Millions Continue To Click On Spam 210
An anonymous reader writes "Even though over 80% of email users are aware of the existence of bots, tens of millions respond to spam in ways that could leave them vulnerable to a malware infection, according to a Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group (MAAWG) survey. In the survey, half of users said they had opened spam, clicked on a link in spam, opened a spam attachment, replied or forwarded it — activities that leave consumers susceptible to fraud, phishing, identity theft, and infection. While most consumers said they were aware of the existence of bots, only one-third believed they were vulnerable to an infection."
Click here! (Score:5, Funny)
FIRST POST!! [hotsexyviagrapanaloons4u]
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Vigra wholesale 83% off dear customer. Everything 80% sale!
Worst Porn Spam Header Ever (Score:2, Funny)
date: Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 6:22 PM
subject: Huge old mommy
Re:Click here! (Score:5, Insightful)
I resent the judgement that my clickable spam was "offtopic"..
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No, that parses to "hots ex y via gra pan a loon s 4u"
In other words, previously-married people with y chromosome will have their temperatures increased via a grey pan full of loons, and it's all for you.
This is not the pr0n you're looking for, and if it is you are one sick bastard.
Old News (Score:3, Insightful)
Humans will always be the weak link in security.
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And the big red fart button will be the wedge that slips through that chink.
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While it is true that humans are often the weak link in the end, there really is absolutely no good reason why clicking on the link should have negative consequences for the user. The whole mess we are in is simply because none of the OSs we use today where build with the security needs of today in mind. Even things like Linux completely fail, as they where build around the concept of protecting users from each other, but not around protecting the user from malicious applications, so once an application run
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We're not far away at all. The truly secure OS is already here. There's only one problem. People won't even consider it. It's called Trusted Solaris or SE Linux. So secure that it barely allows authorized users to use it. Evaluated and approved by the NSA. It's SECURE. It's also incredibly touchy and will NOT talk to your MP3 player, now matter how much you beg. Your digital camer
Re:Old News (Score:5, Funny)
"No, Mr. End User...I expect you to DIE."
Call the It Dept! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Fucking tell me about it.
"I didn't do anything. I mean I was just online..er, using Limewire to get..music, and suddenly!"
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Not likely when IT will be making a short call to HR that will get you sent packing.
And in this particular case deservedly so.
Apart from wasting company time, filesharing can expose the company to legal liability...perhaps even more so that privately since the RIAA will probably drool more at the corporate treasury than Joe Sixpack's own wallet.
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No. No, they're not.
I work for tech support on campus, primarily cleaning student laptops. I have yet to see one that didn't have limewire on it.
Maybe you can argue that they're still smarter, but evidently not by enough to have a meaningful chance of avoiding infections.
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Users. (Score:5, Interesting)
How about we just have a TV show or a movie they want to watch, but teaches them? We could make it a romantic comedy for the ladies or a war movie for the guys, but insert in proper computer use and warnings about spam, viruses, phishing, fraud, etc. We need some kind of mass media to actually teach the masses, and it needs to be a regular interval to keep up with the problems.
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And to think, users were once considered gods and creators. [wikipedia.org]
Re:Users. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Users. (Score:5, Insightful)
The computer industry is largely to blame for user's attitudes; they've spent years convincing everyone that computers would make their lives easier and do everything for them without requiring any specialist knowledge and we all know that's bollocks.
We simply wouldn't accept it if the same proportion of people who outright refuse to even try and understand the basics of the IT tasks they perform every day did the same thing with cars or washing machines or lawn mowers. The roads would be carnage - tens of thousands of drivers refusing to learn how to use the stearing wheel or brakes because they "Just want it to take me to the shops, I dont' care how it works".
I really don't think there's any short-term solution to the problem.
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I really don't think there's any short-term solution to the problem.
I agree, but I think the long-term solution will happen on its own. As more and more people who grew up with the internet get older, less and less computer illiterate people will be out there...eventually, there won't be anyone left who lived in a pre-internet world.
It would be interesting to see what age demographic is currently most likely to click on spam links...
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Don't make the mistake of conflating young people who are comfortable using computers with people who are genuinely computer literate.
My brother is comfortable using a computer; he's on the facebook and twitter & youtube and whathaveyou, but he certainly isn't what I would call computer literate. Anything outside of his "routine" uses will usually result in a phonecall to me asking how to do it. He does at least tend to retain that information for a little longer than, say my mum does, but that doesn't
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Sorry...I meant "computer literate" to mean "not stupid enough to click on obvious spam or phishing links"...just used the wrong phrase is all.
