AOL Blocking Spammers' Web Sites 238
Nuclear Elephant writes "According to this article, AOL has decided to take a fresh approach to fighting spam and is now blocking the spammer's web address. The philosophy is, if the customers can't visit spammers sites, spammers will not be able to make any money. On a side note, I suggested this concept about six months ago but nobody thought ISPs would adopt it. Now perhaps we can get a group like NANOG interested in sponsoring a blacklist for spammer addresses?"
Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Insightful)
I see loads of abuse potential here... While AOL might be smart enough not to block sites like microsoft.com or ebay.com if they showed up in a spam, it could be a knock-out blow to relatively
small and medium (and hence little known) companies on the web.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Interesting)
AOL has a long history of not informing and many times outright lying.
When AOL first gave out usenet access to it's members, it promised to have every newsgroup available. Instead, AOL blocked newsgroup
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Informative)
Eh? Which newsgroups were those? alt.aol-sucks was certainly available from AOL, and I posted there frequently, often via AOL IIRC - in fact, although the flames were annoying and juvenile, some of us occasionally got useful bug reports there.
Jay, the ex-AOL Mail Guy
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Insightful)
So some of those small and medium companies will end up getting blocked imply because they were mis-filtered.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure AOL won't block any joe-jobbed targets but only bulletproof servers hosted at Chinanet, Telecom Malaysia, Procergs.com.br etc. which have been spamvertised by known spam gangs.
This is *really* a good idea - Alan Ralsky uses several "throw-away" domains per spam run, but only a handful of different servers to host his crap. Null route these and Ralsky can enlarge his own penis.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Insightful)
There's nothing new in that. But do you seriously think, AOL will pay dozens of employees to find out just WHETHER a spam is "legit" (in the sense that it's really advertising the target site) or "fake" (in the sense that the real goal is to get the target site blocked)? This will become some seriously tough piece of work!
And it's kind of doubtful, whether it will help or not.
Also - surfing TO a website just to find out whether it's a spam site or not is nowadays also giving away WHO is doing the surfing. By now I get more and more spams that have my email address encoded in the host names of the target site, e.g. the first part of the host name http://sx1piznvxr0svy.froidnet.com/
sx1piznvxr0s
So by now we are in a situation, where not just 'unsubscribe' lists are a way for a spammer to check the validity of our email addresses - no, even the host name we use to 'look at their "great" sites' give our identities away.
It'd be really great if some people would finally clue in that the more successful spammers are actually pretty smart as well! (unfortunately for us though)
Right now I think the best policy is still the passive filtering of incoming spams.
- Filtering destination sites will open doors to abuse in terms of using fake spam to block unwanted sites...
- automatic downloading of spamvertised sites will confirm which addresses are "good".
The latter idea MIGHT still be workable, since the spammer will also get to know WHO has spam-scanners installed (provided the automatic download of the page actually has the name of the spam-filter in the User-Agent header field of the get request). That way the spammer would also be able to drop email addresses blocking his sites.
On the other hand, this has one very big issue with it - if the spammer filters out these addresses for his sales, he could at the same time COLLECT these addresses for DDoS uses...
No - PASSIVE measures are the only GOOD solution we have. Spam-Filters in addition to tar-pits slowing the the spam delivery...
Everything else will - as sad as it sounds - open way to many doors to abuse!
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Informative)
We only blacklist his spamvertised hosts on SPEWS, Spamhaus and other DNSBLs to prevent the bulletproof hoster from sending email. Use the same DNSBLs in a HTTP proxy or a router and the spammer's servers are "invisible". If a spam filter can check spamvertised targets against DNSBLs, it can recognise a lot of spam emails which otherwise might get through.
But do you seriously think, AOL will pay dozens of emp
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Informative)
And - how would a content filter find out whether the content of the spam would actually try and sell the product listed in the spam, or whether it's advertising a product listed on the target server in the hopes that the target server gets blocked?
You *can't* read the true motives of a spam out of its content...
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:2)
I get joejobed, first thing I do is call my ISP. If someone complains about spam, first
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Informative)
It can be managed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:4, Informative)
AOL_Crooks [washingtonpost.com]
I think going after the sites that spam loads it's images from is a great way to go after spammers. Most of them use the img src tag with a uniqe ID (usually the email address of the person) to retrieve the images so they know when a person received it. No hit, might have hit a blackhole and they have no way of knowing.
