Where's Sanford Wallace Now? 223
capt.Hij writes "There is a story at Fosters about Sanford Wallace who is described as once being the 'King of Spam.' The story describes how he made lots of money in the early days of the internet but got tired of fighting the spam fighters. He is now the owner of a night club in New Hampshire. Here is how he describes his life now: 'Back in the day, I used to make lots of money surrounded by computers. Now, I make lots of money surrounded by beautiful women.'" If "Sanford Wallace" doesn't ring a bell, you need to read some old stories.
Not bad... (Score:2)
Re:Not bad... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
Here, it would take a constitutional amendment to enable that...and I don't think you'll find much support for it. From Article I, Section 9:
(At first, I thought it was somewhere in the Bill of Rights...as it turned out, it was in the Constitution as it was originally written.)
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
I don't know, sounds like he's still a scam artist. I suspect a used car buisness in his future, if he doesn't wind up in fedral "pound you in the ass" prison, or wearing a Columbian Necktie first
Re:Not bad... (Score:2)
Making money, surrounded by beautiful women... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sigh. I should be so unlucky.
Re:Making money, surrounded by beautiful women... (Score:2)
Yes, but sitting at a computer 18 hours a day is bad enough, that coupled with spamming people those 18 hours a day, and I'd imagine his change of job has increased his life expectancy significantly.
Re: (Score:2)
Women? (Score:1, Funny)
Poor guy! Went from lots of money and computers to actually having to leave the house!? Shame
Re:Women? (Score:2, Funny)
What a wonderful transition... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What a wonderful transition... (Score:1)
Free pills? (Score:1)
Re:Free pills? (Score:2)
If a woman wants to see a penis get bigger, all she needs is her natural, um... "talents".
Yes but.... (Score:2)
Re:What a wonderful transition... (Score:2)
Re:What a wonderful transition... (Score:2)
AAAA! Spamford! (Score:2)
They don't care (Score:5, Insightful)
To me, this is one of the biggest problem. These people don't realise that what they are doing is wrong, or they flat out don't care. When it comes to telemarketing I can always tell them to f**k off and never call me again, har to do with a spam mail which return adress is a fake.
Re:They don't care (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:They don't care (Score:4, Informative)
Mind you, this was after weeks of complaint without action.
Re:They don't care (Score:2)
Hate to tell you this, but that URL doesn't work. Also, why would anyone want SPEWS back? They were a horrible blacklist.
The more important question is. . . (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The more important question is. . . (Score:1)
Re:The more important question is. . . (Score:2)
Maybe a whole bunch of us should give one [dogdoo.com]...
spam or girls (Score:2, Interesting)
now he pays others to send spam for him ?
no, jokes aside, i wonder if an ex spammer WOULD use spam to promote his own new shiny bussiness
Already /.ed (Score:1)
Re:Already /.ed (Score:1)
It's already getting slow... (Score:3, Informative)
By NATE PARDUE
Staff Writer
Sanford Wallace, the owner of Plum Crazy nightclub on Route 11 in Rochester, poses at the DJ station where he spends the majority of his time. (Mark Avery/staff photo)
ROCHESTER -- He may be known as "DJ MasterWeb" now to his nightclub regulars at Plum Crazy, but Sanford Wallace once ruled the Internet as the king of spam.
By his own account, Wallace, who owns the hopping night spot Plum Crazy on Route 11, was, at one time, responsible for about 80 percent of direct Internet mailings sent to in-boxes around the globe.
The mailings are popularly known as "spam" in the Web world and are virtually impossible to avoid, despite constant efforts to do away with them.
But in the early 1990s, not many people had even heard of the Internet, never mind Internet spam.
"It was junk mail. I have no problem using the term," said the 35-year-old Wallace.
Wallace first learned the craft of computer programming in 1990 from the Chubb Institute, a couple of years before the Internet boom of 1993 and 1994.
Prior to that, the Internet was mainly used by the government and military -- certainly not widely available to the passive computer owner.
When the Web became accessible to the general public, Wallace's entrepreneurial mind began churning.
Much like the junk mail that came through his old-fashioned mailbox every day, Wallace thought there must be a way to transfer that method to the rapidly growing cyberworld.
Wallace found ways to collect a massive list of personal e-mail addresses. He then contacted businesses big and small and asked if -- for a fee -- they would be interested in getting their names out to hundreds, if not millions of people.
In turn, the companies would send their information to Wallace, who formed a Philadelphia, Pa.-based company under the name Cyber Promotions in 1994. He would create advertisements, and send them off into the World Wide Web.
