Study on the Effects of Spam on End Users 448
An anonymous reader writes "'About a third of people responded to a spam, seeking more information. And 7 percent actually bought a product or service.' Who are these people? Is this really what non-techies do with Spam? They can have my Spam if they want it :-)"
One problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
CB
Re:One problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
So that won't necessarily ease the problem.
Re:One problem... (Score:2)
Re:One problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem will be if a large group of people still accept and read spam. The only way to stop spam will be if A) people do not buy the shit they sell or buy into the scams they offer, or B) spam is controlled by methods outside of the end users hand.
I still think this will not be a legislative solution. I really think that a large majority of mail hosts should implement white listing, at least for messages that are sent to multiple recipients. If multiple similar messages are received by a mail host from the same or similar mail host(s) then they should be blocked. If a user wishes to be part of a legitimate mail list then there should be a way to authorize that host to send messages. Sure, it will be a pain for some mail lists but utilities will pop up to make it easier for them to do the authorization dance.
If the top 5 mail hosts would participate, spammers would be obsolete.
Some people would argue that blocking unauthorized messages would prevent some people from receiving mail that they would like to receive. But companies that send mail to so many people obviously are being harmful to more people than they are providing a service to. (If you call con-ing people into buying useless crap a service, even to people who fall for it.)
-Jacob
Not currently experiencing your concern. (Score:5, Informative)
I had one request for passage of mail, which I accepted as I knew what it was about.
In the whole time I have used Earthlink's challenge system only two businesses have requested permission to be added to my link.
None of the big delivery or sales sites have asked, but I did add them as my daily summary of blocked "suspicious" mail was large.
Earthlink has two categories. know and suspected. it is from suspected that permissions can be asked about. their known spam category does not send out notifications of blocked mail
Getting my permission requires the user/company to follow a link and ask for it. It uses the standard picture challenge technique that some advanced systems can defeat.
In the end I love it, I no longer have to filter at my end. I also have cut down my spam to zero.
I have yet to experience a case of repeated requests. I know I can block them permanently, so unless they roll addresses all the time all they could be at most is a request hassle.
PS: This system is great for those who have grand parents who don't need to see that seedy side of the net. You can setup their address books for them and even review their spam online if they give you the passwords.
Re:One problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Have a gambling problem? We can help... (Score:3, Interesting)
1. People may receive mailings from a company they once did business with, offering them worthwhile products. But if they've forgotten about their original dealings, it will look like UCE.
2. Some (otherwise) reputable companies may get hold of a targetted mailing list and send spam that is actually not for sex aids and scams. I've seen a few 'honest' spams in my time.
3. People like me follow links in spams simply out of curiosity. If I get an
Spam (Score:3, Interesting)
They emailed me back, saying the company will never do this again since the response was so hostile, and they had learned their lesson!
I was curious, so just now I did a search for the company. They are not in business anymore, but people are still using and maintaining the product.
So I have technically responded
that's called a... (Score:2)
Re:that's called a... (Score:2, Funny)
The end is now (Score:2)
"Mac OS X Mail can screen out all messages except what comes from recent correspondents and people in your address book."
So that day is now, for mac users with $130.
Re:The end is now (Score:2)
Re:The end is now (Score:2)
I'm sure you could do this with procmail too if you wanted.
Re:One problem... (Score:2)
with a sample size that small (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:2, Informative)
I think the poster may have confused the 30% response rate to the study itself with the response rate to spam. Unless s/he was clever and considered the survey to be spam.
huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
For this report, we collected original data from two sources. The first was a national telephone survey of 2,200 adults, including 1,380 Internet users that we conducted during June 2003. The second was a compilation of more than 4,000 first-person narratives about spam that were solicited since September 2002 by the Telecommunications Research & Action Center (TRAC), a national consumer group.
It's been a while since college statistics, but I thought that in general, once you got to a sample size of 400, your results weren't going to get much better...??
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:5, Funny)
Awhell
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:2)
However, this particluar survey was by a highly reputable non-profit organisation with a long history of well regarded Internet surveys.
And their sample size was large.
The fact that the complete report is available free on the web should indicate something...
Increase Your Sample Size By 50% Overnight! (Score:3, Funny)
an easy, spam-based way to increase the sample (Score:2)
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:2)
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:2)
From the report For this report, we collected original data from two sources. The first was a national telephone survey of 2,200 adults.