This doesn't appear to be what they are doing though. They appear to be going after the link the person clicks on to buy. Still waste the spammers time, but I can see this getting abused if the system is automated -- or even if it isn't.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:5, Insightful)
Having an advertising / services based website is hardly against anyone's (reasonable) terms of service, and ISP's have made it a point to be common carriers, ignorant of the content they are providing. IMO, it's not up to the ISP to decide whether services being advertised on a site are in their customers' best interests.
You can't block these guys by IP, we already know that successful spammers have networks of infected zombie slaves, they'll use this network to host their website. Blocking by domain name has its obvious shortcomings also. How difficult would it be for a spammer to set up an IRC channel that advertises this week's (or today's) IP address and port number for accessing their spam contact page.
Or maybe they just send a spam out every 12 hours with a new IP address advertised. They could just put their current IP address on the bottom of every spam they send, or in the headers.
No, the solution proposed here is simply another speed bump for any determined spammer, and as lucrative as spamming turns out to be, it won't be long until all that's happened is that netizens have unwittingly (and happily) given up another net liberty in the form of website censorship.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a difference between giving up and persuing ill-fated approaches.
And since in your sarcasm you demonstrate that you're not a fan of giving up, you simultaneously advocate the giving up of certain essential liberties on the net -- specifically the lack of censorship.
ISP's blocking websites based on the content of those websites is a BAD precedent, I don't care if it's advertising spam services or showing gruesome imagery. So long as it is not ILLEGAL, it s
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:2, Insightful)
AOL can block all of the websites they want; I believe there is an invention out called the Proxy...
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Interesting)
Especially by those companies that have been incorrectly marked as spammers by AOL.
Re:Is this a *smart* idea? (Score:3, Interesting)
If anything, this should be opt-in, or at least, opt-out.
Not hard (Score:2)
overkill considered good (Score:3, Insightful)
AOL Instant DoS v2.0 (Score:5, Funny)
From: baduser@aol.com
To: gooduser@aol.com
Subject: Look At My Porn
Come look at my naked (sister|mother|wife|daughter) on her web cam doing all kinds of nasty things.
http://www.sco.com
--------------
AOL , making DoS even easier.
Errors: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Errors: (Score:3, Funny)
The kind that would also capitalize the letter after that, and the letter after, and...
Re:AOL Instant DoS v2.0 (Score:3, Interesting)
That said, I went to www.sc
Yes, but (Score:5, Interesting)
There are just too many pitfalls in this. I don't think all large ISPs will go this route.
Re:Yes, but (Score:5, Insightful)
If AOL blocks a local TV site for sharing an IP with a spammer, then the service provider will rush to close down the Spammer
This plan doesn't just stop AOL users seeing spam sites, it provides a powerful incentive for hosting firms to prevent spammers using them
It's brilliant.
Re:Yes, but (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yes, but (Score:2)
I think they have around 22 million customers. Probably 12 million who know they still have an account they pay for.
I used to work for the competition.
So block the URL, not the IP address (Score:2, Troll)
Beating up your own customers (Score:4, Insightful)
Agreed, this is a clear conflict of interest. Even though I could legally and technically block HTTP traffic between spammer websites and our university network, I wouldn't feel comfortable doing so, precisely because those most likely to complain about it would not be the spammers (or those unfortunate enough to share their web server with a spammer), but rather my own colleagues. And, they would complain to me, rather than to the spammer's ISP.
I'm all for public blacklists, and I keep using those to protect my own mailboxes from inbound junk. If somebody wants to send me mail, I'm justified in asking that person not to pay money to (or otherwise support) the ISP of a spammer. Likewise if they want to access my web pages, though I haven't implemented a blacklist check for those yet.
However, when I prevent my friends and colleagues from viewing somebody else's website just because that website shares hardware with a spammer, things are getting real tricky, because I'm interfering with traffic that doesn't necessarily benefit the spammer or his ISP anyway, and the only ones hurt by it are my friends and colleagues. This is clearly not desirable.
I admit that it makes a little more sense for AOL to do this, given their millions of users who supposedly don't know what's in their own best interest, but I wouldn't want to be a customer of such a company, nor would I want to work for it.
