Porn Spam using Slashdot.org name 242
[TEXT OF MAIL FOLLOWS]
"X-Received: from pony-1.mail.digex.net (pony-1.mail.digex.net [204.91.241.5]) by groucho.med.jhmi.edu (980427.SGI.8.8.8/970903.SGI.AUTOCF) via ESMTP id AAA56584 for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 00:14:26 -0400 (EDT)
X-Received: from zamboni.mail.digex.net (zamboni.mail.digex.net [204.91.99.98])
by pony-1.mail.digex.net (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id AAA14165
for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 00:11:07 -0400 (EDT)
X-Received: from mx.icp.rssi.ru (mx.icp.rssi.ru [194.85.223.7])
by zamboni.mail.digex.net (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id AAA01690
for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 00:11:06 -0400 (EDT)
X-Received: from mx.intra.ru ([194.135.182.7]) by mx.icp.rssi.ru
(post.office MTA v1.9.3b **** trial license expired ****)
with ESMTP id AAA224 for ;
Thu, 17 Jun 1999 08:08:50 +0400
X-Received: from ras5.icp.rssi.ru by mx.intra.ru with SMTP (Microsoft Exchange Internet Mail Service Version 5.0.1458.49)
id MQ9VDG1N; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 08:08:00 +0400
From: "slashdot.org" To: Date: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 08:07:52 +0300
Subject: Dear Member of slashdot.org (eisen@access.digex.net)
Reply-To: support@slashdot.org
Organization: slashdot.org
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=XX0BFF0BCE-00350BFFXX
X-Priority: 3
ReSent-From: Halmonster ReSent-To:
This is a Multipart MIME message. Since your mail reader does not understand this format, some or all of this message may not be legible.
--XX0BFF0BCE-00350BFFXX
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Hello dear member!
Slashdot.org offer you new service of overclocking your operation system (w=
in95/98/NT/linux/mac=20
and more)
For more information please visit http://join.at/freepc CT:DO NOT CLICK THIS LINK! ITS
A PAGE OF DAMN BANNER ADS! THIS IS A SCAM!
We always think about You
------------------------------------------
This message was sent to you by
Name: slashdot.org
Email Address: support@slashdot.org
IP Address: ras5.icp.rssi.ru
------------------------------------------
Using Aureate Group Mail Free Edition
Find out more about this product and try it=20
for free at: link
--XX0BFF0BCE-00350BFFXX--
"
Okay, what not to do. (Score:2)
Re:/. effect as a source of good? (Score:1)
Re:Any crackers available to help? (Score:1)
Spa(s)ming Retards (Score:1)
Those people are morons because they may get a ton of hits, but most people would get offended and not come back. They have done nothing for their site, except make a reputation.
Phht!
Re:/. effect with ping? (Score:1)
Uncle Target (Score:1)
Uncle Target was used by artillery spotters in
www2 to identify a target that should be targetted
by all guns that could range on it. The German
breakout of the Falaise Pocket was one of a few
called in www2.
Enough history. I have www.intra.ru firmly in my
sights
CC
Re:Okay, what not to do. (Score:1)
Re:Okay, what not to do. (Score:1)
Re:yeah, but my address is 'spamproofed' (Score:1)
so it was an early morning theory... i was wrong.
Re:Time to call the lawyers (Score:1)
The concept of anonymnity is the problem that makes spam possible.
No futher comment required.
/.
Re:yeah, but my address is 'spamproofed' (Score:1)
Forward it! (Score:1)
Re:Nooooooooooooooo! (Important!!!!!) (Score:2)
I thought "Pants are optional" at BSI (Score:1)
Call me a freak... (Score:1)
Re:I got the message today.... (Score:1)
Anyone who's read slashdot for more than two hours should have realised it immediately.
My initial response was "oooh, he's in for a bad life" (he as in the spammer).
