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Spam Costs U.S. Companies $22B Annually 326

KoReE writes "According to this CNN article, a study at the University of Maryland says the loss of productivity from spam is costing U.S. companies $22 billion per year." Of course, they also say people get 18.5 spam per day, and I'm tipping in at 20x that.
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Spam Costs U.S. Companies $22B Annually

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  • by MattW ( 97290 ) <matt@ender.com> on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:34PM (#11573779) Homepage
    Since I read about a new spam study every other day, I'm wondering if that $22B price tag includes the cost of all the studies being done about the cost of spam?
    • You're right! We should commission a study to study the effects of Studies on other Studies while they are being studied. It could be the next re-insurance insurance bonanza.
    • Well what did you think would happen would you signed up for free sample address labels on freebiecrap.com?
    • I get 18 billion (Score:5, Insightful)

      by peter303 ( 12292 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:23PM (#11574388)
      2.8 minutes x 200 days x 100,000,000 workers with email = 56 billion minutes ~= 1 billion work hours. The median hourly wage is $18.
    • by hackstraw ( 262471 ) * on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:28PM (#11574456)
      Since I read about a new spam study every other day, I'm wondering if that $22B price tag includes the cost of all the studies being done about the cost of spam?

      All of these "annual amount of money lost due to X" studies are bullshit.

      This is saying that $22B a year is "lost" due to people spending an average of 2.8 minutes a day deleting emails.

      Well, how much paper has email saved over the years? How much time has email saved? How much does taking a dump cost businesses annually? What about reading /.?

      I've been hearing these "take a miniscule amount of thing X and multiply it by the number of people Y and report REALLY BIG NUMBER Z" studies all my life.

      Who cares?

      Lets do a more interesting and relevant study for people for a change. How many hundreds of millions of dollars would be saved if we switched to a 4 day workweek? How about the quality of life for everyone having at least 3 day weekends every week? That sounds interesting.
      • OpenBSD's spamd [openbsd.org] can be configured to protect any sort of RFC822 MTA running on any platform, and it will put an end to spam. I hear that Postgrey does pretty well too.

        If you are willing to live with a 5 minute delay in email from a previously unknown sender, then why torture yourselves any further?

  • by Quasar1999 ( 520073 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:35PM (#11573782) Journal
    Funny, I get about 25 spam messages a day... now that's after the corporate firewall/antispam software has had it's hands in it... and really, any message from my boss is counted as SPAM and moved to my junk folder so, yeah, 0 spam from the world, about 25 spams from my boss... yup... near the average then I guess..
  • Uh huh... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jargoone ( 166102 ) * on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:35PM (#11573785)
    Of course they also say people get 18.5 spam per day, and I'm tipping in at 20x that.

    Yeah, their estimate is really low. I mean, everyone runs a website that gets millions of hits a day. They apparently don't realize this.
    • Re:Uh huh... (Score:4, Informative)

      by dknight ( 202308 ) <(moc.deepsthgink) (ta) (nemad)> on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:41PM (#11573877) Homepage Journal
      I'm a nobody. An absolute nobody.
      I get (spread between my various email accounts) a bare minimum of 100 spam emails a day. Usually that number is closer to 200-300, and occasionally as high as 1000.

      My spam filtering takes care of a great deal of this spam (only maybe 5 make it to my inbox) but still.
      • Well, I'm a somebody. Working for a You-Would-Recognize-The-Name company.
        I get 2 to 3 spam emails a week.
        Sure, this is after the company spam filters. But isn't that like expected nowadays? It's hardly rocket surgery people.

        And at my home we get practically no spam. The spamfilter I have just does it's job. If you are tech savvy enough to post on slashdot, I think you are capable of solving your spam problem.
        • I'm a nobody. An absolute nobody.

          18 fans, 7 freaks. 25 people with too much free time
        Your sig contradicts you.
    • Re:Uh huh... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ad0gg ( 594412 )
      Not every worker in the US runs a website. I think 18x is too high for the average worker. How many people at an average business have their email address posted on a website? I have my address posted on craigslist,dice.com and monster.com on our job listings and I only recieve about 1 or 2 a day. I can't see any reason why anyone else at my office would need to share their email address on the net. Hell even my our support@, abuse@ don't recieve that much spam. And those are listed both in our whois inf
  • That number sounds wrong, how could spam cost anyone billions when all they have to do is hit the delete key!!!