Re:Yes, but (Score:4, Interesting)
You, and others, mention the problem of people who "truly want to visit the spammer's sites." I think the key part of AOL's policy is that they provide absolutely no facility for that. It's the people who really want to visit the spammer's sites that are the problem. Letting them do this continues the vicious cycle of spam. It's a decision that only a paternalistic overbearing ISP like AOL will make, but it makes sense in that environment.
Finally, AOL gets so much spam that they would identify the zombie-host-of-the-day within a few minutes of its deployment. A small staff of spam-site identifiers could lock those down pretty fast.
Overall, this seems like a good attempt, and even more interesting, it appears to be working. In our experience, the amount of spam has not been flat as the article suggests, but still increasing fairly exponentially. A system that lowered the amount of spam sent to AOL is worth strong consideration.
AOL should realize that sharing this list of spamvertizing IP's would help lower the amount of spam they receive even more. Spammers would think twice about send spam to AOL customers if that might block the websites from the whole world. Think about it, AOL -- Share the list!
thad
Better to re-direct to a warning page with a link (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Better to re-direct to a warning page with a li (Score:3, Interesting)
IMHO, even though it is all for a good cause, once you start blocking websites "for the good of the internet" it
Re:Better to re-direct to a warning page with a li (Score:3, Insightful)
A notice like "we know who you are, pervert, and we're going to tell your mom" will surely help to reduce even more the number of clicks.
Anyway, excellent idea ripnet [slashdot.org], even without my modest contibution.
Re:Better to re-direct to a warning page with a li (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps slap one of those 'text in image' verifications and have the text read 'I love spam'?
Click here to have your freedom taken away (Score:3, Insightful)
With all the annoying warnings that users have learned to bypass without reading, will another warning really matter?
I think... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I think... (Score:2)
SPEWS has always been anonymous, they didn't "go anonymous".
If NANOG would block CHINANET, KRNET, and a few rogue providers here (4.0.0.0/8) I think we would see spammers getting discon'ed very quickly, r
Sounds open to abuse (Score:4, Interesting)
I'll start with Microsoft, move on to SCO...
--G
Re:Sounds open to abuse (Score:4, Funny)
This is mandatory for webmails (Score:5, Interesting)
This kind of service frequently gets abused by spammers. Two they abuse it
1) they open an account, just to have a valid address in order to bypass basic spam filters. Then, they send their spam through other servers using this address as the sender.
2) they use scripts to send spam through the service, as any regular user would. This is extremely annoying.
For 1) we publish SPF for all domains we send mail from. Now, it's up to people to enable SPF on their mail servers.
For 2) we filter _all_ packets coming from China, Korea, Nigeria and addresses listed in Spews and Spamhaus databases. That's about 13000+ filtered networks. Thanks to OpenBSD packet filter, it's trivial to set up and it doesn't introduce any slowdown.
not good (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:not good (Score:2)
When I pay for internet access, I expect to be able to access any public site on the internet if I so with.
Re:not good (Score:2)
Blocking sites.. (Score:2, Funny)
Mixed Feelings (Score:5, Interesting)
First of all, are all spammers bad? I mean, there ARE some people that buy crap advertised in spam. And is it all bad, or a ripoff? There was an link on Fark a week ago to an article about some guy that actually looks forwards to receiving spam, and had bought a lot of things from spam mails. Weird things, like a carpet cleaner, but things.
On the other hand, do people want AOL to shelter them from the web, from the real world? I can't mail some friends on another ISP because their ISP has blacklisted Roadrunner Email. We already have a government 'sheltering' us from things, such as the real truth behind assassinations, aliens, and the disappearance of Elvis.
Finally, the more things AOL blocks, the more reason for people to take the red pill, wake up to the monopoly, and get on a real ISP. Then those stupid CDs will stop showing up in my mailbox.
I want to see the web, the whole web, the whole glorious ugly sex-ridden spam-filled seething mass of crap, and naught else.
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes.
I mean, there ARE some people that buy crap advertised in spam.
Doesn't mean the other two billion people need to see those ads too. Go to an advertizing site. Just make 'em leave my mailbox allone.
And is it all bad, or a ripoff?
Yes.