Hunting them down (Score:1)
Re:Try to find out his real name, then phone him (Score:1)
Re:Shut him down and flush him with an enema (Score:2)
Why people spam is beyond me. What would motivate someone to do something so sensless? It costs them money and does not gain worthwhile friends. Is it the same motivation that drives serial killers?
Received: from mx.icp.rssi.ru (mx.icp.rssi.ru [194.85.223.7])
by Edison.EBICom.Net (8.9.1a/8.9.1) with ESMTP id XAA14816
for ; Wed, 16 Jun 1999 23:11:04 -0500
Message-Id:
Received: from mx.intra.ru ([194.135.182.7]) by mx.icp.rssi.ru
(post.office MTA v1.9.3b **** trial license expired ****)
with ESMTP id AAA207 for ;
Thu, 17 Jun 1999 08:08:46 +0400
Received: from ras5.icp.rssi.ru by mx.intra.ru with SMTP (Microsoft Exchange
Internet Mail Service Version 5.0.1458.49)
id MQ9VDG1J; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 08:07:56 +0400
The irony . . . (Score:1)
This probably won't help . . .
Re:Reason for using slashdot.org (Score:1)
--
No porn?! (Score:1)
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:1)
You must decode the headers, and hunt them down. Spammers hate losing their net access. Usually there's a dialup, a web page and a drop box at the very least.. make sure you whack all three for max karma bonus.
hmmm (Score:1)
You think they'd at least register their software...
Spamdot? (Score:1)
I know a lot of you are not going to believe it when I say AoL and Microsoft are both against spam however both have publicly come out against spam simply becouse they are fed up with it.
A lot of companys that are against spam have had the missfortune of having a spammer clame to be (in some way) a part of the organisation in question and people quick to judge lable them as prospam and of course we all want to believe all things evil of Microsoft and AoL mostly becouse it is usually true.
Spammers will never admit the true idenity of the spams source. Any clammed supporter is yet annother victom...
Re:good question (Score:1)
If they were, don't you think it would be to some internet technology related company and not a porn site?
Really, i don't think they are.
Re:How to LART this spammer: (Score:1)
>From support@slashdot.org Thu Jun 17 19:57:36 1999
>Return-Path:
We can ignore these lines.
>Received: from localhost (tygris@localhost [127.0.0.1])
> by tygris.strw.org (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id TAA00173
> for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 19:37:58 -0400
FYI: tygris.strw.org doesn't exist, it's really a dialup from Erols.
>Received: from pop.erols.com
> by fetchmail-4.6.3 POP3
> for (single-drop); Thu, 17 Jun 1999 19:37:58 EDT
Can we say I worship ESR?
>Received: from mx04.erols.com ([207.172.3.244]) by mta3.mail.erols.net
> (InterMail v03.02.07.03 118-128) with ESMTP
> id
> for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 01:42:52 -0400
From the border server to my pop server.
>Received: from mx.icp.rssi.ru (mx.icp.rssi.ru [194.85.223.7])
> by mx04.erols.com (8.8.8-970530/8.8.5/MX-980323-gjp) with ESMTP id
> BAA06613
> for ; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 01:42:51 -0400 (EDT)
From mx.icp.rssi.ru's servers to Erols. Some spammers just connect
directly to Erols and spew junk there. This isn't the case.
>Message-Id:
This tells us one thing: mx.icp.rssi.ru is broken. It should of made
it's own Message ID tag.
>Received: from mx.intra.ru ([194.135.182.7]) by mx.icp.rssi.ru
> (post.office MTA v1.9.3b **** trial license expired ****)
> with ESMTP id AAA232 for ;
> Thu, 17 Jun 1999 09:41:11 +0400
Well, at least it's recording the IP address. However, post.office
(unlike Sendmail) defaults to relaying, which is a Very Bad Thing(tm).
>Received: from ras1.icp.rssi.ru by mx.intra.ru with SMTP (Microsoft Exchange
> Internet Mail Service Version 5.0.1458.49)
> id MQ9VDJNV; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 09:40:21 +0400
EW! mx.intra.ru is running non-IP-recording Microsoft Crapware!!!