    I'm being sarcastic. Spam is a huge cost to resources, of course (probably not even counting hijacked resources, an intangible figure). Too bad the government basically told companies they CAN-SPAM as much as they want. Marketing drives America.
    • by justforaday ( 560408 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:41PM (#11573876)
      That number sounds wrong, how could spam cost anyone billions when all they have to do is hit the delete key!!!

      In other news, the replacement keyboard industry has announced increased sales of about $22 billion dollars a year...
    • I spend ten minutes a day deleting spam from my inbox. That equates to approx 1 hr per week. I cost UKP 25 per hour to my company so I alone cost UKP 25 per week because of spam. Multiply that by the number of people like me and 22bn sounds a little on the low side.

      However, to follow your theme, I also spend a similar amount of time throwing away the endless snail-mail I also receive and that has the added downside of killing trees.

    • I wonder (Score:3, Insightful)

      If SPAM costs $22B to companies, can't they invest another $22B to push the govt into making a DECENT law vs SPAM?
  • by umrgregg ( 192838 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:37PM (#11573811) Homepage
    I'm tipping in at 20x that

    Yes, well, maybe you'd have less if you weren't publicly providing your email on one of the most viewed forums on the internet.

    • by Prairiewest ( 719875 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:51PM (#11574008) Homepage
      Yes, having to post your email address for others to see on a web site is no longer a requirement. Especially since most of the web hosting companies will provide you with a free formmail script.

      I took a few steps to curb spam in 2002: first, change my email address. That alone put an abrupt halt to the flow. Second, added comments forms to all my web sites, to stop the future flow.

      Granted, I still get some spam, assumedly because some messages that I send get forwarded and harvested somewhere. I get about 2 or 3 spam emails per week right now, without using any filters at all. So that's acceptable to me.

      I continue to advise people to change their darn email address and start anew. It's pretty easy to do for *most* people. I just don't understand the paralyzing fear that overcomes them when I suggest that. I also think that "but my business email address has to stay the same!" is not a valid argument. I have assisted some people here at the university that I work in getting a brand new email address, and (surprise) life went on and people still managed to send them email.

      On a side note, I switched to a different bank in 2002, one with no monthly fees. I was amazed at how easy it was to do, and now I must be their most vocal evangelist. I'm constantly reassuring people that they, too, can stop paying monthly services charges to their bank. I think I have six converts so far :)

      And no, 2002 wasn't some magical year of transformation. I think it's just coincidental...

      Todd
    • by Schlemphfer ( 556732 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:05PM (#11574199) Homepage
      Yes, well, maybe you'd have less if you weren't publicly providing your email on one of the most viewed forums on the internet.

      A funny, but misleading, comment. Slashdot's popularity has little to do with how much spam Taco gets. He could have posted the same contact info at PeterLorreFansUnite.com and the spam spiders still would have found him. He'd be getting roughly the same amount of spam even if his address was posted on one of the most obscure sites on the net.

      I publish Vegan.com and until I abandoned the domain for use of email last autumn I was getting something like 2000 spams a day. And as much as I'd like to think otherwise, I suspect Slashdot gets a tiny bit more traffic than Vegan.com ;)

  • by Psionicist ( 561330 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:39PM (#11573838)
    A telephone-based survey of adults who use the Internet found that more than three-quarters receive spam daily. The average spam messages per day is 18.5 and the average time spent per day deleting them is 2.8 minutes.

    2.8 minutes to delete 18 e-mails? That's 10 seconds per mail, man that's ineffective. I'd guess the companies would save billions if their employes learned how to read and respond faster, or at least if they learned that if the e-mail subject says "c1al|z", it IS spam, no reason to verify it by reading the thing.
    • by idontgno ( 624372 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:51PM (#11574014) Journal
      if the e-mail subject says "c1al|z", it IS spam, no reason to verify it by reading the thing.

      Yeah, that helps speed-filter about 25% of the spammage I see. But what about "UPS Tracking Number" when you've just completed a bit of web-based purchasing and are actually expecting a tracking number in the e-mail? How about obscure and nearly incomprehensible subjects? I can't just crapcan those, because I subscribe to various NetBSD support lists. (If you follow *BSD mail lists, you know what I mean.)