There was an link on Fark a week ago to an article about some guy that actually looks forwards to receiving spam, and had bought a lot of things from spam mails.
Indeed, about some compulsive man getting a kick out of buying something over the internet.
Doesn't mean *MY* mailbox need to get stuffed with junk, too. That man can go to some ad site or Ebay or something. If he's got the guts. I suspect he's the dependent kinda guy who needs to be told and handed over everything.
On the other hand, do people want AOL to shelter them from the web, from the real world?
No. *Especially* AOL filtering URL's seems like a very bad idea to me.
We already have a government 'sheltering' us from things, such as the real truth behind assassinations, aliens, and the disappearance of Elvis.
I thnk you're acting like a conspiracy theory troll.
Finally, the more things AOL blocks, the more reason for people to take the red pill, wake up to the monopoly, and get on a real ISP. Then those stupid CDs will stop showing up in my mailbox.
They make for splendid frisbees
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
listen, i understand where you're coming from. on the face of it, spam is just another aspect of the lawless net. and the sometimes draconian things people are doing to try to stop spam seem like they are working in exactly the wrong direction -- towards some big corporate power like aol telling you who you can email and what you can say.
but i also remember what the net was like without spam. i routinely got email from strangers (mostly people who'd seen my posts on various newsgroups) and had interest
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes. Absolutely. That is why many use it. Look at the ads - it is all about parental controls and filtering. AOL was dragged into allowing users basic things like telnet, usenet and the like kicking and screaming.
I'm not just spouting here - the parental controls and all are the REASON several people I know use it, and they leave the controls on when they, themselves use the internet. "Keep me safe."
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2, Interesting)
I love these !. bin the CD, reverse the front cover insert (its usually white on the back) - and then I have a new case for my Knoppix or Mandrake download edition release or Toms Rescue CD or similar.
Your free clue of the day (Score:2)
The same story was on Slashdot; go search for it and you'll find it. Several people pointed out something that the journalist missed: the guy interviewed is himself a spammer. And remember, the first rule of spam is:
He was just another lying scumbag criminal trying to get some free positive publicity. The reporter fell for
Responsible and Praiseworthy (Score:5, Insightful)
AOL is a family ISP - most techies wouldn't use it as it doesn't provide what we want, but all those kids surfing on it deserve to be protected from the people who target them with spam
It's been demonstrated over and over that there are enough people out there willing to buy from spammers to make it a highly profitable industry, but that most of those profits come from taking payment by fraud and never supplying the goods
I would not use an ISP that did this, but the marvel of free will means I don't have to. For AOL's target market (largely clueless and wanting an all-in-one service to supply services and protect them) this is the right action.
One final recommendation to AOL
Please supply the latest Windows service pack and the latest Internet Explorer update patches on your CDs and make them a prerequisite to going online. Microsoft would love you to do this, techies would love it too and it would close down a lot of spam relays by closing the holes.
Re:Responsible and Praiseworthy (Score:2)
Wasn't there something about MS *not* allowing Service Pack updates on magazine cover disks?
If this is true (and I'll confess that my memory is hazy here), that alone is good enough reason for the relevant authority in [insert your country name here] to slap Microsoft down. If Microsoft were not a near-monopoly, and co
Re:Responsible and Praiseworthy (Score:2)
The tin foil hat brigade had a cow when AOL turned off the Windows Messenger service to stop messenger spams. What's going to happen the first time an AOL-installed patch kills someone's Windows box?
By definition, if you're usin
yeah, great. NOT. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:yeah, great. NOT. (Score:3, Insightful)
RTFA: They're not blocking the From: address on the spam, they're blocking the website address that the spam is telling you to go to. AOL, for once, has taken the smart approach and has recognized how easy it is to
Another interesting thing aol has done lately... (Score:2, Interesting)
Browsers Need This Capability (Score:5, Interesting)
Make it optional, stick it in "preferences", stock it with an initial list of spam sites, and give the user the ability to add additional sites, delete sites, and select/deselect the block.
Re:Browsers Need This Capability (Score:2)
That adds a level of complexity that isn't needed. Simply use proxy servers on out bound connections. If they want filtering, use one set. No filtering, use another.
How about... (Score:5, Interesting)
After reading through a page explaining that it is a spam site and that the user might be tracked and harrassed further by those companies for giving them a visit, I'm sure most of them would not click through.
