Spam Research Six Month Report 193
Zoomer writes "Every day, millions of people receive dozens of unsolicited commercial e-mails (UCE), known popularly as 'spam.' Some users see spam as a minor annoyance, while others are so overwhelmed with spam that they are forced to switch e-mail addresses. This has led many Internet users to wonder: How did these people get my e-mail address? In the summer of 2002, CDT embarked on a project to attempt to determine the source of spam. To do so, we set up hundreds of different e-mail addresses, used them for a single purpose, and then waited six months to see what kind of mail those addresses were receiving. The results offer Internet users insights about what online behavior results in the most spam. The results also debunk some of the myths about spam." Update: 04/12 15:47 GMT by CN : About a minute after this went live, I found that michael posted this earlier. Mea culpa.
spam is a killer (Score:4, Insightful)
you can't add your email address to your usenet posts
even if you email someone and they get an email virus, then you're on every spam list this side of Mars faster than you can say kazaa
spam is harrasment, spam is bad, spam is undermining the internet. What would my mother think if she suddenly received "cum see horny l0litas" just because someone she emailed got a virus
Legally treat spammers like vandals I say.
Re:spam is a killer (Score:1)
What I want to know.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anyone know who the average spammer is?
Another cool piece of spam research I've never seen mentioned on Slashdot is the Bot Trap [kloth.net], which I learned about from this Little Green Footballs entry [littlegreenfootballs.com]. If you're the admin for any web server, I strongly recommend setting this up. You probably don't make a huge dent in spam, but you get the satisfaction of seeing the list of IP's you thwarted.
Bad Spelling is intentional (Score:2)
yup (Score:2, Interesting)
I doubt these folks' internet connections stay valid for very long once they start spewing email through their accounts, so that might have something to do with it....
-----------
Re:What I want to know.... (Score:2)
It is kinda hard to moralize too much with them. I realise it causes ppl trouble etc, but that all seems very wishy washy when you see the living conditions of the poor parts of romania...
Re:What I want to know.... (Score:2)
Re:What I want to know.... (Score:5, Informative)
At Spamhaus [spamhaus.org] they know. Not only does Spamhaus run the SBL [spamhaus.org], the most widely used blocklist of spam sources in existence, they also run ROKSO [spamhaus.org], the block-on-sight public database of notorious spam gangs. This database is used by many ISPs for background checks when signing up clients. It's also used by the FTC and state Attorney General offices [google.com].
According to Steve Linford, head of the Spamhaus team, 90% of the spam originating from America is sent by some 150 top spammers [google.com]. If these were eliminated, our spam problem would virtually vanish overnight. This seems to contradict your suspicion that most spam is sent by suckers. In reality it's a small number of committed criminals that send most of it, and you can see all the publically available data on them at ROKSO. Go check it out - very educational indeed. So are many of Steve Linford's postings in news.admin.net-abuse.e-mail [google.com].
You said it! (Score:2, Funny)
Support your local troll.
I hate spam too, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
I've had the same email address since Sept 1992. We don't use any filtering on the mail server. I only get about 5 or 6 spam messages a day. On a bad day I might...might get up to 10. Granted, I have seen a marked increase in spam in the last year. True, it's probably going to get worse. I sometimes get more telemarketer calls a day than email spam tho...that says something.
I can only surmise that some people don't know ho
Re:I hate spam too, but... (Score:2)
By some reports, and certainly in some areas, spam traffic outnumbers legitimate internet traffic. That's just
Re:spam is a killer (Score:2)
I only get ~4 pieces of spam per day, if that, and it gets filtered by SpamAssassin. And look! My addy is unobfuscated on
Easy (Score:5, Interesting)
I tend to talk to people I know on the phone and just check my e-mail once per week to see if anyone sent a message about my programs. Even if you are right, I have to sit for 14 minutes doing nothing except deciding which messages with "Hi, Oleg" subject to open. And I deleted quite a few legitimate messages because I didn't recognize the address.
By the same token, if I went to sleep at 4am I won't want to have a chat with a telemarketer at 9. So I end up turning off my phone until I wake up and possibly missing calls from friends. And I don't want my physical mailbox to overflow just because I went on a one week trip during the holiday season. But spam is definitely the worst.
Communication between people is good. I should be able to publish my postal address, my phone number and by e-mail on the web and invite people to contact me if they looked at my stuff and want to chat. Remember when shareware came with a README file with all kind of contact information to send $15? I actually got a few nice snail mail letters with checks.