Extreemly Bad Thing(tm). What are they running, NT?!?
>From: "slashdot.org"
We can start ignoring stuff now.
>To:
>Date: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 09:44:07 +0300
>Subject: Dear Member of slashdot.org (tygris@erols.com)
>Reply-To: support@slashdot.org
>Organization: slashdot.org
>MIME-Version: 1.0
>Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=XX92BD92BC-008992BDXX
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>X-Priority: 3
[snip]
>Using Aureate Group Mail Free Edition
>Find out more about this product and try it
>for free at: http://www.group-mail.com/1
Spamware. news.admin.net-abuse.email knew about this and tried to get
it taken off. I think it may be a good thing to Slashdot the makers of
this product in your distain against spam.
More tutorials for the pissed off at Sam Spade's library (via
http://www.samspade.org).
---
Spammed? Click here [sputum.com] for free slack on how to fight it!
Re:Time to call the lawyers (Score:1)
The main reason spammers aren't sued more often is that, their claims of wealth through pyramid scams notwithstanding, their seizable assets usually consist of an old 386 and a pile of chicken bones.
/.
Internetional Law (Re:Time to call the lawyers) (Score:1)
One of the stumbling blocks in the way of all this is conceited ideas like a physical government attempting to rule something that extends beyond it's boundaries. What exactly are the boundaries of the Internet? Theoretically, they can extend as far as you can communicate. Want a terminal connection on Mars? It is almost as if there is a seperate unseen (seen, but unseen) world that envelopes our physical one.
It will be interesting to see how all this evolves and what will happen with it.
Keeping geeks clothed. (Score:1)
I have news for you, Rob. I'm naked right now.
Okay, maybe not, but... I could have been.
- Darchmare
- Axis Mutatis, http://www.axismutatis.net
Re:Time to call the lawyers (Score:1)
IANAL, but if they have any U.S. assets or associations, you could probably go after those.
As for international law being a myth, heck, Russian law is largely mythical these days, unfortunately.
Re:Not harvesting, or not fully (Score:1)
Typical of the asshole marketers out there. This is unfortunately one of the side effects of the commercialisation of the Net.
operation system? (Score:1)
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:1)
I used to work at a Pre-Verio ISP and we were blacklisted more than once because of the fact that a) maps.vix.com is nothing more than vigilante justice, and b) no one bothered to do the slightest bit of research.
We had a customer who direct-emailed about 15,000 people regularly. These were addresses aquired legitimately from response forms and trade shows. These people AGREED to get this email. Yet someone idiot who forgot that this was solicited email told the blacklist people and we lost email connectivity to vast portions of the net for about a week. Had they bothered to call us, or the customer, it would have been explained that it was solicited email. *sigh*
As someone else has said in this thread, ignore stuff that's not directed specifically to you. I have procmail add a [SPAM] in front of any email not sent to my address, and I never publish my real address. At work I didn't even bother with the [SPAM], every message not directed to me or an alias I deemed interesting was sent to
-Rich
Porn mail (Score:1)
Seriously, I think the headers you posted are clear. Maybe it's some silly prank, or someone trying to show off his ability to "spoof" mailadresses. (Obviously not aware of headers n stuff)
Message on our company Intranet:
"You have a sticker in your private area"
Not necessarily (Score:1)
I didn't look (and I refuse to give them the hit), but the post said that it's a page full of banner ads. That could mean they're not even really selling anything, just trying to collect hits on the ads that they're carrying for other sites, since they get paid per impression. So even if we all just took one look and closed the window in disgust, they would make money, just not from us. So the actual porn sites lose money by paying for advertising that doesn't get them any customers, but I for one still find the whole thing offensive because they're spamming me and trying to trick me into letting them use my click for their profit.