Those masochists looking forward to buying spam and actively supporting these scum could just click "Yes, I really want to see this page" and everyone would be happy. Right?
URLs also filtered in emails to AOL (Score:3, Interesting)
reason: 554-: (HVU:B1) The URL contained in your email to AOL members has generated a high volume of complaints.
The URL in question was http://someplace.(can't remember).solmedia.com which doesn't sound like a spamgang operation to me..
Dynamic IP addresses (Score:2, Interesting)
I sure hope it's just spammers they've blacklisted, rather than a comibnation of a blacklist, and whitelist.
Re:Dynamic IP addresses (Score:2, Interesting)
This also kills the spammers that use the proxy drones created by SoBig et al, 'cuz they'll never reach the drone farm...
Re:Dynamic IP addresses (Score:2)
And the spammer that owns 3-4K domains? Many do. There isn't an easy way to search for them all, but a very easy way to block an IP range.
Re:Dynamic IP addresses (Score:2)
Sure there is. If they're being spammed, they'll show up and can be blocked. If they're not, it doesn't matter.
Not a good solution (Score:2, Insightful)
It's really not fair to those customers. This is why filtering has to be controlled by the user and nobody else should make the decisions.
Re:Not a good solution (Score:3, Insightful)
Bad solution (Score:2, Redundant)
All a spammer has to do is send spam on the behalf of companies that are not their customers and there would be no way to know which merchants should be prosecuted. Spammers muddy the water as much as possible - that is their entire means of survival.
Dan East
Get Rid of the Product Sellers (Score:2, Insightful)
New twist on the idea (Score:4, Funny)
Too much possibility for abuse (Score:2, Interesting)
DDOS, And Virtual Addresses? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, if implemented uninteliigently, filtering by ISPs would simply p/o their own customers. All script-kiddie John has to do is get an account on say, Earthlink, put his little target V-iagra content there and then use an SMTP mailer to draw the attention of Earthlink's own IP blocker after his mails rattle along the 'net.
Sure, they'd clean it up pretty quick, and then unblock, but do you really think that Mr. and Mrs. Non-Techie User are going to be so understanding while their fabulous portraits of their kids are intermittently available as this little war plays itself over and over again? I think not. Grandma is even less technical than them and just can't understand why her AOL dialup can't open the web site where they were just yesterday.
That said, the spam content IP blocking idea has merit, but it's not going to be as simple as merely blocking an IP address. It's probably going to have to be quite smart, smarter than both spammers AND script-kiddies in order to work and thus be accepted. I say the technology merits study but is not ready for prime-time.
Re:DDOS, And Virtual Addresses? (Score:2)
Run it like SPEWS [spews.org]. You don't get blocked unless the problem has been go
Re:DDOS, And Virtual Addresses? (Score:2)
I imagine that, since AOL also supplies DNS to the AOL client, they are blocking by name, not IP.
However, I wonder if blocking by IP would work too in this particular case. Spammers are selling something, and if you sell something it's almost always going to be with an SSL-encrypted link. SSL doesn't work with virtual domains, so either (a) all the spammers have non-vi
AOL fighting SPAM? Really? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is real funny. I've been trying to install some new sendmail milter programs on my mail server in an attempt to cut down on the amount of spam I receive. As a result, I've been taking a closer look at my mail logs.
I'm getting a lot of mail addressed to accounts that don't exist from systems with names like omr-m14.mx.aol.com. Are these legitimate MTAs or open relays?
If AOL wants to cut down on SPAM, they should start with what gets sent by their servers.
Re:AOL fighting SPAM? Really? (Score:3, Informative)
AOL answers [aol.com] this question, and others [aol.com] like it. More helpful than you were expecting, no? In answer to your question, the servers are for bounced messages. Block them, and the worst false positive you'll get is a legitimate bounce.
Re:AOL fighting SPAM? Really? (Score:3, Interesting)
This [gnu-designs.com] is from the last 6 days of mail logs here, and filtered for only one domain we host. Multiply that by about 20 for the domains we host, and then multiply that by the number of hacked providers (comcast.net, cox.com, verizon.net, etc.) and you begin to see an enormous amount of abuse and bandwidth being consumed by these hosts.