Spam has destroyed our ability for this kind of casual communication. People sending it or selling the products advertized make very little money compared to the value of our time or forced changes in our behaviour. It's time to stop them using technological, political or cultural methods, whatever works best.
Re:Easy (Score:2)
I agree that technical solutions like a secure e-mail addresses tracable to an a
Re:spam is a killer (Score:3, Funny)
So what's the thing that might give me some hope?
Hotmail (Score:2, Interesting)
PS if anybody needs some good spam to help Mozilla Bayesian Junk Mail filters learn, just set up a Hotmail account and copy those e-mails into Mozilla :)
Re:Hotmail (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that big providers like Hotmail and Yahoo try reasonably hard to prevent people from sending spam from their accounts, as it uses up bandwidth and creates ill will, so they do things like limit number of recipients per message, or recipients per day, that sort of thing. (Can anyone confirm that?)
But a spammer can make their e-mails appear to come from whatever address they want, and if there's a URL in the message they don't need to worry about whether people can reply.
Dupe (Score:2, Redundant)
atleast this one is in html form, not pdf.
I saw it in the Mysterious Future, but there still isn't a good way to report dupes before they go live. I think you should open the thread for comments before it goes live, and nuke/archive/whatever those comments after it's live.
Re:Dupe (mod) (Score:2)
Re:Dupe (mod) (Score:2)
But what pisses me off is the over-rated mod. If you think that my opinion is invalid, then respond to it with your own insightful remarks (and don't be suprised when no one mods you up). If i have a +funny post, and you mod it redundant, then ask yourself this
Re:Dupe (mod) (Score:3, Interesting)
It would be interesting if the authors of the study published the the names of the companies which refused to honor the opt-in/opt-out preferences or who sold e-mail addresses inappropriately. I'm not sure how "ethical" this is, but I'd really like to know....
Duplicate (Score:1, Informative)
Do as I say... (Score:5, Funny)
For further information, please contact Ari Schwartz at the Center for Democracy & Technology, 202-637-9800, ari@cdt.org.
Anybody see the irony in that?
Re:Do as I say... (Score:2)
You do realize that was probably a set-up, right? I tried to go back and look at the source after leaving the page, to see if it had been posted as alpha tags, but the site's already been slashdotted.
Re:Do as I say... (Score:1)
Re:Do as I say... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Do as I say... (Score:3, Funny)
MOD THIS MAN UP! (Score:2)
Thanks for the laugh! :)
Spammers harvesting slashdot: Re:Do as I say... (Score:2)
Since I run my own mail server making a new aliaes is as simple as editing
Re:Do as I say... (Score:2)
That's not the point. Short addresses receive more spam because of brute force attacks, whether they are posted, not posted, or posted in an obscured manner.
Since this was last posted 2 weeks ago (Score:1)
WHOIS (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd be interested in seeing a study for companies that harvest snail mail addresses from the database.
I've received junk snail mail from every shady company on the face of the planet when I register a new domain or when it's up for renewal...plus I've even received phone calls (back when I used a real phone) about "we're ready to setup your web hosting and web design. Call us back immediately!" Persistant bugger, too...he kept calling back.
Re:WHOIS (Score:2)
Re:WHOIS (Score:3, Interesting)
Domains registered with other registrars have yet to generate spam. Weird.
Re:WHOIS (Score:2)
Both of them get sent junk snail mail, and I've even gotten some sales calls to the crypto-anarchist name.
Sales: I'd like to know if ____ is interested in updating their postage meter to a new Pitney-Bowes Mailmaster 1000.
Me: Actually, ____ is more interested in burning Pitney-Bowes machines in the street as part of our wo
Re:WHOIS (Score:3, Funny)
On a similar note, I personally own a few dozen domain names, many of which do not even have any DNS entries, no site, etc. I just love getting those
"I saw your website at www.????.com and really liked it. We think we can help you get more exposure."
Well yea, like maybe I could get more exposure if I the bloody domain had a web site to begin with.....
Re:WHOIS (Score:2, Informative)
1. How secure the whois information is from automated stuff.
2. Does the company sell your info to other companies?
Re:WHOIS (Score:2)
For the addresses that I use for domain name registration, I actually get more snail mail spam than e-mail spam! The snail mail is generally about paying to have someone submit your domain name to search engines. I've never gotten one of those fake verisign domain registration scam forms.