If they're at all remotely smart, even in their own little paramecium/slime-mold/fungus/spammer way, they are probably not even hoping for us to be actual customers, just to collect hits. That's why it's important for us not to even look at the page, even "just to see for myself what it is, in order to be better-informed, yeah, that's it". Even that would make their attempt successful and hence endorse their spamming practices.
David Gould
Re:Keeping geeks clothed. (Score:1)
fuckin m0r0ns (Score:1)
i knew it was bogus when i realised that of the "operation systems" linux was not mentioned first... that and the horrible grammar...and the fact that they were from a
assm0deus
Re:Porn scam (Score:1)
Re:Okay, what not to do. (Score:1)
WE HATE SPAM (Score:1)
KILL KILL KILL!!!
Re:Taking care of spammers... (Score:1)
Unfortunately, the authorities seem to disapprove of this method (can't think why...).
To paraphrase a famous ex-prez:
"Sure we could drag this scum out in the street and beat him to death with a 5-pound tuna, but it would be wrong..."
Re:The wrong people to annoy. (Score:1)
I got the message today.... (Score:1)
I hope we can find the culprit and take him to task.... else there would be no end to this spamming.
die spammers die! (Score:1)
Well, where did he get my address then? (Score:1)
alexgurry@intra.ru (Score:1)
Send him an eMail and tell him what you think about SPAM; I did!
jason
Re:IIS 4.0 at Intra.ru (Score:1)
Just thought it interesting. Wonder if Intra's sysadmins keep up on bugtraq.
Time to call the lawyers (Score:1)
I would say that advertising porn with the /. name qualifies as defmination.
Too bad there are not a US orginization, international law is a myth that exists only when everyone wants it to.
Re:Well, where did he get my address then? (Score:1)
Re:good question (Score:1)
Re:good question (Score:1)
Re:good question (Score:2)
The connection between slashdot, RC-5 and porn (Score:2)
I know it can be done, because EvangeLista did this already.
Re:Sad (Score:2)
Not harvesting, or not fully (Score:2)
Methinks this is just a prank to dig at the slashdot community. Lets not let that happen. Just ignore them and eventually they will go away, or get a little maturity.
the AntiCypher
UDP or SDP? (Score:1)
- - -
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:2)
p.s. I have no idea why this gets posted with a score of 2....
Re:A method to make spamming expensive. (Score:1)
I understand that the law in Washington State, U.S.A. allows people to sue for $500 for each spam with a forged return address that they receive. Your fee should be about this large.
I believe that you have a right to make spammers pay in this way. I pay for my net access at home. Each spam I receive costs me money. Why can't I take action to recover my costs?
you can't be sure (Score:1)
About suing the organization who owns the server used in the spam: guys, forget about it. As far as I know our laws (yes, I'm from Russia) related to the computer crime, there's almost no legal way of suing someone for spam. And it would be a very time/money consuming process.
Usually, we deal with such cases just by contacting with the sysadmin of the mailserver used in the spam and telling him to fucking close the security hole. Sometimes it helps, sometimes not.
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:1)
Yep. It's been a back-burner project of mine for a while now to make a spam filter. I think I have a winning concept, but the execution is both time consuming and hard. I'll mention my concept and see what you folks think.
The program would be a learning program, based most likely on a neural net. The core of the program would be a list of 100 or so "words". These words would initially be randomly chosen "words" from my entire inbox file. Eventually the program would see these words as triggers. For example the "word" mom@moms.isp.net (i.e. my mom's internet address) would be a strong indication it's not spam, however "VIRGINS!!!" would be a strong indication it's spam.
Now the program would randomly choose these words, and eventually keep the ones with good relevance (like the above), and throw away the ones with low relevance. Low relevance words would be either words that are seldom seen, or ones that are found both in legitimate and spam mail: "a", "the"...
The strength of this concept is that it is tailored to the individual. Even without things like my mom's email address, I imagine the words that are often seen in my legitimate mail are different from the ones seen in another person's. This goes down to the machines that the mail is likely to pass through on the way, etc. So once the 'net had been trained properly, it should be very good at knowing whether the new mail is spam or not.