I would think that there would be a correlation between people who answer surveys and people who answer spam
And the other one is , as usual hyping the results (this is slashdot, so expected )
The results were (from the report)
7% of email users report that they have ordered a product or service that was offered in an unsolicited email, althoug
Re:with a sample size that small (Score:3, Funny)
I've yet to meet (Score:5, Funny)
Barnum was right (Score:3, Insightful)
I've never seen anyone in the act of purchasing the National Enquirer either but obviously it must happen. Frequently.
Not sure if that's funny or depressing...
Re:I've yet to meet (Score:2)
sadly (Score:4, Funny)
but, there is hope, you can only enlarge your penis so many times.
Re:sadly (Score:2, Funny)
(sorry to the comedian i stole this from.)
Re:sadly (Score:3, Funny)
I'll tell you who they are. (Score:5, Insightful)
Senate Bill (Score:3, Interesting)
perhaps the anti-spam bill will pass (Score:3, Informative)
I work as tech support at a university. It is my experience that most people actually read spam messages and then actively consider the promotion. I guess they are still naive to the ways of the internet and believe they are actually seeing a good deal sent to them. People always ask me about the "send your bank account info to nigeria" scam because they don't ever think that *they* could be the target of a scam. I'm afraid to think of what kinds of scams these people fall for in the real world if they believe everything they read on their computer screen.
Re:perhaps the anti-spam bill will pass (Score:2)
The Senate just approved an anti-spam bill 97-0 and the House is working on a similar bill (story here). Hopefully this will keep normal people from getting duped into buying the crap that floods our inboxes.
Very cool. I hope that they come up with anti-virus legislation soon - then we'll all be virus free! Seriously, there are so many other issues (such as international traffic, outsourcing to remote companies who use US servers but bounce mail through Uganda to China and back to the US...) how do you
Re:perhaps the anti-spam bill will pass (Score:2)
The "Axis of Spam"? (That'll go down a treat when countries of a certain religious belief get put on it.) Besides, while most spam might appear to be originating from servers in the far east, the spammers and spamvertised sites almost always track back to the US and EU, in that order. Amsterdam seems to have recently become the Lagos away from home for the 419 scammers for example, and almost all the "herbal viagra" seems to be US. If the propose
A good bill! (Score:2)
People claimed that the courts would collapse from all the TCPA cases for junk faxes, but
Re:A good bill! (Score:2)
I don't think this will fly. It sounds good, but the result will be a myriad of small cases that swamp the justice system and the only real winners will be the lawyers. Faxes are much more traceable, despite what telcos might like you to believe, and are tied to an address and therefore to a person much easier, making the TCPA a more effective deterrant. A much better way for spam might be to allow an offshoot of Government (FTC/FCC in the US, OFCOM in the UK
Re:A good bill! (Score:3, Insightful)
Not true, there may be an increase in the short term, but then spammers will realize that they can't continue to spam and the case load will decrease. Washington and California state courts have not crashed because of spam cases.
Government agencies tend to move slowly and pick the cases for people who donate to campaigns or cases that they want to use to make a point. Look at the EEO
Unenforcable, Political (Score:5, Interesting)
I see this as more toothless-tiger feel-good legislation that politicians sign to get votes. I for one don't buy it for a second.
Re:Unenforcable, Political (Score:3, Informative)
The point is right now, the only way the government can go after spammers is if they are commiting fraud. And while a fair number of them are, others are not. The e-mail you get flaunting a new screensaver, cell phone, or home loan might be annoying, but it's not fraud if they deliver the product. Suppose you manage to catch
Re:Unenforcable, Political (Score:2)
Seriously tho, it will be encorced on a company by company basis. Big shops like AOL Earthlink, and whoever will pursue the big spammers, once they stop, they'll go after the smaller time ones and then the fear will settle in. Sure then spam will be forced overseas or whatever, but it will still be drastically reduced, because not just everyone is willing to go to the trouble of moving overseas.
Spam is big pain for businesses, they're customer
That's a misreading (Score:2, Funny)
The blurb reminds me of "Every five seconds, somewhere in the world, a woman is having a baby. Our job is to find that woman, and stop her." Par for slashdot, I suppose.
spamassassin.org (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, the spam comes with a modified subject (beginning with *****SPAM*****) and a report such as
SPAM: . : . . : . : . . Start SpamAssassin results . : . . : . : .
