Wireless Spam?
An Anonymous Coward asks: "Recently I've begun to get spam on my e-mail equipped cellphone. Now, you have to realize I took every precaution to make sure this never happened: I have never used that e-mail address anywhere; I have an alias set up on my server that forwards to it; and I only use the alias for my own personal use. However, the spam I'm getting is not going through my server's alias to get to the phone -- I checked the logs. Multiple complaints to Voicestream's abuse address have not even evoked a response. The only way I can figure they got my address is either: Voicestream supplied it to the spammer; or the spammer entered all Voicestream phone numbers in e-mail format. Either way, I'm pissed at Voicestream. Also, I know for a fact I'm not the only Voicestream customer having this problem. The guys at work are getting the exact same spam at the exact same time. Is anyone else having this problem now? It's enough to make me drop my e-mail address on my phone. Could you imagine deleting 80 spams a day from your cellphone?"
There is an epidemic in Japan with regards to cell phones. Cell phone usage is only charged to outbound calls, providing an incentive not to call anyone (but I digress...)
There is a problem wherein spammers (for lack of a better word) are calling cell phones at random and hanging up immediately. This results in a "Missed Call" type of message with an included phone number. Phone owners are thusly tricked into calling the number back and subsequently charged outrageous fees for calling a 900-style number.
It's a big problem over here. When I got my phone, I had 3 calls like that in the first day.
just wait until you start getting spam via your major home appliances:
. ht ml
http://www.energy.whirlpool.com/pressrelease_06
TEL: 234 8023132472, FAX: 234 - 1 - 7595586
HELSINKI, FINLAND
Dear Sir,
I write you this letter of request for partnership which I hope you will give your urgent attention. We worked as members of the Operating System / Penguin Abuse Committee inaugurated by the present Democratically Elected Committee of the Electronic Frontier Foundation headed by General Richard Stallman (rtd). We are empowered to diligently review, re-appraise, scrutinize and approve feces payments to Linux users who executed *BSD devils under the past operating system regime and our work is almost concluded.
In the course of our work we discovered this fecal matter, which resulted from grossly over-used toilets, which were executed for the GNU is Not Unix Corporation (GNU) by a consortium of several Foreign Companies such as:
VA SOFTWARE, RED HAT, INC., SUSE GMBH. AND A JOINT VENTURE OF MANDRAKE AND CALDERA GMBH FOR: This amounts to the tune of 100 tons of fecal matter, but was over-invoiced to 150 tons of feces. And we deliberately approved these fecal deposits and all Lunix users have been paid with these penguins executed and since abused, leaving the large amount of Eric S Raymond's magnificent deposit floating in the escrow pool of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) ready to be paid for the sexual services from the products in item number [2] as stated above. Before digressing further I would want you to know that our GNU General Public License forbids us from owning any money or having heterosexual relationships whilst in GNU service; hence we are contacting you to be part of this transaction.
We intend to use your anus as a front to get the over-invoiced amount of 50 tons of feces out of the BSD sewers and into a designated toilet by you. Not regarding your field of specialization (sphincter expansion) you are going to forward us with any name that we will claim executed the sewaging services in the turn around maintenance of the Penguin fecal abuse farms mentioned above. All logistics are in place and all modalities worked out for the smooth insertion of the feces within ten to fourteen days of commencement after the receipt of a semen deposit from you. You are going to get 25% of the feces by posing as the owner of this fecal matter, while my colleagues and I will get 70% to ourselves with which we wish to invest in Agriculture and Farming in conjunction with you (and 5% will be set aside for the use of both parties for all excretions incurred locally and internationally during the realisation of this transaction, including toilet paper). As a matter of fact you are expected to take a sincere inventory of your toilet paper.
It is imperative to let you know that I am also a keen scatologist, with qualifications world-wide.
Despite research carried out to verify and ascertain your personality we can only move ahead if you can further assure us of your anal capacity and homosexuality and promise to help and treat this proposal with utmost confidentiality. We are men of proven integrity in our various fields who have put in 22 - 30 years of fecal matter in the toilets of our country; we are therefore averse to having our image and anuses widened. That is why we should acknowledge the fact that confidentiality is the key to the smooth insertion of this infection free transaction.
Awaiting your earliest positive response.
Best regards and remain blessed.
DR. LUNIX TORVALDS
your ISP is selling out just like others.
You can only safely forward email to a mobile phone if your service never uses the temping #@telco.com format, even "internally". My ISP is also my mobile phone provider and they go directly from my private email address to their SMS server without an extra email-2-SMS gateway. A private address I have masked by sneakemail and filtered by spamcop. (I can also cap the number of SMSes sent per 24 hours.)