The other big strength of this system is that it ends up using the same criteria I use to determine whether or not something is spam -- the words contained in the message. I can tell at a glance whether something is spam based on the words. A rule based system can easily be fooled -- as this article shows.
The weakness, of course, is that as a AI type program, it must be taught. But I don't think this would be too hard. My guess would be that to teach this program you'd simply have to take a huge chunk of mail you've received in the past, mark each message as being spam or not, and then let it train on that.
So what do you think? A good idea? A lost cause? I know it really doesn't go after the root cause of spam, and means that the Spam keeps clogging up the 'net, just that I don't see it -- but right now that's enough for me.
.../. showed tolerance for spam before this. (Score:1)
Even the above would not cover "joe-ing", or the disparaging of another's reputation through false headers...what just occured here at slashdot.
If false headers and false reply-to addresses were not allowed, because mail relay protocols couls somehow intercept them, spam would cease to exist.
When protocols are in place that require a genuine reply to and headers, they can be used whether they are required by law or not. After all, there is no law that specifically protects the right to use false headers and false reply-to addresses.
I'm thinking here returning any email without a verifiable reply-to, and RBL(blacklist) the source of any any email without valid headers. The reply-to address could be queried somehow, such as when a large mailing is detected...there are probably other, better ideas how to implement this, but it would not require any new legislation. Just a consensus.
The flood of angry replies would serve as a kind of DOS attack/mailbomb of any spammer's mailbox. The trafic would help shift the cost of spam back to the sender, and eliminate the profit motive. I guess a full mailbox would have to count as a false reply-to, and halt any further relaying of a given spam mailing. So once you get 5megs of replies, the spam stops...or you have to pay for a bigger and bigger mailbox (5 gigs+?).
Re:good question (Score:1)
In my experience as postmaster, spammers never use up-to-date lists. I receive severel rebounds from the mail system daily from mails destined for no-longer existing users on our system, and which bounce back since the reply-field is bogus as well.
Needless to say, I hate this. A lot.
Do your bit against spam (Score:1)
--
Barry de la Rosa,
Senior Reporter, PC Week (UK)
Work: barry_delarosa[at]vnu.co.uk,
tel. +44 (0)171 316 9364
Re:Well, where did he get my address then? (Score:1)
Are you on the RC5 team? Current theory is that they pulled it from there-apparently that's happened before I'm not on the Slashdot RC5 team and I got the spam. I am however on another RC5 team. Did they send it to everyone who's doing RC5?
Re:Feel the power baby... (Score:1)
>ping flood him, he would die a horrible death.
*Argggh*. Kids at play. Pingflooding is *not*, I repeat *not* a good way to solve a problem. You hurt his ISP, his ISP's upstream, also, all the systems involved in ping'ing the poor sucker will lose some bandwith, and so on.
Flooding hurts the *entire* net. Not only those that get hit. When ISPs have to double their bandwith because half of it get wasted because of smurfattacks
The team list lists you anyway (Score:1)
Re:good question (Score:1)
Somewhat Simple Solution (Score:1)
why is this???
my main point is, simply go to the porn companies who are paying this prick to attract the customers, show them what he did (spam mailing). Explain that spam, especially spam under false pretenses, is in the grey area of legality (and also pisses a lot of people off), and more than likely the spammer will receive no compensation for his work.
Its a small victory... Even though I would rather rip off his head and pee down his throat.
Re:Any crackers available to help? (Score:1)
it was overdue (Score:1)
The
1-you would all go to his site to see if he really WAS affiliated with
2-you would all try to use the
Spam sux. But do not act shocked that it happened to
(Of course I can keep a cool head about it cuz I didn't get the spam, LOL.)
Short of hacking the f*ck out of his site, I don't think any of the other options laid out here would be effective...
Re:good question (Score:1)
And i'd bet pretty heavily against these spammers having stolen the internal email address list.
