny)
You can't drive or swim in them, but surely they'd have no objection to you placing a flyer in/on them. You and a couple of hundred friends...
I don't buy it (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, a few business models would break. That's always going to happen when you start mucking around with economic rules. New ones will also come up.
It pretty much comes down to "If you don't let us force Foo (useful product news/advertising) on you, you won't get Foo and you wouldn't want that". This ignores the fact that if customers wanted Foo, they'd willingly sign up for free Foo. Yes, current advertising generally sucks from an informational standpoint, and isn't that entertaining. There would have to be changes in the product information distribution system.
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Here, use my computer (Score:3, Informative)
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:5, Insightful)
Media Companies, Communications Companies, Oil Companies...they all yell about how new technologies will ruin their business models and how they need to be protected!
Who fucking cares!?!?
Governments exist to protect the people, not to forward corporate interests. I'm so sick and tired of companies using legal bull shit to protect their business model. Why don't we have bloody subsidies for horse shoers?
*Sigh* I feel better now.
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:3, Informative)
Beware! Giving you methods to blow off your righteous steam (such as the "internet chat room") is how the Man keeps you from becoming so angry you revolt against him!
Re:still doesnt solve much (Score:5, Funny)
Ahhh, the naeivity of youth...
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Corporations are not people!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Paying taxes does not make an entity into a person. While there are lawyers who have perverted the word to refer to both corporations and human beings in the same way, we don't have to accept their twisting of the English language."
Corporations also DO NOT pay taxes. The myth of corporate taxation is one of the biggest ones that most people believe.
Taxes to a corp is an EXPENSE. Corporate taxes get passed on 100% to their employees (in lower wages), and to their customers (in higher prices).
It's really just a mass charade to make people THINK that corps actually PAY taxes. And it honestly should be ended, as the cost in paperwork and government bureaucracy is a drag on the economy.
Worst of all, most people don't realize that it is THEY who are actually paying corporate taxes, simply by buying their product!
They could double the corporate tax rate tomorrow. All that would happen is employees make less, and customers pay more.
Really, our whole tax system is a sham. Numbers were just released today that showed that in 2000, the top 50% of wage earners ($26,000 a year or so or more) are paying 96% of all taxes...
Corporations are NOT people. They are a legal quasi-person, a fiction. Honestly, I think that they should be abolished. In a way, they are, as the new laws being passed in the wake of Enron/Global Crossing/WorldCom ARE putting personal liability back into corps, by making the CEO's personally liable for fraud.
And it's long overdue... If corporate executives were personally liable for what the corporation does, there'd be a lot less chicanery.
My best solution for spam regulation would be to hold the company being advertised liable for spam sent.
Re:Corporations are not people!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Read up on the history of Corporations, and you will find that they are a very perverted form of the original intent. They were supposed to be formed for the common good, disbanded in 20 years. They were given very little of the rights of people (other than to do business as a combined entity for a limited period of time), but they were waived the resposbilities of people in order to attract investors (nobody wants to invest if they could lose more than they put in because of liability). If before the 20 years were up they stopped serving the common good, you could get them disbanded earlier.
At various points corporate law changed, and now they still have an immunity to real resposbility, but all of their previous limitations have been removed. They get all the plusses of being a person without liabilities. They don't have to serve the common good, they can exist for centuries, and they don't have to make amends if the screw up royally, they can just fold up the company and the investors dont lose anything they didn't put in.
Illegal forged headers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, yes - this really isn't "illegal"... My question is, when does it become illegal?
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:3, Insightful)
I have received notices that mail I tried to send couldn't be delivered. But in fact, the mail was not from me, and some spammer had spoofed the email address and pretended to be me.
What happens when this is done and spoofed to point at an innocent person and gets them legal trouble?
And how come these damn spammers don't realize that I DON'T read the spam, and if by some accident I do open the letter, I refuse to ever buy that product because of how they market it.