Report it to Carl Hutzler (cdhutzler at aol dot com) and let him know your concerns. He is the director of AOL's anti-spam measures.
Re:AOL fighting SPAM? Really? (Score:2)
Re:AOL fighting SPAM? Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
You really need paranoid lookups to be sure-- any loon can control his own reverse DNS and pretend to be someone else.
Not enough (Score:2)
Spammers now, who's next? (Score:5, Insightful)
great idea, wrong premis (Score:3, Insightful)
The only solution to spamers is jail or a clue by 4 [clueby4.com] to the brain.
Re:great idea, wrong premis (Score:2)
If they are so stupid that they think they can lease an "opt-in" list, then they are too stupid to be allowed to have web traffic.
The problem with your point here is that there isn't any way to tell a stupid web site operator from a lying spammer. Spammers li
Timeless Words Of Wisdom (Score:2, Insightful)
Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
~Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), reply of the Pennsylvania Assembly to the
governor, November 11, 1755
What AOL Needs To Fix (Score:2, Insightful)
This not the right approach. (Score:2, Insightful)
In Russia (Score:4, Interesting)
You suggested it? (Score:2)
AOL doesn't care about spam (Score:5, Informative)
I even emailed Carl Hutzler, Director of Anti-spam at AOL, and he hasn't returned my emails or my calls. The same goes for the hundreds of thousands of spams we get from *.verizon.net, comcast.net, voyager.net, compaq.com, and others. Clearly people inside the business infrastructure have infected systems propagating spam on the weekends, using the corporate bandwidth to do it.
At this point, this is what I do:
So far, the more I block, the faster the spam comes in, and the more I block, ad nauseum.
Here is today's counts. At 5:30am, this was 164 hosts, and now it is 109 more than that.
Spam is definately getting worse, as more and more machines are hijacked for the purposes of propagating it, with these trojans.
The more I block, the more incoming spam we get.
Re:AOL doesn't care about spam (Score:3, Insightful)
What I've noticed is the more we block the harder they try to get stuff through, and apparently the stuff that makes it through is the Viagra, penis enlargement, etc. type ads that we really want to block the most.
Spam is getting worse, the incoming attempts to the ISP servers I manage has grown to more than double what it was in August 2003 already, one ISP I deal with in particular is rather pissed, he is dialup only and slowly but surely is losing users t
right idea wrong approach (Score:3, Insightful)
Give people an informed choice. Tell them that the website they are attempting to access has been identified as a security risk/spam house/pron site/etc then let them decide if they want to continue.
It is just as open to abuse but it also seems like it would fail gracefully in the event that the site is not a problem or that as an individual you don't have a problem with it's content.
Go one step further and allow the browser or your account to keep a white list of bookmarks which pass you straight through to the site... just set a cookie or similar.
The end result is that you give people a community knowledge-based opinion about the content of a site, then you give them the choice of whether they want to go with the crowd or go their own way and you make it convenient for them to go their own way from then on.
Many tools already do this with filtering for Ads... just extend it to apply to entire sites and return the bookmark option page instead and if you are AOL you can hook it up to your community database of opinions... "mod this site up, it has 'original' pron... not just the same set of crappy old pics"
Spammers' weakest links (Score:3, Insightful)
Legality != morality (Score:4, Informative)
On this last condition I disagree. Don't confuse legality with morality.
Re:Would this work or be fair? (Score:3, Informative)
"I can see legal problems in many jurisdictions for ISP's censoring the Internet."
what legal problems? what jurisdictions? Seems unlikely to me - if AOL's terms of service allow them to restrict access to certain websites then they can do so.
"not only are AOL a big spammer"
I get hundreds of spam each day; I've never had one from AOL. Is this really correct?
"most spam comes from their network"
oh come on - spam often contains a spoof AOL e-mail address, but the idea "most" spam actually
Re:Would this work or be fair? (Score:3, Interesting)
But as to spam from an AOL address -- it's been about 5 years since I last saw a spam that *actually* came from an AOL server.
Re:AOL sucks. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:AOL sucks. (Score:2)
And what was AOL's reaction when you complained? You did submit a complaint, right?
Re:what about all the spam AOL sends? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This WILL work.. BUT.... big BUT... (Score:2)