Re:WHOIS (Score:2)
yourname.registrar.domain.01@yourdomain.com
If I recieved spam to jason.godaddy.artoo-net.20030410@roysdon.net, I'd know exactly where the spam came from.
Simply set up a new alias like jason.godaddy.artoo-net.20030411@roysdon.net and update your contact at your registrar. Once it is successfully updated, remove the alias from forwarding to your
Really good report (Score:5, Interesting)
harvested e-mail addresses from Web Sites, I didn't realize the
magnitude of it.
of the 10,000 spam messages they received over the six month period,
8,609 of them were from simply posting it publicly to a web site. I
always opt out of the subscription services where I can, and most of
the time I avoid posting any of my e-mail addresses publicly, now I
will redouble that effort.
They had some really useful suggestions also, my favorite was using
multiple "disposable" e-mail addresses and forwarding them to a main
e-mail address that you keep private. When you sign up for a site,
create a new disposable e-mail address and use that. If you start
getting spam from it, just shut off that disposable e-mail. That is
incredibly good advice.
I like the idea of disguising or masking your e-mail address,
although I think using HTML characters or a "Human readable"
equivalent is something that spammers will easily be able to
circumvent if the practice becomes widespread. They don't bother now
because not many people do it.
What I would like to see is a standard practice of generating your
posted e-mail address into an image. This would make it
*significantly* more difficult to harvest e-mail addresses in mass,
while remaining easy for a single use of sending someone an e-mail message.
Think of the blind (Score:2, Insightful)
What I would like to see is a standard practice of generating your posted e-mail address into an image.
This would shut out people with less acute vision and would shut you out from contracting for the U.S. government [section508.gov].
Re:Think of the blind (Score:1)
Re:Think of the blind (Score:3, Insightful)
Typically when you are posting it for some type of a government contract or any type of business page, the actual membership consists of a fairly closed set of individuals. If you have that set, you could easily make the e-mail address displa
Re:Really good report (Score:2, Funny)
$ banner -w 40 joe@foobar.baz
It is a bit large, though.
Re:Really good report (Score:3, Interesting)
What I have done in the past is to disguise the @ and . chars with other characters and include instructions how to fix it. For example, sign your posts like : email address me at "johndoexfakeyemailycom" and change the x to @ and the y to .
That technique might eventually fail if a large database of domains is built up such tha
How about... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:How about... (Score:2)
Re:How about... (Score:2)
It wasn't a bad idea all the times it's been suggested over the last two or three years.
At this moment, Cowboy Neal has an apology added to the article. Why the fuck can't he pull it from the front page then? Are these guys too busy watching anime that they can't work out a way to detect dupes (since they dupe stories twice on the same day quoting the same sources, obvioulsy there is no system at all in place to even try), or at least a way to hide them after realising it.
personal statistics... (Score:1)
What I don't understand is how it is financially still possible. Someone has to pay the bill for the used bandwidth/server usage..
Re:personal statistics... (Score:2)
In my case, my 40/day translates into at least 120/day total transactions, because every spam I get ends up getting shoved to uce@ftc.gov (go ahead, spammers, copy that!) and a Spamcop.net address. That makes 120 mails even before Spamcop starts sending
Re:personal statistics... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, that's entirely the point. The spammers don't have to pay for it, the recipients' ISPs do. That's why so many people regard spamming as a criminal activity, and not merely annoying antisocial behavior. They are literally stealing bandwidth.
Bad Addresses (Score:4, Informative)
I'm happy to get all of this spam because it increases the effectiveness of my anti-spam system Herbivore [herbivore.us]. Herbivore is a distributed anti-spam system. Everybody that uses it increases it's accuracy. If you're interested, any Slashdot readers can get two years for free by entering "slashdot" as the promotional code. Help us fight spam!
Re:Bad Addresses (Score:2, Informative)
Herbivore filters out random garbage that spammers are putting into their messages before it creates the identifying hash. It also was designed to be easy for anyone to install and transparent to use.
Cloudmark's SpamNet has a lot of users even though it is only currently only available for Outlook. Herbivore runs on just about anything (its running on Gento
Hrmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Fight SPAM. (Score:3, Interesting)
If you are sick of this - as I am - add your e-mail address with NOSPAM in the middle of it like name@NOSPAMhost.com, or write it like this; name at host dot com. I have started doing that, and as I can see spam has acually increased a little bit.