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I taught high school for 5 years. I saw lots and lots of kids who grew up with computers do amazingly stupid shit. $400 phone bills for signing up for ringtones and wallpapers and not realizing that they were signing up for $10/month continuous billing rip-offs. Lots of malware from limewi
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Re:Users. (Score:5, Funny)
How about we just have a TV show or a movie they want to watch, but teaches them?
Great idea. Here is a sample from the new soap opera, "One Operating System to Run"
"Madeline, we can't keep seeing each other like this."
"It's your wife, isn't it?"
"No, she doesn't care. She hasn't since the accident. It is...I can't say it..."
"Tell me Steven! Tell me!"
"Fine, it is your hard drive, it is a mess."
"What? How can you say that?"
"Admit it Madeline! Not only is it heavily fragmented but it is full of bloated logs, unneeded installation downloads, duplicate mp3's, old temp files, core dumps, I could go on."
"Oh Steven, it's true! It's true! Please help me! I love you! I want to change!"
"Ok, just go to www.diskcleaner.com and download..."
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Third infection: 500$ and you have to learn Linux :-)
Might work for a lot of the world, but in the USA cruel and unusual punishments are illegal.
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In completely unrelated news.... (Score:5, Funny)
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I am incredulous that "80%" of people are aware of botnets. I call B.S. on that figure. Most people think "the internet" is a utopia where nothing can go wrong.
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Re:In completely unrelated news.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Millions of computer users are idiots.
Ignorant != stupid. The difference is, there's a cure for ignorance, none for stupidity. But everyone is ignorant. I know about as much about running a bar and construction company as Mike knows about running a computer. I have as little interest in learning about construction as he does about running a computer -- little to none. I just want a house to live in, he just wants his computer to work.
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Re:In completely unrelated news.... (Score:5, Insightful)
You know that if you buy a house, you must be ready to maintain it if you don't want it to fall apart. The same SHOULD be said of computer owners, yet this is not the case.
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If you hadn't noticed, most of my analogies
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You can't protect a user against everything, but the default should offer more protection. If you have a device aimed at consumers where a significant proportion of those users have problems, it's not a well-designed device.
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Most people in the world are ignorant fools, most people in the world behave like idiots at one time or another, unfortunately it is what it is, intelligence is not prerequisite to survival apparently. Also it is probably true that a very large percentage of the population will also do pretty much anything for a buck, combining these facts together and you get a pretty sad place to live in.
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Also in unrelated news, millions now are st0ng-er in bed! They l0St w3ight now! And they are getting huge discounts on pfizer and v1@gra!
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To summarize the summary of the summary: people are a problem. - Douglas Adams
Smart software (Score:3, Interesting)
we need to take advantage of this.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Congratulations!!!
Your name has been picked. You have just won millions of dollars worth of software. You are also granted the permission to give this software to all of your friends and family.
Click on this link to claim your prize...
CLICK HERE TO GET FREE SOFTWARE! [ubuntu.com]
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Congratulations!!!
Your name has been picked. You have just won millions of dollars worth of software. You are also granted the permission to give this software to all of your friends and family.
Click on this link to claim your prize...
CLICK HERE TO GET FREE SOFTWARE! [thepiratebay.org]
FTFY
These users (Score:4, Insightful)
They're probably the users who believe that computers run off magic. For any above-absolute-beginner, common sense should kick in naturally.
This goes to show the level of incompetence, and talking from experience too:
Me: "Okay you're logged into the system?" ...(proceed a barrage of troubleshooting)...
Cust: "Uh-yes"
Me: Click on the Reports menu item"
Cust: (silence) I don't see it.
Me: "Any errors pop up recently?"
Me: "What DO you see?"
Cust: "Just a white page with an image, that says 'Google'"
Absolutely. (Score:2)
The other day I was walking my mother through launching Windows Live Messenger, so we could video-chat and she could see the kids.
Here was the conversation:
Me: "Click on the icon on your start bar that looks like a little man."
Her: "I don't see it."
Me: "It's on your start bar."
Her: "Ok, I see All Programs..."
Me: "No. Not under Start, it's on your START BAR."
Her: "I don't know what that is".
Me: "Where is your clock."
Her: "Uh....I don't know..."
Me: "It's either at the top right or bottom right of your s
Re:Absolutely. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Also in defense of his mother, she's really hot.
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It's one thing to have an ignorant user, but someone who is informed enough to know that the word "Start" means the next step to running a program is usually "All Programs" isn't completely ignorant. When you just completely make up terms like "Start Bar", that are named similarly to things that they already know, they'll just assume that is what you are referring to.