SPAM HURTS YOUR SALES!! DON'T SPAM ME!!!
[/rant]
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:4, Informative)
The chances are that it wasn't a spammer doing that, or rather that it wasn't the result of a spammer doing so deliberately. Some of the more recent email viruses have adopted the strategy of forging from headers in their propagation letters. They pick two addresses from the victim's computer, one recipient and one forged sender. The theory seems to be that there's a decent chance that the two are likely enough to know each other that it will increase the chances of the letter being opened, while masking the identity of the infected machine. It seems as though some spammers have become infected, so there are lots of people receiving random messages apparently from people they've never heard of.
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:2)
Spammers are now criminally impersonating other domains so they can get past the MTAs that require a valid and resolvable FQDN in the message envelope. This eliminates spam from klsjger@xxagt1kjc34.khz, but it can cause a lot of long-lasting damage (from the especially clueless spam fighters) to innocent parties.
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:2)
So you are ranting something that every spammer already knows and doesn't care about, unfortunately.
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:5, Funny)
Indeed. Such a violation of the conservation of mass, which occurs when 100.01% of people are accounted for, causes galactic rips in the very fabric of space-time, causing TORRENTS of cosmic ether -- sometimes called "UCE" because of it's nebulous Unidentified Cosmic Ether nature -- to be unleashed on mail servers everywhere!
The lesson learned: If you ever grow interested in a spam-marketted product, think of the world! Think of the children!
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:3, Informative)
--
Damn the Emperor!
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh yeah, I've ALWAYS found that spammers are considerate enough to not reap e-mail addresses from the From: field, and to always send spam to the address in the Reply-To: field.
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Mind you, when I say I spoof "From:" I'm talking about the From: in the message, not in the envelope -- you can still see exactly where my message came from if you read the headers.
Setting Reply-To: would be sufficient for me, but I think it would just confuse others, especially people unfamiliar with the intracacies of such things (e.g. my parents).
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:2, Interesting)
1) No forged headers.
2) Legal obligation to respond to
a) remove address - and all references to
b) made to say where the bought/harvested your address
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Are they going to come and take me away because I'm illegally altering headers but not sending spam?
I'm getting more and more convinced that we can't make good technology leglislation without infringing freedoms and that we're all doomed.
Re:Illegal forged headers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Almost any legislation limits our freedoms in one way or another. I am convinced we can make good technology legislation, without infringing on any freedoms that are outside the intended scope of the proposed law, if lawmakers just stop and think for a bit.
In my opinion, anti-spam laws should be written in such a way that they specifically apply to spam only (which requires a loophole-free yet narrow legal definition of "spam"). I think a good set of requirements for spammers might be:
- an obligation to clearly identify the spamming company, i.e. provide valid contact information in the form of an address or preferably a phone number.
- an obligation to clearly label the mail as being spam, by putting the label "BULK MAILING" in the subject and MIME header. Failing an opt-in law, this would allow ISP's and e-mail users to simply filter out any unsolicited mail. We have a similar system for snailmail here: placing a sticker on your mailbox will "block" unsollicited mailings and/or free newsletters.
- a strong law against any measures taken to defeat anti-spam filters, such as that random bit of letters that all the recent spam seems to have in the subject field.
- a strong mandate for ISPs to deal with spammers breaking the aformentioned rules. ISPs clamping down on spammers should not have to fear lawsuits, provided they keep within their mandate.
Of course the spammers will whine that this would "break their business model" or some such. I have no doubt that it will.
What was the intent? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you can be easily reached after changing the header field, there's not a problem. This is why that "I had to forge the headers to protect the opt-outs" claim doesn't hold water - if this was a serious concern you could set up a second accuont to handle all complaints yet still protect your outbound account.
If you can't be reached after changing the header field, then it's a problem.
And if attempts to reach you result in the harassment of an innocent third party, e.g., the guy whose domain name you forged in your headers, then it's definitely illegal.