Over the next three years, Wallace sent as many as 30 million e-mails a day to consumers from 10,000 clients, and made millions of dollars in the process.
"I didn't think there was anything wrong with what I was doing. It wasn't as annoying as telemarketing, because with e-mail, I wasn't interrupting anyone's dinner," Wallace said.
But some heavy hitters with very deep pockets didn't quite see it that way.
From 1995 until 1997, Cyber Promotions was involved in 16 separate lawsuits, with companies like America Online and CompuServe.
The basis of many of the lawsuits was that unlike phone lines, computers were considered private property, and Wallace was accused of violating that privacy.
"People were essentially lining up at my virtual door," Wallace said. "I made a lot of lawyers very rich."
Wallace also attracted the ire of Internet enthusiasts -- or computer geeks, as he classifies them -- who strongly voiced their disapproval and outright loathing of Wallace on message boards throughout the Web.
The distaste infamously earned him the nickname "Spamford" in online circles around the country.
The negative reactions and relentless lawsuits started to take their toll, and Wallace decided to get out of the business in 1997.
"I was getting tired of the controversy. My goal was never to bother people," Wallace said.
Wallace took another stab at Internet spamming with SmartBot, a permission-based system where marketers and consumers would agree to be sent spam e-mail, similar to the check boxes found on most online registration pages.
The business lasted for a few more years until the dot-com crash of 2000, when hundreds of self-made millionaires lost their shirts on investments that peaked and fell in just a couple of years.
That was it for Wallace's life as "Spamford."
"A lot of people lost a lot of money. I did too, but there were people out there who got it a lot worse,"
Re:It's already getting slow... (Score:2)
Re:It's already getting slow... (Score:2)
Right, and muggers don't mean to hurt people, they just wanna make a living...
Bullshit.
Uh-huh. (Score:5, Funny)
I also understand that he's incredibly handsome, hung like a horse, rescues puppies, and can cure leprosy with a mere laying-on of hands. He's on the Pope's short-list, can beat Kasparov in any chess match, and walks on water. Further, he is the inventor of a working perpetual motion machine, has single-handedly saved a small third-world nation from disaster, and loves his mother.
He is not, of course, a habitual liar.
Re:Uh-huh. (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
The original Spam King (Score:5, Informative)
With the ambiguity (Score:1)
The fluff gets up your nose.
Finish the quote... (Score:2, Funny)
who find me repulsive.
In New Hampshire? (Score:1)
I've been to Plum Crazy... (Score:1)
Although last time I was there someone got a bottle broken over their head and got their neck cut up. Cops came, wouldn't let anyone leave, took everyone's name, etc.
Re:In New Hampshire? (Score:2)
Just my 8%-meals-tax worth
RickTheWizKid
I wrote an article about him for Phila. Inquirer (Score:1)
Ahh... (Score:1)
Re:Ahh... (Score:1, Redundant)
By his own account, Wallace, who owns the hopping night spot Plum Crazy on Route 11, was, at one time, responsible for about 80 percent of direct Internet mailings sent to in-boxes around the globe.
The mailings are popularly known as "spam" in the Web world and are virtually impossible to avoid, despite constant efforts to do away with them.
But in the
Story found in "Stopping Spam" (Score:3, Informative)
-Erwos
Samford's rights being violated? (Score:5, Informative)
Check out the club's webpage at
http://www.clubplumcrazy.com/
(Which amusingly has a free vip signup via email...)
Or just wish him well via email. it lists an address of:
masterwebfanclub@aol.com
(I guess he did not want to deal with spam on his own domain, thus the aol account.)
Finally, there is a newsgroup if you wish to find out more about the club itself:
http://pub89.ezboard.com/bclubplumcrazy
Lets be mature about this and not abuse these points of contact.
Re:Samford's rights being violated? (Score:3, Informative)
REQUIRES NO LOGIN
use any login/pass...i like "transexual seeking vampire"
quote: "I'm not sure what he's worked up about. (Score:2)
Re:Samford's rights being violated? (Score:3, Insightful)
>He actually stopped spamming people, that means we won.
But, your Honour, I stopped burgling people after I made enough money to buy myself a stable of hookers. Justice has been done!
Re:Samford's rights being violated? (Score:2)
Um. Yes. Were you out of grammar school when the lawsuits were going down?
What's to stop him returning to his primary money making activity
Uhh, son, the nightclub IS his primary money making activity now. How old are you?
when the police figure out what's going on at his club?