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:1)
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:1)
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:1, Insightful)
I'll give you a little tip: it doesn't work.
Despite what you may want to believe about spammers, they have some pretty darn good scumbag software behind them. You don't think they go to every web page and write down addresses they see on a piece of paper, do you?
The spammer himself may not be that bright, but he most certainly has a geek who knows his perl and how to hack up sendmail co
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:2)
Hmm, maybe I should go register nospam.cx then
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:2)
I find it hard to believe that spammers aren't already accustomed to these techniques, and haven't had stuff built into their software to remove phrases like "NOSPAM". Apparently they haven't, but...
What I like to do, and what I see as a future-proof way of handling this, is to reverse the @ and the . in my email address (see comment header for example). That way if there is a "clever" spam harvesting program at work, it'll either throw it out (domain name too short) or it'll start sending spam emails to
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:2)
So if I put the addresses of my good friends here--such as jvalenti@mpaa.org and csherman@riaa.org --then they would get lots of spam? Good to know.
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:2)
How DARE YOU recommend that people use my domain name just so YOU get less spam!
In all seriousness--if you use a munged email address, make sure it has an invalid TLD, like name@REVERSEMOCmyhost.moc so someone won't get your mail. I (seriouosly) own the domain yahoot.com. It gets about 50K emails a day, because people think that they can disguise their email addresses by adding a "T" at the end of it. I wish I had the resources to go sue everyone who does this.
But I thin
Re:Fight SPAM. (Score:2)
I honestly don't think there's as much harvesting going on as people think - some websites, certainly, but I imagine the main source of spam lists if companies who get the addresses (semi-)le
Shouldn't this have been posted by CmdrTaco? (Score:3, Interesting)
Spam, the religion of CmdrTaco, who will soon declare SpamJihad on the troll community here, unleashing his SpamFedaykin-Slashbots! SPAM!
Mailshell.com (Score:3, Interesting)
AI... (Score:2, Interesting)
OR perhaps spam doesnt come from any one person - perhaps its the beginning of a dormant AI within the internet that no
Your email on a WebSite (Score:3, Interesting)
Some of our old email accounts are now firmly planted in the email lists that these companies sell to each other and will "be in play" forever. Having received numerous offers to assemble and sell email lists (which we will never do), I know a little about these companies. Once your email is known by one of the big players, it will be sold to others in units of thousands for as little as pennies but sometimes up to a buck per thousand.
Another Internet phenomenon they should research: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Another Internet phenomenon they should researc (Score:2)
You mean, like this [bnl.gov]?
Another spam beating method? (Score:1)
Another method I have seen used effectively is creating an image file (.gif, .jpg, etc.) of one's email address. I guess a truly devious spammer could write a program to check all image files on a website and try to read them if they have
Re:Another spam beating method? (Score:2)
Worth saying again. (Score:4, Informative)
A week later, spam to my hotmail account has dropped from 30 or so a day to about 2. (Warning: Hotmail support is only provided in the pay version, but there's a 30-day trial.) Preview the spam on the server, and you're able to delete it, blacklist it, and best of all, bounce it back to the sender. In my wildest dreams, I never thought it would work so well. YMMV.
Another kick-ass product is Spam Gourmet [spamgourmet.com]. Some website wants your email address? Give them (unique identifer).(some number).(your user name)@spamgourmet.com . The number is the number of emails they can send before the address is killed, and the user name is your user name at spamgourmet. Go sign up, and you never have to go back to the site again. It works.
I'm sure many people are like me, and read these testimonials and figure that they're hype. Trust me. They're not. I wish I had done it the first time I read about them.
Also, spampal (Score:2)
Re:Worth saying again. (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't bounce it! (Score:3, Insightful)
For the love of God, don't do that! All of a sudden you stop being part of the solution and become part of the problem.
Repeat after me, spammers lie. The return path to the sender is intentionally set wrong, and because they go through open HTTP proxies, you cannot believe that the IP addresses in the Recieved headers.
Bouncing back e-mail to a non-existant sender just generates needless traffic and load on your victim's server. Yes, you become th
Re:Don't bounce it! (Score:2)
A new method of email adress harvesting come from brute forcing random strings "@hotmail.com". The spammers then take all the emails that didn't bounce and voila: a long list of valid email addresses. As for the victims of spammers, I figure that if someone's getting joe-jobbed, they probably stand a decent chance in the courts. Furthermore, if they take it to some of the newsgroups online that are used to help track down spammers wh
Re:Don't bounce it! (Score:2)
Let's see if your arguments below support this thesis...