      So yes, for the majority of spam, you have to at least preview the content. If you have a slow mailserver, particularly if you use a "download on demand" (IMAP) rather than "download in advance" protocol (POP), you have to pay the content download time. And if you're foolish enough to let your MUA download remote links, that's more time before you figure out the message you're looking at is spam. (If you don't do the remote links thing, all you know is that you've got a blank e-mail. I guess that's spam. Even if it theoretically might have been something you wanted.) So 10 seconds per mail is perfectly reasonable.

    • 10 seconds per email isn't that far off. if you were using pine and all the spams came consecutively, sure, it only takes 1 second to hold down "D" and erase them.

      but if you were using more complicated email programs, highlighting spam, clicking delete, throughout the day, 10 seconds per spam deleted (which is* not* the same thing 10 seconds per deleting a spam) doesn't sound that unreasonable.

    • by Speare ( 84249 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:02PM (#11574173) Homepage Journal
      Two words: dialup and webmail.

      Some people don't use local clients which download headers, summarize subject lines, allow you to delete before reading, etc. Boggles the mind, but it's true.

    • Some of those gurlz are worth at least ten seconds!
  • way lowball (Score:4, Informative)

    by delmoi ( 26744 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:39PM (#11573850) Homepage
    This dosn't take into account how much time and effort they put in to filtering out spam, and doing all this crap. I've had to abandon email address and spammers have made an entire domain of mine almost useless for sending email because they started jojobbing (forging headers to look like the mail came from my box, with random addresses so I get tons and tons of bounce messages) it when sending spam.
  • by phidipides ( 59938 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:39PM (#11573852) Homepage
    >Time wasted deleting junk e-mail costs American
    >businesses nearly $22 billion a year, according
    >to a new study from the University of
    >Maryland... The average spam messages per day
    >is 18.5 and the average time spent per day
    >deleting them is 2.8 minutes.

    Using this same logic, I would guess that Solitaire, Minesweeper, etc. cost American businesses at least $200 billion per year. I hate spam as much as the next guy, but using the time it takes to delete spam as the basis for determing its economic impact is ridiculous. A much more accurate number would be the amount of time/money companies use to prevent spam from coming in and going out of their systems, the amount lost to phishing and other scams, etc.
    • > Using this same logic, I would guess that
      > Solitaire, Minesweeper, etc. cost American
      > businesses at least $200 billion per year. I hate
      > spam as much as the next guy, but using the time
      > it takes to delete spam as the basis for determing
      > its economic impact is ridiculous.

      No, you are wrong. It's very important for any business to ask the question "what are our employees doing every day?". If you discover that your employees spend 1 hour a day waiting for the slow laser printer, or so
      • >No, you are wrong.

        Actually I think I'm right. Employees aren't 100% productive. That's life. I would bet that 2.8 minutes is statistically negligible in terms of total time a person spends not 100% focused on their job each day. And even in your laser printer example, if I spend an hour not working because the laser printer is down, as long as I still complete the same amount of work that I would have completed had the printer been up, that laser printer outage did not cost the company any of my pr
    • but using the time it takes to delete spam as the basis for determing its economic impact is ridiculous

      Wrong.
      Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

      You say spam only takes 5 seconds to realise and delete. The spammer is only taking five seconds of your time. What's the big deal? He shouldn't have to pay for doing this to tens of thousands of people because it only wastes a few seconds of their time, right?

      Wrong.

      Lets take TV ads. A nice short five second TV ad. It only takes up five seconds of everyones time. Maybe millions of people are looking at it, but what's the big deal eh? So how come then advertisers pay millions of dollars every year in order that these five second ads be shown to viewers? Same goes for ads on billboards, radio magazines, blimps, football stadia, buses, T-shirts, people's foreheads and on web banners. They should all be free right?

      But spam is even worse than all these other forms of advertising because you cannot ignore spam. You must take the time to recognise it and delete it. If someone sends you spam you cannot look away. With all other forms of advertising, bar junk mail, it costs you the same amount of effort and time to look at the ad as it does not to. That's yet another reason why spam is so evil.

      Spam is profitable. That's a fundamental fact. You need to make it either illegal or unprofitable or both. But how to do this without killing regular email? See the ant-spam response sheet for more info on that one.
      • Of course you can ignore spam. It's not like you have to read the entire message. Just look at the subject line.

        Now that I switched to gmail, it's even better for me. I used to have to take time to download messages. Now, gmail filters it out and I never am forced to look at them.