Everything else is just window dressing.
Required Related Reading... (Score:3, Informative)
Eh? (Score:2)
Something strange about the "pig" topic icon (Score:5, Funny)
Strange...
Different degrees (Score:5, Insightful)
Bad Publicity (Score:4, Interesting)
The first step for these businesses is to see that spamming and dishonesty doesn't win customers - customers will not do business with you to spite you if they get ten unsolicitated e-mails from people about your business than if you just put on advertisement on television, or just used word-of-mouth advertising.
Re:Bad Publicity (Score:3, Insightful)
opt in by reference (Score:5, Insightful)
1. you opt in on just one, let's say amazon
2. warner bros makes a "patnership" with amazon. warner bros starts spamming you.
3. warner bros then makes a partnership with the bestrate loan company who starts spamming you.
4. bestrate loan company makes a "paternship" with joe's porn palace and before you know it your p*nis is being enlarged!
Re:opt in by reference (Score:3, Redundant)
what should be written into law is that they must tell you which partner they got your info from
Re:opt in by reference (Score:5, Funny)
You too?! I've been so embarassed. I've been buying new pants every week but the bulge is getting too large to hide. Today on the bus ride home this little old grandmother kept *looking* at me in *that way*. I'm so freaked out.
Legit Headers (Score:2)
Really, opt in would be nice, but if they could just follow the common rules and use [ADV] series tags in the subject line, I would be perfectly happy.
-
Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind. - Albert Einstein
Opt-in list unworkable? (Score:2, Insightful)
The "Honest Spammer" (Score:5, Insightful)
Additionally, since a vast amount of spam is fraudulent (or so my Nigerean Finance Ministry contacts tell me), assuming ethical standards for any of these people is absurd.
Let's face it - spamming is no more a profession than being a heroin dealer. To expect professional standards out of them is equally fruitless.
Re:The "Honest Spammer" (Score:5, Insightful)
Great! (Score:2, Funny)
Beware -- the Microsoft gambit (Score:5, Interesting)
The DMA's job is to promote DMA, not to tailor it to our desires or rights -- requiring opt-out is a good example. They provide a limited opt-out for junk mail and telemarketing primarily to silence their critics and head off decisive government intervention.
Many states already have anti-spam legislation on the books, but it is rarely enforced because of the difficulty in tracking these cretins down. A federal law would provide uniformity and predictability of everyone's rights and obligations. And hey, it might even work.
A recent article reported with a straight face a major spammer's contention that they HAD to forge the headers because otherwise anti-spam zealots would complain to their ISP and get them shut down -- making opt-outs impossible. Ha!
Reshaping legislation sometimes good (Score:2)
In general, the legislation may be flawed and the opposition and reshaping justified. Personal approval of the goal or the proponents may lead you to support bad legislation, this sadly happens too often. The people writing legislation are sometimes well meaning but fairly ignorant of the subject matter and their proposed law may have far reaching and unintended consequences. For example "anti plastic gun" legislation outlawing anything without a couple of ounces of steel. The flaw is that steel is a specific alloy and a gun with several pounds of metal may not have enough steel. You may dislike the gun lobby but they are correct in reworking the legislation so that it only outlaws things not detectable by current metal detectors. Similarly Microsoft may have the occasional good point as well.
Re:Beware -- the Microsoft gambit (Score:2)
It's like saying that DRM is inevitable, and that we should start cooperating now with Hollywood/Microsoft/the RIAA to make our slavery more bearable...
Re:dont compare DMA with NRA (Score:3, Insightful)
And the comparison is perfectly valid. Any organisation, heroic or otherwise, will try and protect their own free hand. If they are in danger of losing it, particularly if the public is against them, they will "bargain" by proposing compromise laws in the hopes that they will be seen as a good team player and be treated leniantly.
Re:dont compare DMA with NRA (Score:3, Funny)
I totally agree with you. Not only should dissolve the NRA, but then afterwards we should pass a law that makes killing people illegal.