SPAM: This mail is probably spam. The original message has been altered
SPAM: so you can recognise or block similar unwanted mail in future.
SPAM: See http://spamassassin.org/tag/ for more details.
SPAM:
SPAM: Content analysis details: (6.4 hits, 3 required)
SPAM: Hit! (2.7 points) Subject contains lots of white space
SPAM: Hit! (3.7 points) BODY: Information on getting a larger penis
SPAM:
SPAM: . : . . : . : . . End of SpamAssassin results . : . . : . : . .
Now, I'd suggest you ask your provider to install such a filter on his servers.
Re:spamassassin.org (Score:2)
You have to stay on top of the rules though...
Re:spamassassin.org (Score:2)
Article Omission (Score:3, Funny)
Oxman's 15-year-old son, Robert, says five out of six e-mails he gets daily are spam, often including offers of pornography or dating services. Robert says he simply deletes them.
Robert would neither comment on the delay between when he received the pornographic emails and when he deleted them, nor would he comment on his activities during that time.
Responses to Spam (Score:5, Interesting)
I've got my Dad well trained... he usually blocks anything that's not from a user in his address book, and deletes anything with an attatchment that he was not expecting. He's not exactly a techie, but he's a lot more savvy than a lot of non-technical internet users
My mom on the other hand, still seems to believe that it's all personally directed at her, and that she should either respond, get angry/offended/whatever, just as if someone she knew in meatspace said/sent it to her. :-)
She's learning, now, but quite often she looks at stuff like those banner ads saying "Speed up your internet connection..." or "You have won..." and she's just not worked out yet that it's all lies. The worst are those emails which claim it's a new critical update from Microsoft. It took ages to convince her that Bill's Boys don't send out neccesary updates through email.
It's the folk who don't have a reality check in the form of a friendly techie around that I'm worried about. If not for me, my folks PC would be riddled with trojans, virii and other malicious software.
-- Soluzar
It's math (Score:4, Funny)
A few years ago I had a rather nasty realization; as 100 is the mean IQ, that means fully one half of the population has an IQ below 100.
This realization has brought me peace. I'm no longer frustrated at the stupidity of the "average" person...they just can't help it.
Re:It's math (Score:3, Funny)
Except in Lake Wobegon.
Re:It's math (Score:3, Funny)
I think you might be in there...
Re:It's math (Score:2, Insightful)
No! Holy crap! How many times do I have to tell people that simply because the mean is 100, that doesn't mean half the people are below it.
For example, a test is given to 4 people who scores are 5, 90, 95, 100. The average (mean) score is 72.5, but three of the four people are "above average".
Re:It's math (Score:2, Funny)
"It's people like you that make people like me above average."
Re:It's math (Score:3, Insightful)
It may not be that bad. You're confusing "mean" with "median." The arithmetic mean is obtained by summing all of the values and then dividing by the count of the values you summed. The median is obtained by choosing the middle value in a ranked list. If the mean IQ is 100, there could be many people at or slightly above this value with only a few who are significantl
Re:It's math (Score:2)
Re:It's math (Score:4, Funny)
But that doesn't explain where you found 3 people who would moderate that as "Insightful."
Re:It's math (Score:2)
Re:It's math (Score:2)
Actually, the mean is around 120. Either this is because the tests don't work properly, or it has increased since the tests were devised. In any case the vast majority of people are between 110 and 130. Not that IQ is as good a measure of intelligence as some people would suggest...
Re:It's math (Score:5, Interesting)
That little realization is really scary to me. I don't FEEL above average. Actually I feel I could be a hell of a lot smarter. My IQ is above 150, and I'm well educated. (It's not bragging from an "anonymous handle" is it?) Yet I feel dumb often.
Which makes me feel fairly hopeless to think about your 'realization'. There are many people under 100, marginally educated, who are: driving, voting, holding office, raising children, listening to Rush Limbaugh, purchasing firearms... OMG !! If I sometimes wonder if I'm properly qualified to do all those things...
Not to mention the loneliness.
Excuse me now I have to go purchase a small island and fortify it.
