The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
attribution is given and this notice is included.
Engendering
disgust
By Scott Bradner
Network World,
4/6/98
I have resisted
writing about spam mail for a long time - actually since
mid-1994. But this
is not to say that spam is far from my mind.
It would be hard to
forget the issue considering how many spam
messages I get per
day. Judging from the fact that all too many of the
messages are
advertisements for companies that want to send spam
mail for me or will
sell me the software to do it myself, things are not
likely to get better
soon.
Some people still
claim that spam is not a problem because you can
just delete unwanted
messages and move on. But I wonder if those
people actually use
computers.
If they do use
computers, I'm sure they do not subscribe to AOL. The
figure on spam most
often cited of late has been that as much as one
third of the mail on
AOL is spam. It gets more than a bit tiring to
retrieve and delete
all the junk.
I've decided to
revisit the question of spam at this time because of the
reception Sendmail,
Inc. has received to its recent announcement of
antispam technology.
This announcement was a big story to most of
the major U.S. news
organizations, including The New York Times,
The Wall Street
Journal and CNN. The FBI's decision to send out its
own spam
(www.firstbase.com/fbi.htm) also has prompted me to
write on the subject
of spam again.
The Sendmail
improvements try to make it harder for companies that
send spam to hide
their actual location. These companies often try to
hide their location
to avoid the angry return mail and the notifications
of bounced mail.
These companies redirect this mail to some innocent
third party or to
someone that they do not like.
The Sendmail
improvements also try to keep spam senders from using
third-party
computers to do the actual sending of the mail. These
improvements should
be quite a help, but the problem will not go
away easily.
Junk fax problem
solved
A few years back junk
faxes were a big problem, but they have just
about disappeared in
the U.S. Two seemingly minor changes in the
legal landscape seem
to have done the trick. First, you're not allowed
to send faxes to
people who don't want them. Second, all of the
information on the
fax - including the sender's identity - must be
accurate or the
assumption is that the send faxes to peoplewho don't want them.
Second, all ofthe information on the fax - including the sender's identity -
must be accurate or the assumption is that the senderis attempting to commit
wire fraud, which is a felony.
The same steps might work for solving the spam problem.
The business of spam must be controlled if the Internet is going
to get close to its potential. A future in which hundreds of thousands of
companies are sending unwanted mail to millions of people is not pleasant to
imagine.
It does continue to amaze me that some people are eager to
engenderthe disgust of millions in order to getthe business of a few hundred.
But immunity to disgust seems to be a featureof the people who are in this type
ofbusiness.
Disclaimer:
I trust Harvard engenders more envy than disgust, but in any case, the above
are my laments.