A new method of email adress harvesting come from brute forcing random strings "@hotmail.com". The spammers then take all the emails that didn't bounce and voila: a long list of valid email addresses.
That's a pretty interesting definition of "new". New to you, perhaps.
As for the victims of spammers, I figure that if someone's getting joe-jobbed,
"Joe-jobbed?" Is that
dupes aren't always such a bad thing... (Score:1)
Odd coincidence and report summary. (Score:5, Informative)
1. Don't give out your e-mail address any more freely than you have to.
2. For the love of God, NEVER put it in unadulterated form (i.e. user@domain.com) in a Usenet posting or in a publicly-accessible HTML page-- even in the comments or other places that it won't appear on the final, rendered web page. If you do, it WILL get picked up and you WILL get an assload of spam.
3. If you MUST provide your address on a web page or Usenet posting, slightly obfuscating it (i.e. "user at domain dot com") is, for now, 100% effective against fooling the spambots. Which frankly I find amazing, because that trick has been around for years.
~Philly
Re:Odd coincidence and report summary. (Score:2)
The alternative - things like formail.pl and php e-mail scripts have zero-day exploits that can be abused by spammers too. You'll know when that happens when you get about a hundred e-mails back
Re:Odd coincidence and report summary. (Score:4, Insightful)
The way I look at it, if someone is too lazy to type in my e-mail address into a "To" field, they must not have something very important to tell me. And having to weed through a lot of spam inconveniences me a lot more than an inability to just click on a mailto on my site inconveniences them.
The alternative - things like formail.pl and php e-mail scripts have zero-day exploits that can be abused by spammers too.
The servers for my domain run on Mac OS 9.1. The best way I've come up with for easily-accessible feedback to an e-mail address is via a form that sends the message to an undisclosed (to the submitter) account on my mailserver. (The mailserver is also set up to not accept any mail to that account except messages originating from the webserver's IP.)
I have a helper app [sentman.com] on my server that allows me to embed AppleScript into my web pages which is executed when the page is accessed, so the e-mail is sent via AppleScript commands from a scripting addition. [24usoftware.com] In testing, I'm seeing some oddities with messages sent from my scripting addition which I'm currently trying to work out with the developer-- but once that happens I'll have a pretty secure and spamproof means of convenient feedback.
~Philly
Re:Odd coincidence and report summary. (Score:2)
While it's certainly not where the bulk of email comes from, I no longer have my email address on my business cards. If someone wants to reach me they can call.
It's all to easy for companies to decide I want to receive their daily press releases and add me to their spam list after I give them a business card.
Back in my time... (Score:4, Interesting)
I still remember when guides for newbies told that not providing an usable return address was a breach of netiquette.
Re:Odd coincidence and report summary. (Score:2)
Don't argue with me, I'm just summarizing the report. And in their fair bit of testing (all methods and results documented in the report), no e-mail address they obfuscated by changing "user@domain.com" to "user at domain dot com" received a single spam message.
~Philly
Government Increased My Spam (Score:4, Interesting)
To my shock, one of the single greatest sources of spam that I have gotten is from an email address placed on a CA voter registration form. I've never actually used that address or given it out for anything before or since, and yet a year later I am still getting 3 or so emails a day showing up in my spam filter from that address.
To my knowledge not one of these spams actually came from the CA governement, but I can only infer that either they sold it, or there is some big public list of voter registration emails that spammers know about.
Re:Government Increased My Spam (Score:2)
Re:Government Increased My Spam (Score:2)
Even so, that would imply millions of records, in CA alone. I would be very upset if someone could go up and request a copy of all of the email addresses contained therein in a nice electronic format. If a spammer wants the info, let them process a million pieces of paper. Not impossible, but I'd at least like to know that the spammers had to put in a li
morpheus generated spam (Score:3, Interesting)
I noticed some time ago I received a lot of spam from musiccity@, an e-mail address I provided for the once-popular peer-to-peer network morpheus.
The funny thing is, I just redirected this e-mail address mail towards sales@musiccity.com. It helped!
perfect spam-filter (Score:2)
Alternatively, use SpamAssasin, which uses Bayesian filtering. Btw, if you're going to be throwing the term Bayesian filtering around, please at least find out what Bayesian Inference and Bayes Factors are, and maybe understand MCMC.