Re:dont compare DMA with NRA (Score:3, Informative)
Now, I don't agree with either the DMA or NRA, but respect the NRA a lot more because it is made of individual people protecting their individual rights --- even though guns obviously do more damage than junk mail. In fact, as far as Big Evil Trade Associations go, the DMA is fairly harmless (compared to the BSA, RIAA, MPAA, etc.) It mostly represents regular junk mailers that use the postal service, not spammers.
easier to filter? (Score:2)
Re: easier to filter? (Score:2)
no, it will make it easy to filter legitimate advertising because they'll follow the rules. While this would still be a good thing, the spammers are unlikely to follow the law and will remain a pain in the ass. unless of course, the penalty is great enough and someone is effectively prosecuted. oh, but then they'll just spam from outside the US and we're right back where we started.
--Atlantix
A bit confused (Score:2, Insightful)
Essentially, they are saying "Spam will be sent, but from businesses that we warrant legitimate". Are these pornography companies not legite? Surely, some of them must be...
DMA Opt-Out Wouldn't Be Bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Also (Score:5, Interesting)
These advertisers can then pay ISP's a 'distribution fee', which allows mail signed by that marketer's key to pass through the ISP spam filter. This ensures that spam is not free, which will drop the number of spam messages, and will also cause a corresponding increase in quality.
We are not getting rid of spam, but establishing a reasonable system for permitting its distribution seems fair.
Re:Also (Score:2, Informative)
1. Verifying these messages requires processing power. A lot more than plain old mail delivery. Processing power costs money. I doubt any spam-firm would be willing to pay that much.
2. There are lot's of email servers which don't belong to any big ISP. If there was a law to sign messages surely the law would require all servers to support it? That way all the small-timer and enthusiast servers would not fit into the picture.
I love the idea though. If it only were a perfect world...
of course they want to be regulated (Score:4, Insightful)
Not to mention that they'll probably sneak in a clause to outlaw RBLs.
And besides, I doubt the worst offenders are members of the DMA, much less citizens of the US.
Setup? (Score:2, Funny)
But then again I see MS gave Linus a beautiful giant wooden penquin this morning. Things are looking up
Re:Setup? (Score:2)
Secure the software! Don't pass the laws! (Score:5, Insightful)
As with all computerized information that can be modified, I strongly believe it should not be illegal to modify headers in an email message. The possibility of such modification is extremely useful for the computer professional in fields including programming, debugging and network administration.
Instead of having laws passed to dictate what can be done with a particular tool, I believe resources should instead be spent on securing and strengthening software, and on otherwise improving this field technically. To prevent the reception of email messages that appear to come from a trusted source, all email clients should automatically apply encryption. Nearly all mail sent through the postal service is enclosed in envelopes. I strongly believe the electronic realm would benefit from the electronic equivalent of an envelope.
Re:Secure the software! Don't pass the laws! (Score:2)
The point is that if an organization has something to tell millions of netizens without them asking to hear it, they'd damn well better be ready to admit who they are when saying it. A legal "anonymous" tag might be implementable, which any server can promply annihilate. Anonymous e-mails are fine (they'd be filtered everywhere). Headers designed to deliberately mislead the recipient should not exist.
Re: Secure the software! Don't pass the laws! (Score:3, Insightful)
When the very first transmission of the message begins at the spammers system with "From:" and "To:" headers that are intentionally incorrect, how can you possibly consider that to be "modified"?
Worse yet, spammers regularily include "Received:" headers in the very first transmission of the message, to make it appear that it actually originated somewhere else and the system they used to transmit it was actually relaying it instead of acting as the original source. Indeed each system that processes the email adds its own "Received:" header, thereby modifying the message..... but the original transmission from the spammer that has "Received:" headers can't be considered modified, since it was created there.