Re:It's math (Score:4, Insightful)
When I assumed that "most" people were reasonably intelligent, I would get frustrated, angry and depressed at how stupid the "average" person could be. Now it no longer bothers me. Oh, of course individual acts of stupidity can be annoying, but the general stupidity of the masses is no longer unexpected, and therefore no longer frustrating.
"Feeling dumb" is a sign of intelligence. Actual dumb people usually feel they are smarter than they are. Limbaugh listeners, for instance, feel they are more well-informed about news than average. When tested, they prove to be less well-informed than average.
Note: I had originally typed "median", and replaced it with "mean". I knew that it was a Gaussian distribution and that the mean and median in this case were the same. But I also knew that, this being Slashdot, there would be a dozen people to "correct" me no matter which one I used.
Re:It's math (Score:2)
In partial defense (Score:3, Offtopic)
The IQ scheme was set up assuming an approximately Gaussian distribution, for which the mean and median are the same. 15 IQ points = 1 standard deviation.
Naturally, that's horseshit, but 100 was at least designed to be the median and the mean, by definition.
Re:In partial defense (Score:2)
It could happen to be the mean and median, and you could say 15 points is 1SD (but that would mean a given IQ score is not comparable to the same score from a different time)
Having one person like einstein in your sample would scew the mean, but not the median.
There is no way to "define" IQ in such a way that a situation like that makes the mean and median different.
You could make up some new type of statistics I suppose, but that would be stu
mean and wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
100 is the most common value, or the Mode.
100 is the midpoint of the values, or Median.
100 is the average value or Mean.
If you're talking about something without a normal distribution, then extreme values on one side will drive the average down, but most of the population is above average.
In Lake Wobegone, "All the children are above average." Maybe they have a lot of terribly stupid adults, so that all the children can be above average. I knew something bothered me about that place.
Effect on me? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm setting up my own Email server (yes, paid the extra bucks to get a business broadband account), complete with filters, attachment blocking, etc. Even purchased and read a couple of books on the subject... it's proven to be quite an educational endeavor.
When my kids are old enough to use Email (pretty soon now), I want to provide them with something at least partially filtered by dear old dad... I' ve even saved about 2000 spam emails to help train the filters. I don't want to have the birds-and-the-bees conversation with my kids any earlier than I have to (and explaining some midgets-in-leather porno spam is NOT on my preferred activities list).
Doing something is so much better than just bitching, and so much more satisfying.
Re:Effect on me? (Score:3, Informative)
Congrats! My Internet experience also 'opened up' when I took control of my own communications, instead of letting my ISP provide their own brand of crappy, buggy email service.
I have some recommendations for you. First, look into using postfix [postfix.org] as y
rolling your own (Score:2)
Re:Effect on me? (Score:2, Insightful)
it's not simple (Score:5, Interesting)
Take my Dad, for example. He's happy keeping in touch with his operatic society via their mailing list, and using email - you forget how big a "Wow!" moment you had when you first got your head around the whole idea of free global communications - but he's still printing out the latest "MS Security Patch" fakes and asking me if he needs to do anything with them.
He also keeps asking if there's anything I can do to stop the semi-porn spam - and other than the usual precautions, the answer is still "not really".
It may be natural to us old pros to just hit delete, but to people new to the technology it's not that straightforward.
People think it's polite to mail back saying "actually, I don't want this mail" rather than LARTing them to the ISP, looking up their address from WHOIS, burning down their house and sowing the ground with salt like we do (it's not just me doing this, is it?
Basically, there are always going to be enough people making enough mistakes whilst learning to keep spammers happy...
Mind you, anyone who buys a Penis Patch probably deserves all they get!
Re:it's not simple (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes you can! Easily!
Get Mozilla. Use it as your e-mail client. It can either POP or IMAP. It has bayesian filtering. Just start training it, and your spam will be filtered. It doesn't save your bandwidth, but it does save your time.
I was talking with someone just yesterday evening. She is not a geek. She does use Mozilla for both browsing and e-mail as I recommended. She was raving about how she never gets popups, and hardly ever sees any spam. Her boyfriend gets tons of both. (Again a non-geek.) She keeps recommending that he get Mozilla. He thinks it is too much trouble to download it and run Setup.exe.
It is the easiest thing to do for a Windows user.