    • by drooling-dog ( 189103 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:47PM (#11574654)
      Using this same logic, I would guess that Solitaire, Minesweeper, etc. cost American businesses at least $200 billion per year.

      So when did time stop being equal to money? I can't speak to the actual amount, but I would say that they actually do cost quite a bundle in lost productivity. If someone is paying for your time, then the things you spend that time on - productive or otherwise - are all costs. This would be crystal clear to you if you were an employer rather than an employee.

    • Using this same logic, I would guess that Solitaire, Minesweeper, etc. cost American businesses at least $200 billion per year.

      Or for a timely analogy, that Super Bowl ads cost Americans $1.5 billion per year.

      A much more accurate number would be the amount of time/money companies use to prevent spam from coming in and going out of their systems

      That would be the cost of spam prevention, not the cost of spam.

      the amount lost to phishing and other scams, etc.

      That'd make as much sense as calling that

  • What scares me... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by myheroBobHope ( 842869 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:39PM (#11573853) Homepage Journal
    The real problem that I noticed from the study is that 4% of people have bought something advertised through spam. That's the real problem. If everyone would just ignore it, and get there *cough* all important pills elsewhere (try Mexico!) then none of us would get spam. It's a simple cost to benefit ratio, as long as enough people buy things off spam, spammers will continue to operate.
    • by tbone1 ( 309237 )
      The real problem that I noticed from the study is that 4% of people have bought something advertised through spam.

      Bingo! If no one made money at it, it would soon go away. In spite of appearances, businesses don't like pouring money down a hole. Once they realize that's what they're diong, they tend to quit.

      • by bfields ( 66644 )

        Bingo! If no one made money at it, it would soon go away.

        I'm not convinced by that. The fact is, it's so cheap and easy to send mass email, that people can do it just on a whim, or by mistake.

        Anyone get that spam about the lost time-traveller looking for exotic equipment to replace his time machine? And what about all those viruses? Many of them I suppose had the purpose of creating zombies that could later be exploited as spam-senders. But many of them seem to have been done for other reasons, or j

    • Re:What scares me... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Spy der Mann ( 805235 ) <spydermann.slash ... com minus distro> on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:55PM (#11574067) Homepage Journal
      It's a simple cost to benefit ratio, as long as enough people buy things off spam, spammers will continue to operate.

      I live in Mexico. Here (in Mexico city) there are thousands illegal taxis running. People don't care just as long as they get to their destination. Of course, the number of innocents being raped, kidnapped or assaulted in these illegal cabs.

      If people stopped using them, our taxi assault problems would be over.

      Generalizing, if people don't care about promoting assaults and rapes in illegal cabs, do you think they'll give a sh*t about SPAM?
  • I recently had occasion to examine every email that I received over the last 10 days, trying to find a particular email. 10,228 messages were received in just under 10 days. More than one every 90 seconds, around the clock. My mail server is a 300MHz Pentium running BSD, and its load average hovers around 25%-30% just processing my spam.

    And I *don't* run a million-hit-a-day website.

    I *do* run my own domain, and about half of the spam is bounces from third-party forged spam.
    About 10% of it, or about 1

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:41PM (#11573871)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by tbone1 ( 309237 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:54PM (#11574056) Homepage
      How stupid can these people be? Buying from spammers?

      There is a certain part of the population who will buy into anything. Generally they are those who would have been eaten by wolves long ago if it weren't for civilization trumping evolution. In this (relatively) enlightened age, we still have people making a mint as fortune tellers, televangelists, runners of Ponzi schemes, 'multi-level marketing', charity scams, and so on. In fact, I think that many people's tastes run to the untruth told in sonorous, comforting tones.

  • Wrong assumptions (Score:5, Insightful)

    by FiReaNGeL ( 312636 ) <.moc.liamtoh. .ta. .l3gnaerif.> on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:41PM (#11573879) Homepage
    These kind of 'calculation' assume that 100% of the time an employee is 'working' is productive work. Trust me, it is not, especially when the employee has unmonitored access to the net.