Words like "forgery", "fraudlent" and "counterfeit" apply to the case where the original message contained intentionally incorrect headers to disguise the origin of the message, to whom it was send, and who sent it. The word "modified" includes the concept that the message was originally something different, but when spammers spew messages, they ORIGINATE with intentionally incorrect headers.
To DMA: You can send me more spam... (Score:5, Funny)
...Like a supermodel.
...With a 6 pack of Keystone beer.
So basically... (Score:5, Funny)
Did I get that right?
credit where credit due (Score:4, Insightful)
What is good news, though falls under 'I will believe it when I see it' is headers that are not forged. To be effective, this will have to go beyond a valid from and return address. It will have include all headers, including all routing information. Such information will be critical if a user is not promptly removed from a list after a request. We have to be able to notify the upstream provider that the company is not following the rules.
The next question to ask is if forged headers are bad, then why is anonymous telephone numbers for telemarketers good. Mind you, I think it is a good thing because I ignore all anonymous phone calls(none of my friends or contacts are so cowardly as to hide from me), but I wonder why anyone would think a business that needs to hide behind an anonymous phone number would be slightly legitimate?
Re:credit where credit due (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it is an attempt to reject the one and only acceptable rule: OPT-IN. Tell your Congresscritters that you will tolerate nothing less.
Problem is not only headers, but relaying as well (Score:2, Insightful)
And this means what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Big Deal
I will still have to filter out the same number of get rich quick schemes, drug selling operations, and teensexwhoreslutlittlegirlswithbigboobs.com type companies from my mailbox. The "legit" spam will be filtered out just the same as always, or at least, I'll try to keep the filters going.
I can see how this has the same affect as the "you must provide a way to opt out" rule put in a while ago. This meant that now people don't opt out from spam because you don't know if the company is legit and is going to take you off their lists, or if they are just trolling for valid emails.
Basically spam is spam is spam, it's unwanted mail in my inbox, and if someone says it's legal to do, that's great, I still don't want it.
medium will no longer be useful (Score:2)
When the spammers realise that, then I'll take notice and celebrate!
WATCH OUT! (Score:4, Interesting)
-russ
Re:WATCH OUT! (Score:2)
too little too late, (Score:2)
And this is going to do two things to stop spam... (Score:2)
2. Shi...errr, squat
Seriously, though...do spammers really care about the law?
their so called business model (Score:3, Insightful)
Any time where I have to pay to receive messages, I shouldn't have to receive messages I didn't sign up for. If I get an ad in an email, it's usually a sure fire way for me to avoid that company and it's products
Hrmph. Spam is still theft. Still, might help. (Score:4, Interesting)
Still, this might help in spite of them. A U.S.-wide law against forged "from" messages from commercial spam would at least dissuade some, especially if it had a stiff penalty. This would make it easier to set up my mailbox so that I raise the priority for people I've talked with before; with stiff penalties, they're less likely to forge friends' addresses.
This would be REALLY good if the federal law also required the "ADV" convention, and nailed down EXACTLY what it means. It's already in some state laws. If I could automatically reject the messages without having to read them all, that would steal my bandwidth and storage, but at least it wouldn't steal my time.
Yeah, not everyone obeys the law, there are offsite systems, etc. But it would be a first step, and some legal tools would make it a lot easier to employ technical ones. For example, there's no point in tracking down offenders if they've broken no law. Also, the evasion techniques make it much clearer that they ARE breaking the law. Finally, if nearly all email from some asian countries are spam, then entire continents can blacklist them... and that would be a real wake-up call that would reduce spam. So, a few basic laws can really enable technological solutions, so even a feeble law might help.
I've written down a few comments and anti-spam techniques at http://www.dwheeler.com/esssays/stopspam.html [dwheeler.com]; some of you may find them interesting. I know many others are interested in stemming this outrageous flood of spam that is threatening to steal the ability to receive email.