What i imagine happened, was that some sort or crawler program sucked up hundreds of thousands of posts in the comments, after all its nots hard to generate the urls for the individual comments (http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=99/06/17/123
Re:alexgurry@intra.ru (Score:1)
logic serves, he is probably the one who did this.
ok, this is very likely, but perhaps its not him. its like someone who doesn't know much and blames slashdot.its just you've done a little more research and found this e-mail and i disagree with the comment below
Send him an eMail and tell him what you think about SPAM; I did!
doing that (esp if ya don't know 100%) is almost as bad as the original spam. because you're wasting bandwidth like spam does. two wrongs don't make a right, perhaps you should send a polite e-mail to the persons isp and tell them what is happening and they can acctually do something, cos if it is correct, they can do something about it.
for one, by mailing him you're veryfying your e-mail is valid..
Re:Porn mail (Score:2)
Re:The connection between slashdot, RC-5 and porn (Score:1)
The mail was sent to the address I userd for registering for that. And that's a different one from the one I used for registering at slashdot.
Thanks for solving this riddle.
abuse@slashdot.org (Score:1)
--
Re:Shut him down and flush him with an enema (Score:1)
It looks like this guy was using one of Microsoft's 120 day trial licenses...maybe the best response is to forward the emails to piracy@microsoft.com and let them deal with it from an illegal-software perspective...:o)
Re:Well, where did he get my address then? (Score:1)
Please read his message! (Score:1)
They can get 180,000 valid email addresses out of there with a robot.
I think we should ask distributed.net not to tell our emails,
but rather our names, just like, ehm, seti@home does.
---
Re:Somewhat Simple Solution (Score:1)
Re:Keeping geeks clothed. (Score:1)
Re:Take 'em to small claims (Score:1)
Great.
Unfortuantly, I live in the UK. It's an american firm. Nasty international boerder problems. I guess I *could* sue them here, but, it's a whole different ball game.
At least there's some positive action US citizens can take easily - now if everyone did this the 'net would be a better place.
Thanks for the advice.
Later.
Mark.
A method to make spamming expensive. (Score:1)
Spaming happens because of economics. Messages are cheap to send and 'no recourse' exists to punish the spammer.
Answer: Make it MORE expensive to spam than to not spam.
1-Create a 'sign' that says "if you sent spam, I'll accept it because I accept spam. My spam fee is $100" or something like this, depending on what works for you.
2-Allow in the spam.
3-Send the company with the spam a bill
4-Charge fees when they don't pay the bill. Administrative fees
5-When the bill gets large enuf, sell the debt for pennies on the dollar to a LOCAL person to the spammer.
6-Said LOCAL person(s) takes the spammer to court on each debt they bought
6a) different local people, different court days to make it more fun for the spammer.
7-If the case is a draw, the spammer still pays legal fees. If you win, push the debt collection to the point where they either declare bankruptcy. or go to jail
We don't need new laws....just a desire to turn the spammers over to lawyers and use the laws we ALERADY have.
Me, I've been thinking about this idea for some time. Only works if LOTTSA people decide to play.
Just getting lottsa people to play is the problem. And my automated software doesn't work 100% automated.
(HINT: If you GOT the spam, and don't have up the 'notice of billing' it would be unethical to claim you did, then sell the debt to someone else.... So please don't take the above as an invite to
Re:Help! What can we victims do about this? (Score:1)
Good idea - I didn't think about this at the time. It's been a while, buit I might have a go at dealing with this some time in the summer.
I supose this goes along the 'nobody has to forward your packets' line of thought.
Thanks.
Mark.
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:2)
OK then...the headers say it came from ras5.icp.rssi.ru. According to www.rssi.ru [www.rssi.ru], that is the remote access service of the Institute of Chemistry and Physics in Moscow. RSSI is the Russian Space Science Internet, an non-profit ISP for the scientific community in Russia.
I looked for an account administrator to send this to, and I found marina@rssi.edu [mailto].