    Now I don't say that employees SHOULD be productive 100% of the time. I just say that the time spent deleting spam is probably taken on 'unproductive' time anyway, not on things that need to be done.
  • Is that the same productivity cost they use when estimated how much money a "hacker" cost them when he looked at their files?
  • Why so much spam? (Score:2, Informative)

    by Kordmp ( 731261 ) *
    I very very very rarely get spam and when I do it is quite easy to shutoff. Boy that is asking for it. For every person or company I meet I give them a unique email address. This is actually quite easy to do if you own your own domain. This helps with 2 things. 1. If a friend gets a virus that gets my address and uses it to start sending spam, I just delete that address and give them a new one. 2. If I gave a company I do business with an address and I start getting spam I just delete the address.
  • No it can't (Score:5, Funny)

    by asoap ( 740625 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:42PM (#11573898)
    This is another bullshit study.

    I spent 5 minutes today scratching myself when I got into work. Now if everybody in the world does that, it costs $512823812937123 TRILLION DOLLARS every other minute! Then you'll get angry CEOS who will want to enforce rules to only higher ugly women, or remove them from the work force.

    This is just more serious bullshit. If they really want to do a study. See how much money is spent on men looking at women's breasts at work. They will find out that is 123190238127398071273891029837129387 TRILLION DOLLARS EVERY minute.

    Do these studies ever take into account that people can't spend every single waking second at work doing work, and that it neccessary to sometimes do something different. Although spam does differ, where it is a nusance, and as such it does waste peoples time constantly. But the way the factor it by putting a value on an employees time is very in accurate.

    • by jxyama ( 821091 )
      >$123190238127398071273891029837129387 TRILLION DOLLARS

      with that many digits, i think "DOLLARS" would have been fine, that extra "TRILLION" doesn't add much to the IMPACT. :P

      • Hehe..

        I thought it was necessary to go over the top and then over it again. We could argue it, but then I would have to conduct a study on the amount of money being wasted by people arguing over silly things on slashdot. Then /. would be sued by those angry CEOs for the billions and billions of dollars that are wasted anually.

  • by Nijika ( 525558 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:43PM (#11573906) Homepage Journal
    I guess... just like roaches and plagues. I just realized that a large part of my job is figuring out how to keep email going and meaningful despite the deluge of crap that comes in every day. It's not what I was hired for, but here it is as a major part of my role and a justification for my continued payment.

    Would I prefer that Spam be stopped dead in it's tracks? Regardless of this, yes, because it also occours to me how much time I've wasted on this problem that I could have used doing other more productive things.

  • by chaboud ( 231590 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:48PM (#11573976) Homepage Journal
    This sounds a lot like the wildly fictitious "cost of hackers" reports that we have all seen before.

    You don't see me declaring that theifs have cost me $120 because I have locks on my doors, do you?

    I know that this is a claim of lost productivity, but people sitting in front of computers aren't 100% productive. Expecting them to be so is absurd, and pinning their less-than-perfect output on spam is just scapegoating. We all hate spam, but this is just the usual cost-hunting nonsense....
    • Do the maths

      Lets say an employee takes 12 minutes per day to delete spam and then thats 60 mins per day. If each employee costs $20 per hour then each employee costs $20 per week. If the company employs 2000 people then it's costing $40,000 per week.... and that's just one medium sized company

      If you ran a company and you were told that each employee was going to lose 12 minutes a day whilst on your payroll you wouldn't call this just the usual cost-hunting nonsense

      • by chaboud ( 231590 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:50PM (#11574681) Homepage Journal
        As some employees claim to read the mails in question, some have even purchased the products advertized, it appears that the bulk of this cost isn't that the mails are sent but that the employees are willfully seeking distractions in the first place. I would call this the usual cost-hunting nonsense, because people sitting in front of modern computers are not machines.

        These are web-connected, multi-tasking, bright-colors-and-lights computers, and expecting employees to stay constantly focused on the task at hand is folly, at best.

        I mean, look at me. I'm checking out slashdot while waiting for my build to finish when I could be answering work emails or reading code that I'm about to change. It is a personal decision that one could construe to have cost the company money, but it's really more a part of conducting business with human employees.

        If you had read the article in question, you would have found that, of those surveyed, the average time supposedly spent deleting the 18.5 spam messages received per day was 2.8 minutes, rather than 12. I spend more than 2.8 minutes per day going to the restroom.

        Do we see reports on CNN saying that allowing employees to use the facilities costs businesses $44 Billion/year? Should we all be in diapers to increase productivity? Would it increase productivity to be in diapers? I know that this is an inevitable result of employing non-slave labor, but the point here is that attempting to quantify these costs in an attempt to demonize spam is an exercise in futility.