As of this morning SprintPCS still officially refuses to handle their already existent SMS spam problem. They will not pass headers to end users. They provide only message 'from' and 'subject' headers, which does little good. Of course we all know how easily forged envelope headers are, so it matters little. Their SMS gateway still strips the relay IP information, and their web to SMS gateway doesn't pass an IP from the sender to the recipient either.
In short Sprint is forcing themselves to be the only ascertainable point of contact for the end user. Their official suggestion? Change your phone number and the messages will stop. They do claim that they will try to identify the sender and ask them to stop, but with Sprints track record as a publicly identifiable smashups that is hard to belive.
Not with a bang, not with a wimper but with flawed products and poor customer service.
on long distance calls in the U.S. on regular phones. On cellular phones they have been paying both ways, but increasingly on cell phones long distance and local are treated the same. They have recently been offering free long distance for a monthly fee on regular phones.
I had thought about this but hadn't actualy heard of it happening untill someone in the lab I was working in was complaining about getting offers for free DVD's on their cell phone just today.
The only real way to stop this is going to be getting the phone companies to stray from the phone-number@mobile.phone-company.com. Hopefully they'll catch on. It'll be far more work for them to offer you an user name instead of just using your phone numnber, so we'll see what solution they come up with. They *could* start filtering any server trying to send more than two or three messages an hour, but we'll see how that goes.
At least with my plan I don't get charged for incoming messages, but they're a high priority interupt. If I start getting spam I'll just turn off the message beep. The moral of the story? Spam sucks.
Where did the spam come from? If it originated from a serious company and not some obscure {p0rn|make_money_fast|get_beautifull_painlessly|lo ose_50_pounds _in_1_day} outlet on the net then you could try this: Contact them with a very a polite e-mail (or in case of SMS spam: SMS) and inquire about a snail mail adress that you may use to serve a cease and desist order. The inquiry alone is often enough to end spam from that source.
You should also check if the terms of use of your service provider allows the company to distribute your e-mail address. Sometimes one forgets to check the conveniently hard to see "I don't want any valuable unsolicited consumer advice" boxes.
Line 9: Argument of type SIGNATURE expected.
I do hope that the telcos realize that they are impairing adoption of wireless e-mail as long as two things still happen:
t
1. Billing for messages recieved (when most of them are going to be spam)
2. Not billing the e-mail sender.
What needs to happen is that the telcos, maybe even the postal system needs to create an unique GUID-like system that generates e-mail addresses in the format like FFFFFFFF-FFFFFFFF-FFFFFFFF-FFFF
Of which the last two bytes can be used for identification/area, kinda like area-codes, but not base-10.
Then charge money for access to the directory service that resolves the GUID to something like mynameissombody@exchange.city.state.country.plane
So in order for spammers to mass-gather and send spam it would cost a fortune. Bulk-mail to specific target groups is made easier as well, since someone could pay a few thousand dollars and lookup an entire cities worth of e-mails. Instead of the stupid "10 billion e-mails on CD for 449$" type of crap seen in spam, which is neither targeted, nor regionally correct (Canadians, Austrailians, and Europeans get so much spam for junk from the USA isn't not funny.)
Then there is also a magic flag that we add called "disable bulk mail" and whenever a bulk query is called to the directory, e-mails with the flag set are not returned.
Also allow for opting-out of reciving e-mail from entire countries, finally, get rid of all that american spam.
Then opt-in your friends (the "only directly recieve e-mail from those on your list" feature.) so they can contact you directly.
It could be done, but I doubt the telcos want to pony up the money to do it. They are in the market for making money, and making money means billing the reciever for all the spam they recieve.
For the last six of months I have not recieved any thing other than SPAM through my phone email. As I don't use it to send mail I canceled the option last week.
If more of us start canceleing our accounts, the mobile companies will start to take notice, especally when they keep getting 'I get to mutch SPAM' as the reasion for disconecting.
My mobile company charged me a monthley fee for the service. A monthly fee they are no longer recieving.
Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
I recently had a similar problem which resulted in a DOS attack against my 7110. I recieved a data call every 1 minute from and 'unknown number'. Obviously a modem configured to phone my number over and over again. This resulted in calls being lost and my phone ringing itself to death.
When I contacted my provider they said and I quote! "there is nothing we can do. They will stop when they realise their mistake!", Oh yeh - what if this is somebody determined to annoy me or even somebodies home PC thats been hacked.
When are the mobile and phone providers going to realise that what happens on the Internet today will happen on the mobile network tomorrow...
Almost as funny as the time my providers, support engineer told me to disable my "fir wall" so the alerts I was getting from Code Red infected machines will stop being displayed...
regards -Sliver-
The only spam I've received on my wireless device (knock on particle board) was a spam in the 2000 election from George W. Bush's minions asking me to vote for him. I was so livid in receiving this. He didn't change my voting convictions any, but he sure did piss me off in the whole process.
I read the above post, and can't determine why it was modded as flamebait.
Whomever modded it, care to comment?