"Taskbar Notification Area" and "System Tray" are both perfectly acceptable, and non-ambiguous, terms to refer to the icon area that sits to
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Microsoft was smart and picked very unambiguous names for everything on the desktop, and this terminology started in 1995.
And that's why you have to click "Start" when you want your computer to stop ...
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Note that I said "unambiguous", not "well-chosen". :)
"Start bar"? What's that...? (Score:2)
I've been using computers for 30-odd years and I don't have a clue what a "start bar" is.
By deduction I think you might be referring to Windows' "system tray" but I wouldn't expect anybody's mother to understand that term either - not even if I told them in ALL CAPS.
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Thankfully in recent years stuff like TeamViewer has come along. I install it on all of my customers computers as a matter of course nowadays. [teamviewer.com]
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Wow, close tag fail on me. Okay, no more HTML before my morning coffee...
I click on spam... (Score:2)
However, I run Linux so I don't worry about viruses, trojans, pedophiles and other malware.
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I click on spam occasionally when it has be obfuscated enough for me to believe that it might be a real message. I have even found a few real messages that looked like spam.
This is one of the reasons I LOVE the default email client on my HTC Ozone...if there are links included in an email, it will show the display text and then in it will show where the link actually goes. The number of "OMG YOUR CREDIT CARD HAS BEEN HAX0R3D" emails I get that go somewhere like "freecoupondeals.com" is insane.
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Instead of clicking on links in message that "might be" real, have a look at the message source. Safer.
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Newsflash: pedophiles are now classified as malware and will be quarantined. Gentleman, prepare your definitions!
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I run Linux, and I do worry about viruses, trojans, and other malware.
I'm sorry, I mean no offense to you personally, but this dangerous myth has got to stop. Linux is more secure than Windows, but that does not mean that it is absolutely secure.
There are, really and truly, examples of Linux malware in the wild. Processes do not need Root to run, they only need Root to corrupt your system. Your userland privileges are still enough to install a malware executable in your \home directory. Vulnerabilities
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I just did a quick Google search and it didn't come up with any real Linux malware... just articles about either potential (not real) threats and articles stating that there are no threats.
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Really? I found reference to some in the first link. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_malware [wikipedia.org]
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"The viruses listed below pose a potential, although minimal, threat to Linux systems."... I can't get excited about this...
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Excited? No.
Cautious enough to stop cavalierly saying "Linux is completely immune to malware, so I can click on anything I want without risk?" I certainly hope so.
Plus, if you follow a few of the links (under the "Threats" section) they talk about actual malware that has actually infected actual systems. Not theoretical. Not potential. Real malware that has attacked and compromised real systems.
"Linux is absolutely secure" is a dangerous myth that does not serve the Linux community well. It discourage
This was an e-mail survay ! (Score:5, Informative)
From TF pdf, under methodology
"Survey participants are all members of Ipsos' opt-in consumer panels in each of the six markets and were invited to participate via email".
So, people who respond to spam also respond to bullshit surveys via email.
Who'd a thunk it ?
Whitehat spammers? (Score:5, Insightful)
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How about some crusaders who mount spam campaigns that, when clicked, scare the holy living hell out of the recipient?
Because if you hit the wrong idiot with a weak heart and a litigious or determined-and-violent violent family who happen to be in, or have contacts in, your jurisdiction you have something on your hands that you'd rather not deal with. Some may even track you down just over the "sucker" thing: the uneducated don't tend to respond to an insult with a cunningly worded witty repost.
And then you need to consider the "pro" spammers who, seeing your vigilante action as something that might impact their margins in
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How about some crusaders who mount spam campaigns that, when clicked, scare the holy living hell out of the recipient? ... Of course no money would be stolen but it would at least give a few idiots the scare of their lives and get them to stop clicking on spam.
Well, "the boy who cried wolf" comes to mind. I think some users who experience this hypothetical situation might think "ah, not harmful spam. Just some jerk with another false alarm."
It's a good thing. (Score:2)
It’s called “natural selection”. It’s a good thing. It gives the more intelligent an advantage that they deserve, while making it harder for the not so wise to live.
If we’d remove it, we’d only allow more idiots to live. And you know where that would lead to.
To the exact same thing that it lead, that you now don’t even have to get up all day long, or face any challenge at all in your padded XXXXXXL suit, and demand that lifestyle as a “right”, while bein
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If any, if we want us to advance, we should make it harder.