Half a loaf is better than none. (Score:3, Interesting)
Simple solution (Score:2, Interesting)
If someone fails to abide by this new law, then slam them with a badass penalty. No one will want to disobey it if it comes with a severe penalty. Unless of course they think they can get away with it.
The irony (Score:5, Interesting)
- Direct Marketers Association
- Asks To Be Regulated
At least they can opt-in. .A couple of us around here have been assigned to create direct mail programs and some of these programs, while initially billed as using strictly Opt-In, degraded into Opt-Out and even eventually into a simple spamfest. I admit I sent out two groups of "spam" (though clearly marked according to California regulations, blah, blah) on behalf of a failing employer. I have to admit: it was fun to do (one was for a legitimate product the other was for a MLM, the Amway web effort) and we had fun optimizing the script to pump out more spam. But the list we were given was complete junk! Over 2 million addresses (took a while to load into MySQL from the CSV file)--including my own father's email address! It also included harvested email from die.net. Ever tried to send mail to die.net? It's a great honeypot/tarbaby for spammers. But 2 campaigns were enough for my conscience (we sent less than 500,000 total messages).
When asked to make a Flash/Windows multimedia program that could automatically extract email addresses from a users machine and send them to a central server--on behalf of serious players in the music industry no less--a couple of us around here drew the line and said "no". [The couple of us I keep refering to no longer work for the slimebucket that wanted to move spyware to a new level in exchange for listening to HipHop tracks.]
Anyway, when complaining about spam realize that someone with technical know-how enabled the peabrain spammer to do his evil.
Re:The irony (Score:4, Informative)
It really is for the best for society.
Not sure it's enforceable, but... (Score:2)
The real solution: capital punishment.. (Score:2)
It's a little late... (Score:3, Insightful)
But it's a little late. At this point, the big ones, the little ones, they all spam, and being spammers, they deserve what all spammers deserve...
I've solved my own spam problem... (Score:5, Funny)
This Nigerian chap contacted me and wanted to transfer alot of money to my bank acount... All i had to do was transfer a mere 10K to his account so the money would go through.
Now I'm just waiting for my 10.000.000,- USD to roll in, and I'll hire a personal assistant to remove all the spam from my inbox manually...
I've got this whole thing figured out!
MWAHAHAHAHAH!
Spam blockers will continue (Score:3, Interesting)
That in mind though, chances are the unless it's applied at an email-provider level, Joe User won't bother taking the time to put these blocks in place and thus may be more incline to view "friendly" spam as opposed to getting annoyed over having his 12-yr-old get one of those "hey, remember me, visit my website" emails.
Good news for those who do use spam blocking, it should hopefully get easier now. Those strongly active in blocking crapmail aren't likely to read it anyhow.
Ah - the sense of relief is palpable (Score:3, Funny)
Spam Primer (Score:3, Interesting)
(Fine, I'm plugging, but it's a good site.)
Re:How ironic! (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, in response to what you found...
I know I say this a lot, but...
"We think the opt-in creates a true noneconomic model," Cerasale said. "We don't believe you get a viable economic model in opt-in."
Yeah, and the laws against prostitution are really hurting the members of the Direct Whoring Association.
I'm sorry, but I just can't stand the "but our business model needs this" legal argument. I'm serious! What university is putting out the MBAs who think whatever dumb-ass business model they think up is going to be okay, and they have the right to see it succeed.
Of course, they have the right to try, and the sad thing is if their stupid argument actually works, then they just managed to succeed anyway.
Re:And I always thought DMA (Score:2)
Re:DMA vs. Microsoft (Score:2)
I'm sorry, I just peed my pants laughing so hard....
Re:When forged headers are outlawed... (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, but many of them still have a contact person in the US -- there has to be a contact point somewhere for the sleazeball to collect money from the suckers, and sending money to another country complicates matters. An enforced (that's really the catch) law against stealing people's bandwidth would make the contact person liable as an accessory (at least) to the crime.