    • I generally agree with you, but I think there is a bit of a difference between an employee dealing with spam and an employee otherwise being nonproductive. The thing is, most office jobs these days are *dependent* on e-mail -- in other words, an employee *needs* to deal with spam in order to do their job. Imagine if you had to run through an obstacle course in order to do your job. It's not really the same as surfing /. or playing Solitaire because you could still do your job if you didn't do those thing
  • Surely the profits on spam, selling the hardware, selling the services, etc. are large, otherwise no one would do it. SO, some people are making money on it, others are losing money on it. Does it equal out?
  • Total loss (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rorschach1 ( 174480 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @12:52PM (#11574033) Homepage
    Seems we see these stories about every day or two - 'companies lose $xx billion to such-and-such every year.'

    Has anyone added all of these up? With the wild loss estimates from sick days, viruses, spam, major sporting events, bee stings, and Slashdot, I wouldn't be surprised if the world as a whole is running trillions of dollars in the negative...
  • I am so glad that the government was able to protect the telemarketing firms freedom of speech.

    Now we need a US civilians freedom of silence.

    Unfortunately none of this will change through legislation. Our government is too heavily in bed with corporations and not enough concern exists for the individuals experiences. As you can see by the title of this article, it's the cost to business, not individuals, that is worth measuring and reporting on.

  • I think that the 4% who buy from spam, according to the article, should be castrated. Then they won't have any need to buy anything else. Unless they start selling strap-ons.

  • The average spam messages per day is 18.5 and the average time spent per day deleting them is 2.8 minutes.

    You can tell if it is spam by reading one line. It shouldn't take that long to delete spam unless you are using Ximian Evolution.
  • Of course they also say people get 18.5 spam per day, and I'm tipping in at 20x that.

    My SpamTaco(tm) campaign must be working, then! Muahahahaha!
  • Someone should do a study about how much Slashdot cost companies in productivity each year.
  • I am running Spamassassin 3.0 (using qmail-scanner) with Razor, Pyzor, clamav and F-prot. 90% of the email coming into my server (with 10 or so users) is spam, but with the Razor rules and the URI blacklists turned way up one a day or so gets through, and no false positives yet that I have found. (I won't even talk about the 30+ viri a day.) Qmail-scanner can be set to reject mail at the SMTP level too, which doesn't save much bandwidth but does prevent extra work from bounces bouncing etc.
  • by BlueThunderArmy ( 751258 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:00PM (#11574140) Homepage
    Stuff like this rather reminds me of a scene in The Hudsucker Proxy where, after the boss throws himself out a window, the employees are compelled to observe a moment of silence. Afterwards, there is an announcement that "This moment of silence has been deducted from your pay!"

    I suspect that, while the figures these studies come up with are dramatic, they don't actually reflect very much actual loss of "productivity." If time is money, and each minute equals a certain amount, then millions of employees taking several seconds to delete each spam over the course of a year is going to add up. But time isn't money; time is time. American companies need to chill out a bit.

  • How do they actually figure those $s? I mean, I don't doubt that spam is a problem and it does costs us, but do they really know how long it takes each of us to delete, ignore, *woops!-open* or similarly waste our time on it? I've never actually seen a study that does figure these things properly. With the virus industry for instance, I am very suspicious that the "computer viruses cost us $X" lines are way over estimated on purpose just to get more business for the anti-virus firms. But for that to be

  • by sjonke ( 457707 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:01PM (#11574160) Journal
    I know it isn't because it was sent by my Mom! I don't know where she gets the time to research so many products, but damn do I ever appreciate it!
  • "Of course they also say people get 18.5 spam per day, and I'm tipping in at 20x that."

    I can see that being accurate because of grandma's who only check their e-mail once a month. They also never post there e-mail address on web groups and web pages, and they never go into chat rooms. They have almost no Internet presence therefore they have almost no exposure to Spam harvesters.

    The same thing is true of pranksters who sign up with services like Hotmail or 2d.com. They sign up, send a stupid message and
  • About 4-5 months ago, apparently a script-kiddie spammer misconfigured his spam mailer and I got 2,762 spam messages (all from the same mailer with the same content) in a three-hour period.
  • As much as I'd like to see the spam problem in exaggerated terms in order to motivate something to solve the problem entirely (and that includes 'accidental death of spammers' either financially or otherwise) I just don't buy it.