Please do not slam this woman's mailbox. Send a well-constructed, concerned letter. The spam is not her fault, but it may be her responsibility to deal with it.
Mike
--
Re:International Law (Score:2)
Here are a few great antispam links:
http://maps.vix.com/ [vix.com]
http://www.orbs.org/ [orbs.org]
http://spam.abuse.net/ [abuse.net]
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:2)
maps.vix.com has both the MAPS, a list of known offenders, and the DUL, a list of dial-up users from which direct mail should never be accepted. (Dial-up users should always go through their ISP's mail host...) www.orbs.org contains a list of insecure mail hosts which are often trespassed by spammers.
Blocking with these three lists would go a LONG ways towards reducing spam. If sysadmins would just use them... It's much harder to do as a user, unfortunately.
Check ORBS as well (Score:2)
Re:possibly harvested from distributed.net? (Score:2)
Tell join.at, as well (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Spam to distributed.net team members (Score:3)
As mentioned in our official announcement below, we're going to try to make it as hard as possible for spammers to grab email addresses, but its to impossible to protect emails that are listed 'out in the open'. If you're concerned about spam, PLEASE edit your info so that you are not listed by your email address.
Again, we apologize to those of you who were targeted by this spammer. Its very disapointing that someone would use the services of a non-profit organization, who's goal is to make the computing world a better place, to send spam.
Here's our official announcement:
Yesterday, a spammer 'harvested' email addresses from our stats database and sent out spam with spoofed email headers, making it appear that the spam came from slashdot.org or team warped. It appears that the spammer took email addresses out of the team member listing for the Slashdot team, the OS/2 Warp team, and perhaps other teams.
We are looking into ways we can make it harder for spammers to harvest email addresses from the stats database. Given the determination of some spammers, it will be difficult for us to completely protect email addresses without taking the stats off-line completely. Currently, our best line of defense is to allow participants to be listed by something other than their email address. If anyone has other suggestions, feel free to send them to our mailing list, rc5@lists.distributed.net.
If you are worried about your address being harvested, we strongly suggest that you edit your participant info and change how you are listed. In addition to being listed by your address, you can also be listed at 'Participant 123456' or by your name, which you can specify on the same page.
To edit your information, you need your password. If you don't have it, take a look at your personal stats listing at http://stats.distributed.net and click the link at the bottom of your listing that says 'I cannot remember my password. Please email...'
Once you have your password, go to http://stats.distributed.net/pedit.php3 You will be asked for a user name and a password. Your user name is your email address, and your password is the password that was mailed to you.
We hope that our users already assume this, but to clarify, distributed.net will never, ever sell or otherwise distribute your email addresses. The only method for people to retrieve email addresses is via the stats database. We do not support spam, and we're very sorry that someone would use our services to spam people.
Jim Nasby
distributed.net Human Interface
Re: (Score:2)
Too late. (Score:2)
Deja(news) search (Score:2)
Re:Spam, the ultimate coders itch. (Score:2)
Take 'em to small claims (Score:2)
You've got a less than tiny chance that the idiots will blow off the court date (you would be supprised how many people do) and the court will almost certainly find in your favor as a result. You could win a lien against their bank account(s) or even physical assets.
At least that is how it works here in Wisconsin. YMMV. Of course if the SPAM originates from outside of the US, this won't work.
Thad
Re:/. effect as a source of good? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
How to LART this spammer: (Score:3)
mx.icp.rssi.ru is an OPEN RELAY used by spammers to hide their tracks. Complain to postmaster@rssi.ru about it and send this spam to them, with full headers.
The spammer is hosted via intra.ru. Send mail to abuse@intra.ru and postmaster@intra.ru with the full headers and spam and say "You have a spammer on your system which is compromizing security and profits. Please remove."
Also, visit The Radparker Relay Spam Stopper [radparker.com] to block the relay on subscribed systems.
---
Spammed? Click here [sputum.com] for free slack on how to fight it!