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Engendering disgust
By Scott Bradner
I've resisted writing
about spam mail for a long time. The last time was mid 1994. 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 I get are advertisements for companies that will send spam mail
for you or will sell you the software to do it yourself, things are not likely
to get better soon.
Some people still claim
that spam is not a problem because you can just delete the message and move on.
I wonder if those people actually use computers. I'm sure that they do not
subscribe to AOL. The figure on spam most often cited in the last week or so
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 to the announcement
of some anti-spam technology by Sendmail Inc. this past week. This announcement
was a major story in most of the major U.S. news organizations including the
New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and CNN. Spam and the dislike of it is
hitting the big time. That observation plus the FBI sending out its own spam ( http://www.firstbase.com/fbi.htm) has gotten me to write again.
The Sendmail
improvements try to make it harder for those companies which send out spam to
hide their actual location, something these companies do to avoid the angry
return mail and the notifications of bounced mail. They redirect that to some
innocent 3rd party or to someone that they do not like. The improvements also
try to keep the spam senders from using 3rd party computers to do the actual
sending of the mail. All good stuff and these improvements will be quite a help
but the problem will not go away easily.
A few years back junk
faxs 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 must not send faxes to people who don't want them. Second, all of
the information on the fax, including the identity of the sender, must be
completely accurate or the assumption is that you are attempting to commit wire
fraud, a felony. The same might work for spam.
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 engender the disgust of millions in
order to get the business of a few hundred, but immunity to disgust seems to be
a feature of the people that are in this type of business.
disclaimer: I trust
Harvard engenders more envy than disgust but in any case the above are my
laments.