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Britain |
Email gangs bombard Britain in "Spam Wars" |
2006-11-28 |
![]() "Email systems are overloaded or melting down trying to keep up with all the spam," said Dan Druker, a vice president at Postini. His company has detected 7 billion spam e-mails worldwide in November compared to 2.5 billion in June. Spam in Britain has risen by 50 percent in the last two months alone, according to Internet security company SurfControl. The United States, China and Poland are the top sources of spam, data from security firm Marshal suggests. About 200 illegal gangs are behind 80 percent of unwanted emails, according to Spamhaus, a body that tracks the problem. Experts blame the rise in spam on computer programs that hijack millions of home computers to send emails. |
Posted by:Fred |
#8 Crap like this is only going to hasten the day when we all have to pay "postage" or some such fee for emails and other traffic. Even a nominal fee of 1¢ per email sent will put an end to most spam, but I dread how it will be regulated and enforced (UN need not apply). |
Posted by: Dar 2006-11-28 16:17 |
#7 I've got a firewall and a fairly good spam filtering system, and I still get 100-200 spam emails every day. My ISP deletes another 1000 or so, and my spam blocker gets another 100. This crap is getting out of hand, and those responsible should be on the receiving end of a 1000lb JDAM, wherever they are. Screw "collateral damage" - if you don't want your house blown up, don't send spam. If you don't want your apartment ventilated, make sure the spam bandits don't live next door. |
Posted by: Old Patriot 2006-11-28 15:36 |
#6 I blame poor ISPs who don't configure their networks correctly to block port 25 traffic unless specifically requested. |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles in Blairistan 2006-11-28 13:34 |
#5 I'll have spam, spam, spam, spam, eggs, and spam. |
Posted by: wxjames 2006-11-28 13:15 |
#4 Turn off when not in use? |
Posted by: john 2006-11-28 11:56 |
#3 Experts blame the rise in spam on computer programs that hijack millions of home computers to send emails. It's called a firewall, people. |
Posted by: Mike 2006-11-28 06:33 |
#2 That and ... who were these samaritans that sacked that Russian spam king? Rinse and repeat wouldn't be bad. |
Posted by: twobyfour 2006-11-28 05:18 |
#1 Experts blame the rise in spam on computer programs that hijack millions of home computers to send emails. Thanks for the secure operating system, Microsoft. |
Posted by: gromky 2006-11-28 00:32 |