.... until you in all your superiority get knocked down, cry foul, and claim that it was unfair.
In a related story (Score:2)
Modern civilization allows idiots to reproduce.
Forward IT! (Score:2, Insightful)
"continue to....forward it"!!!?!?!?!?!
FORWARD IT?!!
* apocalyptic seizure *
Why do mail clients use hypertext links anyway? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Why not ban HTML in e-mails, then all URLs shown won't be masked.
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That isn't actually a bad idea, save for the legit emails that do use it.
Here's my idea:
Take a html-to-jpg converter that will render the email as it is intended to be rendered. This converter should be sandboxed in a way as to not infect itself. Then on any suspected spam message, or any message at all, have the mail client load it as a JPG. This will kill the links, and prevent any kind of JavaScript hacks. Then in order to actually interact with the mail (copy text, etc) have the user "unlock" it at whic
Likely to continue so (Score:3, Interesting)
Have you ever looked at a "normal" user interact with a computer? In my experience is more or less like this:
What's that? A mail about some interesting photos I must check out by clicking here... Uhm, I don't know the guy sending it... and I have really no time for photos, but I have to check it to be able to drop it from my mind.
What's that? The Internet opened up. Ah! the photos must be there, but there is some stupid error message that stops me moving Yes! Yes! I said YES! Stupid machine!
What's that? Didn't work. No photos. Again the same message, or it's another one. Impossible to know since I never read the first one, they are all equal, anyway.
What's that? Again the same message. I'll have to read the message to see why I'm not moving forward. Stupid messages! What's an "X active" anyway, do they think I have time for all that. Oh! It seems that to go forward I have really to click "No" on the second message. Must be to avoid stupid users clicking blindly on "OK" all the time. Ain't I smart? I can now move. What? Installing what? Always waiting. Well, it seems to work now. Oh! Those are porn photos! Close, close, close. If the boss sees me I'm dead. Damn SPUM mail!
Ok, next point in my to-do list, banking. What's that? Yes , I want to ALLOW that program to access the site "allOfYourMoney.AreBelong.to.us". Stupid firewall. Won't let me alone to do my work. ...
People, probably due to a nomadic origin or something, think in computers in terms of "going" places, "reaching" things and "routes" they know (To open the Excel you go here, press here). Messages from the computer are interpreted as obstacles that one must overcome to reach the goal. Some other paradigm has to be found for security in computers. I have some ideas, but too tired to write more. If some rich company making OS's is interested, I do expensive consulting.
Re:can't win this battle (Score:5, Funny)
I'm really not sure what to say to this...
Re:can't win this battle (Score:4, Funny)
Re:can't win this battle (Score:5, Funny)
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You can, but all cures are lethal.
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I, for one, welcome our stupid-people killing overlo... hey, who are you guys? Where in the hell did you come from? What's the gun for? NO! STOP! NNOOOOO[BANG]
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Damn that should be a new RickRoll ;)
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It isn't paranoia when the bastards really are out to get you. The ignorant, the stupid, and the clueless just don't understand that there ARE ten million parasites and predators waiting to suck their life's blood from them.
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Foxnews? That's one of the worst online parasites!! They won't suck your bank account dry - instead, they hoover up your BRAINZ!!!
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But then how would he get fed?
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Actually, about the last 2:
- The funny thing about the health care bill is that right after it passed, it only had 40% of the American people not wanting it.
- You haven't been modded down.
However, also to add to your list:
- The Pope is Catholic!
- Bears shit in the woods!
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Don't forget:
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- I will get mod'd down for stating 4 things that are 100% true!
Moderation
40% Troll
40% Funny
20% Flamebait
James Roday [youtube.com], is that you?
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... or you get a lot of email with embedded remote-linked images. Which, of course, most of us do.
I agree on the scripting/active content part, but it's not quite as simple as only opening network connections to the email server. HTML email means that your email client is really a web browser in disguise.
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Agreed. I've seen some very VERY cleverly-crafted bits of phishing that are almost indistinguishable from real email I get from my bank. Even the URLs are getting more and more clever.
I've started advising people just to never click on any link in any email, ever, under any circumstances, for any reason. If your bank sends you a notification, use the shortcut you have in your browser to log in to your account. If the notification is real, chances are the notification will be there and easy to get to fro
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Survey detects idiots are plenyful. What next??!?
Studies reveal 87% of AC posters on slasdot can't spell.
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Studies reveal 87% of AC posters on slasdot can't spell.
As opposed to the non-AC posters, of course. :)