A good place t
Who wants to get rid of spam? (Score:4, Funny)
Since I've had an e-mail address I've had my penis extended 6 times, my breasts enlarged 8 times, I own the worlds supply of viagra and, and I get to have hot teen sex every night with 18 year old nymphos!
And to top it all off I've just received £3498435784354085 from Senator Hamza Kalu from Nigeria just for opening a bank account! ;)
Active Spam Killer (Score:3, Informative)
Basically it requires a once-off confirmation from any non-whitelisted and non-blacklisted user who sends you something. I haven't gotten one spam since I installed it. It's impossible to loose a real email and it's dead easy to install.
Wishful thinking? (Score:4, Funny)
While [posting to] "alt.sex.erotica" generated twice as much spam as the next newsgroup, we do not believe that this data supports any strong conclusion regarding which newsgroups are the most susceptible to spam.
Now, is that just wishful thinking on the authors' part :)
Not all means taken into "account" (Score:4, Interesting)
Just having an account can get you spam these days. Even at a university...especially at a university. Like any good system, my school's mail/student server is organized by year and/or alphabetized.
If any user changes up a directory...does an ls -1p > spamlist.txt and then mails said spamlist.txt to their friendly neighborhood spammer who pays them 20$...then all of those users just got added to somebody's hit parade, even if they never submitted their address to a public or private outlet.
I know this, because my email address is a bit ambiguous. One could email me at fake@university.edu or fake@xxx.university.edu and it would arrive in my mailbox. I have *NEVER* used this email address in any forum other than work-related issues and have *NEVER* used the "xxx" portion of the email when I have submitted it (in interest of brevity).
I currently procmail filter about a dozen different spammers (each sending different revisionary mails of each of their products) and invariably the address used is fake@xxx.university.edu (NOT the one I have ever used). Clearly someone determined what my account was named and then determined the mail server to be xxx.university.edu and put the two together. It's easy enough if you have an account on the server to simply list the home directories into a file and submit.
fake@xxx.university.edu is not listed on any google-indexed site or usenet article which furthers my belief that this came from within. Also, some spammers send the mails to about 15-20 university accounts at a time (they don't always hide the headers correctly and I get a cc list of about a dozen other users on my university's student server...ALL using xxx.university.edu).
These inside jobs are easy, do not negatively affect the committed party (unless the school is logging every ls command), and probably earn you enough money to buy a six-pack. A few beers for the inconvenience of your fellow students...great job, jerky.
Re:Not all means taken into "account" (Score:2)
Actually even if they are logging the ls command you can still get a directory listing without it appearing in your command history. "ls
They didn't test forwards or viruses.... (Score:2, Interesting)
I have suspected for some time that lots of spam gets sent to people who send (or recive) lots of forwards. This is the only explaination I can think of for some of the spam I've seen to some "private" (given only to friends) addresses. This implies, I suppose, that some friends, or friends of friends, or their friends are giving my address to spammers.
They also didn't test viruses as a method of address-harvesting. (Viruses like Klez that send mail to random people with forged From: addresses.) I have
Images (gif, jpg) used as spam. (Score:2)
ISP could detect spam being posted because of the sheer bandwith used, but its not implemented yet.
Anybody has some insight of this new kind of spam?
Re:Images (gif, jpg) used as spam. (Score:2)
Well, if the image was on a remote server, then if your mail client loaded remote images when you read the email (many do) then you've just verified that your email address is valid. This is known as a Web bug [privacyfoundation.org]. Web bugs are great for tracking when people read your emails,as even if they disable return replies, most still allow image loading.
Disable remote image loading in emails!
Re:Images (gif, jpg) used as spam. (Score:2)
If you have remote image loading in email turned on, it doesn't matter too much what else you do, you're going t
Use a "payback page"!` (Score:2)
Let those who live by the spam, die by the spam I say!
A note for neophytes: Never assume that the "from" address in a spam is valid or actually belongs to the spammer. Always go to the website being promoted and find some form of contact address there (often hidden in an HTML reference to a formmail script).
Then add em to
Re:Maybe... (Score:2, Insightful)
The articles should stay for as long as there's a problem. If you have an issue with this, save the bandwidth by not reading them. the subject was clearly marked after all.