Dancing?? Peeing in the toilet? Smoking outside? Please tell us, Anonymous Cow-idiot. It was fucking YEARS ago. You didnt even utter your first "mama"
Sounds like quite a club... (Score:2, Funny)
And guess what - you DON'T NEED TO WEAR A BULLET PROOF VEST... (quoted from Fosters about an event at the competition, 360 nightclub, Saturday Oct 11)... "a gun had been fired on the property" ... "He fired one round" ... You don't need to worry about gun fights at Plum Crazy! People come to Plum to dance and have fun, not to get involved in attempted first degree assault and gun shootings!
Damn, I'm always see
Re:Sounds like quite a club... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sounds like quite a club... (Score:2, Interesting)
Let's just say being a nightclub owner is not a business I'd like to be in.
Chip H.
Take it from someone who lives in NH (Score:5, Informative)
-A.M.
I thought (Score:2)
Darn (Score:5, Funny)
We all know where Sanford is. (Score:2)
I guess it takes a special type of person. (Score:2)
Review of Plum Crazy (Score:5, Interesting)
Rt. 11
Rochester, New Hampshire
Summary:
Price: Low
Cover Charge: Always
Patron Age: College Age
Description:
Plum Crazy is a Bar/Pub that has 2 bars with 15+ beers on tap. It also has pool tables and a dance floor. There is street parking available.
Review:
Great bars if your into drunken reprobates, and women with teeth you could count on one hand. Dance floor wreaks of fromunda cheese (fresh nightly). Overall, an experience I can only rank up with alien abduction, or a visit to the local church for "confession" with a priest.
So Sanford can't run a good club, either.
Re:Review of Plum Crazy (Score:2)
Re:Review of Plum Crazy (Score:2)
RD
Women and penis size. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Women and penis size. (Score:3, Funny)
In other news. (Score:5, Funny)
Plum Crazy nightclub on Route 11 in Rochester NY burned to ground in an overnight fire. The structure was a total loss. A statement form Rochester Fire Chief, Floyd Madison, "We have ruled this fire suspicious in nature. Perhaps the most bizarre thing is the number of charred cans of spam we found".
ALWAYS RTFA BEFORE ARSON (Score:2, Informative)
Now that we know where he lives... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Now that we know where he lives... (Score:2)
I wouldn't back the death penalty, after a fair trial of course, for him just for sending spam. I'd support it for the message it would send to other spammers.
He is still Spamford.... (Score:2, Insightful)
A recent thread about it on GeekVillage is at:
http://geekvillage.com/forums/showthread.php?s=3ac c1351f7aa1563a017c39513af8358&threadid=22196&g t; [geekvillage.com]
Read down a ways to see where he comes into the thread - he actually posts defending his site.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
The Spamish Phenotype (Score:2)
Check out his "club's" site... (Score:2)
And guess what - you DON'T NEED TO WEAR A BULLET PROOF VEST... (quoted from Fosters about an event at the competition, 360 nightclub, Saturday Oct 11)... "a gun had been fired on the property"
Re:Check out his "club's" site... (Score:2)
CB
Re:Check out his "club's" site... (Score:2)
Uh... count the digits in my ID. Now count the digits in yours.
You don't have to be a liberal asshat to be a geek.
One word ... (Score:2)
He's a truly sad human being. The best we can hope for is that he never reproduces. By his looks and persona this shouldn't be a problem.
I think (Score:2)
... he deserves a righteous ass-kicking.
"Don't need to wear a bulletproof vest" (Score:2)
"UPDATE! Yes, it's true! The dress code is HISTORY at Plum -- You CAN wear bandanas, skull caps, jerseys, caps, anything! Just keep it stylish and clean.
And guess what - you DON'T NEED TO WEAR A BULLET PROOF VEST... (quoted from Fosters about an event at the competition, 360 nightclub, Saturday Oct 11)... "a gun had been fired on the property"
Time to spelunk the archives (Score:2)
There's no justice... (Score:2)
If there was, he'd be in the deepest pit of hell.
I hope he books Great White in his club (Score:2)
Stupid clueless journalist types (Score:2)
Quoting from the article:
The mailings are popularly known as "spam" in the Web world.... But in the early 1990s, not many people had even heard of the Internet.... Prior to that, the Internet was mainly used by the government and military.... When the Web became accessible to the general public, Wallace's entrepreneurial mind began churning.... Wallace found ways to collect a massive list of personal e-mail addresses.... He would create advertisements, and send them off into the World Wide Web.