It is very sensible. Switch from a corporate-friendly e-mail client that can't filter, and a corporate-friendly browser to a user-friendly one of each. Mozilla's agenda is different. It is open-source, which is automatically user-oriented rather than vendor-oriented. Mozilla is never going to have the internal conflict whether they are being "too" harsh about filtering out vendor's potential advertising.
It just astounds me that so many Windows users complain about both pop-ups and about spam, when it is so amazingly easy to get rid of both in one fell swoop. Truly amazing.
From what I gather... (Score:5, Interesting)
Much more interesting would be a survey of the last time they responded or bought something from spam, versus how long they have been using e-mail. You could draw more conclusions from that.
The average person is of average intelligence (Score:5, Insightful)
Then there's just plain stupid people, who think that an anonymous advertisement in their email, with spelling mistakes, lots of exclamation marks, and garbage writing warrants a legitimate product or service. A fool and their money...
So you'll either have to require better training for all computer users, which probably won't happen. Or you'll have to revise the types of software that laypeople use to protect them from the world.
Re:The average person is of average intelligence (Score:2)
OR... how about outlawing the fucking spam?
Re:The average person is of average intelligence (Score:2)
I hear the news repeat _constantly_ "If it's too good to be true, it is." yet inDUHviduals just do not get it....
Confusing clients (Score:4, Interesting)
It can be a bit annoying, because of course clients don't understand these things are just spam sent out in their thousands, and think they are from real people criticising their web sites. Of course the standard Slashdot response is to laugh at such people for being dumb, but often this type of spam is created in a deliberately deceptive way to make it look as if it is from a real person.
Newbies (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Newbies (Score:5, Insightful)
This whole issue goes hand in hand with security, and software design. The onus is on the software developers.
Software that laypeople use should be designed to protect them from the real world (geeks use what they wish). And no, Microsoft software is not appropriate for the lay person: it requires frequent security updates, has too many complicated features that users misunderstand or misuse, has too many bells and whistles in Outlook etc. that introduce unnecessary security risks. There's no reason for script support in emails. I stip all my HTML mail to plaintext and have not missed a single word of meaning.
I have started looking at laypeople with Internet connections as very real risks to the digital world. If you consider this statement overblown, then consider the most serious network attacks to date. Almost all of them have used unsecured machines to launch attacks, or spam. And you must also realized that it is because of these unsecured hosts that plague most of the Internet that ISPs are forced to use increasingly restrictive filtering: they filter dangerous ports and drop mail from suspect IPs. Both of these are of huge detriment to all of our Internet experience.
I Answered All My Spam (Score:4, Funny)
on any day I go online.
I used to get in quite a huff,
while wading through unwanted stuff.
But then I changed the man I am,
the day I answered all my spam.
Now every time I check my box,
I load up on fantastic stocks.
I'll gladly say I felt no loss,
when, with a smile, I fired my boss.
With just one click, the best thing yet,
I freed myself of all my debt.
I have, paying a few small fees,
ten university degrees.
Now that I'm losing all this weight,
I'm sure, someday, I'll get a date.
Instead of going to a show,
I spy on everyone I know.
(That's easy, since I have in hand,
this nifty wireless video cam.)
I spend my evenings viewing screens,
of barely legal horny teens.
And with a little credit charge,
Whoopee! My penis was enlarged!
Meanwhile these shots of Britney Spears
should be enough to last for years.
And so I lead this online life,
my monitor is now my wife.
It has become my greatest dream,
to launch my own get-rich-quick scheme.
And if you think you might get missed,
relax, you're on my e-mail list.
SATIREWIRE'S 2ND ANNUAL POETRY SPAM
2001 FREESTYLE WINNER:
"I Answered All My Spam"
by Alex Silbajoris, Columbus, Ohio
http://www.satirewire.com/features/poetry_s
Phone Survay ! (Score:5, Insightful)
The report is based on a randomized, national phone survey of 2,200 adults.
Now, I wonder why a survay carried out in this manner recorded an unusually high number of people responding to spam?
Maybe a truer responce would have been acheved if every time someone told them to fuck off and slammed the phone down they treated this as an 'I dont respond to spam' reply
Correcting for such error (Score:2, Interesting)
You separate into groups; the response group R, and the "Fuck off" group F. Say that F is 1000 people or so; you now take a subsample of F, say 20 people, and you harass them at all hours of the day until they give you a straight answer. You then assume that the 20 people you randomly chose to harass in this manner are representative of the entire 1000, and multiply the ratio accordingly.