    I mean there are individual industries out there losing money of that magnitude due to other internet activities (music, movies, software) and the response to that heavy loss is new legislation. I don't see a strong response to the spam problem... in fact, I see government respons
  • Does this study take into account the amount of productivity of all the spammers out there? Surely some of them are getting paid for spamming, so that should be added to (or subtracted from?) the total...
  • Percentage of GDP (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cyngus ( 753668 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:11PM (#11574257)
    Perhaps most striking is that this figure is 0.2% of GDP. Assuming that this money is lost production, then we could boost GDP by 0.2% a year by solving the spam problem. This is a big boost! Of course its really not that simple, but you get my point.
  • my spam numbers (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    My spam inflow is increasing each and every month:

    Jul 2004: between 22000 and 23000
    Nov 2004: between 38000 and 39000
    Dec 2004: 45663
    Jan 2005: 59097
    Feb 2005: ~3500 so far

    I may be a lowly AC here, but these are real numbers. (I'm not in front of my email right now and I don't remember the numbers for other months.)

    Needless to say, it gets annoying to delete ~2000 unsolicited commercial emails each and every day. My legitimate emails number less than 50 per day.
  • by Indy1 ( 99447 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:19PM (#11574346)
    I started agressively firewalling off spammy isps sometime ago, and its really paid off for me. I get maybe 1 spam a week (i check 10 different accounts). 5 different rbl's catch whatever spam my firewall doesnt get.

    By carefully white listing people dumb enough to host on a spammy isp whose email i still want, i dont have a problem with collateral damage either.

    http://mail.btfh.net/spam.txt [btfh.net]
    http://mail.btfh.net/asia-spam.txt [btfh.net]
  • If you get two of those nigerian mail scams in one day, tell them both you have a friend who could help them, but they have to be very discreet about their offer and get to know the person first. Then send them the mail of the other spammer.
  • by lysium ( 644252 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @01:28PM (#11574451)
    Fortunately for us all, dilligent corporations are applying an old remedy [theonion.com] to bring these costs down.
  • lost worker productivity among end users is just one important factor in the total cost of spam.

    there are a number of other important factors, including:

    • more time spent administering e-mail servers: keeping MTA current (e.g. sendmail [sendmail.org] or postfix [postfix.org] upgrades) and keeping anti-spam software up-to-date (e.g. spamassassin [apache.org] upgrades, some occasional score tweaking, etc)
    • occasionally upgrading server hardware to keep pace with increasing spam bombardment
    • time spent investigating major spam incidents and/or abuse
  • Average spam per day .. 18.5

    Time to read each one .. 10 seconds

    Having a bigger penis .. Priceless
  • Of course they also say people get 18.5 spam per day, and I'm tipping in at 20x that.

    My 9 year old domain was getting flooded with over 5000 emails a day. I finally screamed to my ISP and was given a way to stop some of the emails at the server. Now I'm down to about 300 a day, with filtering in my Mozilla mail client taking care of the rest. It's frikkin' ridiculous what the average email user has to put up with. I'm for any and all legislation that shuts these rat bastards down.

  • "they also say people get 18.5 spam per day"

    Now does this mean that they were sent 18.5 spams perday, or on average they received 18.5?

    Their is a huge difference between what is sent, and what the person will auctially receive in their inbox, be it from the ISP blocking it for some various reason, spam software false emails used on websites (could a person be sent a spam, but not get the spam because it can not read their email address correctly (someoneATsomeplaceDOTcom)).

    I only receive about 2 spams ad
  • by 5n3ak3rp1mp ( 305814 ) on Friday February 04, 2005 @03:12PM (#11575660) Homepage
    A) No spam at work.
    I guess the intranet monkeys who work for Deloitte & Touche are doing SOMEthing right.

    B) No spam at home.
    After getting fed up, I redirected my spam-infested email address to an autoreply which posed a simple riddle to determine my new email address, that humans who knew me could figure out but not machines. My new email address is owned by my domain, and THAT in turn gets redirected to my GMail account. When I picked the account, I made sure it wasn't easily guessable, and longer than a few characters... and when I need to enter in an email address on ANY site online, I use a mailinator.com disposable email address if at ALL possible. Hey, no spam at all! Zilch! How about that? Why is this so hard in this day and age???

    Maybe I should start an antispam consulting practice. Clean all this shit up real fast...

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