Stu
It's so cliche - it's mildly amusing.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Usually, they're "has beens" or "wanna-be" rich and famous individuals who came into some money in the past (often via questionable means), and thought owning a nightclub was a great next step to take in their lives.
The average nightclub only turns a decent profit for the first 6 months to a year it operates. Once it's not "new" anymore (and you've collected cover charges for all the "first tme" visitors who just wanted to check the place out), it's really tough to keep it hyped up and popular. Having a really creative niche helps immensely -- but even then, a niche is just that; catering to a small segment of the population who shares a love of whatever you're offering.
There are many things more likely to make you decent money than owning a nightclub. So why do people throw their money at it? Simple.... They're fairly lazy and don't want to actually work at a job that makes them get up early each morning, and they yearn to be "cool". (If you aren't attractive enough to have a good-looking woman of your own, at least you can brag about all the ones surrounding you each night who really don't care if you live or you die.)
weird (Score:2)
Guess you missed the Wired News story (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a small world (Score:2)
Worst day of my life (up to that point - I've had worse since) was when an issue of a popular computer magazine showed up in my mailbox (subscription) and the cover had a big honkin smilin' picture of my wife's ex. That was awesome. She wouldn't shut up about
Is this the same New Hapshire I lived in?!?!?! (Score:2)
Beautiful women??? If you find sweatshirts and stretch pants stretched to the limit, or you are a connoisseur of camel toe, maybe. Actually, if you're in to teens who smoke and drink NH might be the place for you. That and Mechanixville, NY.
The entire concept of "New Hampshire" and "night club" being in the same sentence is hilarious, especially when we're talking about Rochester NH. The only thing near Rochester is Canada. I'm surprised they even have electricity
netscum (Score:2)
DRINK BEER FAST!!! (Score:2)
It'd be cool if when he's 80 or so, someone punched him in the gut. Anti-spammer actions should be like the mafia... You never escape from them.
Good thing I don't live in New Hampshire, because then I'd have to hate the fact that I'm too law abiding to do it myself.
Telling quotes... (Score:2)
Translation: None of the millions of people, whose inboxes I clogged with some of my billions of pieces of spam were ever bothered by it. But a few corporations and lawyers thought they could make money off me, and that bothered me. Why wouldn't people leave me alone?
Boo Fscking Hoo
out of touch (Score:2)
Spam his club. (Score:2)
'Enlarge your penis' 2 metres high!
Re:Sanford Who? (Score:2)
how about exercising OUR rights (Score:2)
wonder what cocky-boy would do if every slashdot member sent him a single piece of snail-mail once a week...
if you really read the interview, this asshole hasnt "reformed". he is still the same jerkoff that is proud to do whatever he can get away with to make a dollar at anyone else's expense.
Re:how about exercising OUR rights (Score:2)
How about when he's screaming in agony as his broken, battered body is consumed by flames?
Wallace, like all e-mail spammers, is a sociopath with no respect for property, going so far as to FORGE HIS DOMAIN NAME and implicate Compuserve in his criminal actions. Compuserve had to sue him to stop him from doing that.
Wallace, like all e-mail spammers, dese
Re:how about exercising OUR rights (Score:2)
As pleasant as that image is, I have to concede the point.
Spamford Wallace stopped spamming.
I wouldn't let him touch my computer. But the guy found a legitimate business and is making an honest buck. Seedy honest buck? Sure. But seedy or not, he's now selling a product people want, and he's not violating my property righ
Forgiveness (Score:2)
How about when he's paid back the money for all of the bandwidth he stole, or makes some kind of restitution (community service or the like) to repay all the time wasted by everyone he bombarded?
That'd be a start, but he doesn't seem to be interested in any of that. The only reason he's not spamming any longer is that AOL's lawye
Re:how about exercising OUR rights (Score:3, Funny)
He just needs to book "Great White" at his club. They can take care of the rest...
Re:Good for him (Score:2)
Lawyer
MS Programmer
RIAA Spokesperson
Spammer
Prostitute
Stripper
Night Club Owner
Used Car Dealer
Food Service employee
Food Service manager
Local resteraunt owner
Teacher
Professor
Doctor
Lawyer
goto MS... etc.
Frightening no?
Re:Speaking of which.... (Score:2)
I wondered that this weekend... I looked at some of the subject lines in my spambox, and realized I'd gotten the first green card spam I'd seen in years.