Of course, most surveyors don't have the nerve to do the statistical analysis properly
nailing the bastards (Score:2, Informative)
This is more than just sending off a single email to a scantly watched abuse email.. This means getting hold of a real person and explaining, re
Re:nailing the bastards (Score:2)
How many? (Score:2)
You lucky lucky people. Guess I'm in the top 1% with 120 a day.
Email is useless for me these days. Even with filtering 95% of the mail it is still useless. I get one email a week from The Old Man and authorisation emails from forums.
Thanks you dirty spammers.
What if? (Score:2, Insightful)
I mean, it's the same thing with drugs: you prosecute those who sell, and those who consume.
If law enforcement starts sending bogus spam and getting those who respond, fewer people will respond, thus killing the profitability of it.
I just quit using email (Score:2)
Spam study uses spam? (Score:2, Interesting)
Read this article from the spammer's point of view (Score:2)
Think of it this way:
About a third of people responded to a spam, seeking more information.
And 7 percent actually bought a product or service
A spammer would read this as:
A STUPENDOUS, UNHEARD-OF 33% of people responded to a spam, ATTEMPTING TO BUY SOMETHING!!!
And A SPECTACULAR **7 PERCENT** actually bought a product or service, compared to the measly
They Obviously Do (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess we should stop trying to make laws to stop spam. If it were something like 5% of responded to a spam message and 0.01% actually bought something, I could see the argument for illegalizing it. However, a figure this high suggests that people actually want these offers (I haven't a clue why, either, so don't ask).
Maybe this is better as I would much rather have spam than DRM, and it appears spam has been used as one of the arguments in favor of locking down the Net.
I would rather suffer the inconvenience of freedom than the frustrated meaninglessness of life under tyranny.
Spam can be fun! (Score:3)
More Annoying Than Door--to-Door Sales? Come on.. (Score:3, Insightful)
OK. People would rather put up with some poor yammering sod than hit "delete"?
Makes little sense to me.
You got lucky, or you're lying. (Score:2)
Re:You got lucky, or you're lying. (Score:2)
Re:Whats the big deal about spam... (Score:3, Funny)
I never hide my email when posting on forums or anywhere online.
Profile for Garak [slashdot.org]
Garak (100517)
(email not shown publicly)
Come again?
Re:Whats the big deal about spam... (Score:2)
Re:Whats the big deal about spam... (Score:2)
From Garak's User Page [slashdot.org] in the right column:
Of course he may change this before you read it.
Obviously you do hide your email. Some of us still need to allow others to contact us. Unhide your email on Slashdot and wherever else you are, and tell me again in six months that it's only "an extra few emails to delete". For me, despite the high-volum
Just cleaned-out my spam box... (Score:2)
33,600 messages. About 1 months' worth. And I have to check them individually to make sure that there are not real messages in there, and yes, there were some.
Spam is a _real_ problem. At the least it means that the level of reliability of normal email is dropping from perhaps 99.9% to about 97% today. At the worst it means hours spent every week cleaning out the junk.
Think abou
Re:Whats the big deal about spam... (Score:4, Insightful)
You've never paid by the byte for your data transfer, then, have you? I imagine you've also never paid for your storage space or paid by the minute for your connection time. Any of these things make spam suck much worse. Also, it really sucks if you get so much spam in your mailbox that your provider starts bouncing legitimate messages. These conditions (among others) can cause unwanted email to become costly rather than merely annoying.
Liar. You hide it when posting on slashdot.
Re:My coworker has done it (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure a few very intelligent
Just because you know nothing about how much an airfilter costs doesn't mean you are stupid, and likewise with photoshop.
Re:how to trace spam? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:how to trace spam? (Score:3, Insightful)
The "Click to remove me" links are not all that effective. People tend to forget that the other way Spammers verify your email address is with HTML email containing foreign image tags.
E.g. <img src="http://10.0.0.9/images/9879287493?email=blah@ nothere.not">
Re:it makes sense (Score:2)
Your wife has a penis? Shouldn't she properly be called "husband"?