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Spammer Gets Spam Mailed

ssblood noted a story about a spammer getting what he deserves as well as a related story from the Register. Essentially the virtual spammer is capable of sending a billion emails a day, and is getting sacks of physical junk mail from irritable folks. Apparently part of this plot was hatched on familiar turf too.

11 of 341 comments (clear)

  1. "They're Out of Their Minds..." by efatapo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok....? Getting back a little of what you dish out justifies calling people "Out of their minds". I can see if they were firebombing his house, but sending him junk mail? ;) Come on Alan, what're you thinking. This has to be the best story ever. The funniest thing I've heard today at LEAST!

  2. Clearly everyone has missed the best story... by Munra · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Clearly the best story on that page is the genius of the person using Fedex's parcel tracking to find out where Santa lives :)

    Tracking a package to Santa

    South Haven photojournalist David McCreery uses Federal Express a lot and is fascinated with the tracking feature on the FedEx Web site (www.federalexpress.com) that lets you watch as your package makes its way to its destination.

    "I send FedEx packages every few weeks," he says. "Once, I sent a package to Bowling Green and watched it leave Michigan via Flint for Memphis, come back to Flint and then drive to Ohio."

    So, this being the holiday season, he decided to FedEx a letter to Santa, wondering: "How far would a package to the North Pole go? How would it get there? Where would it end up? Who would sign for it?"

    You can follow the progress of his letter on his personal Web site (www.davidm.net), where he posted his letter and the FedEx tracking number.

    Read the results, linked from here, over here.

  3. What about his lawyer? by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Considering that /. listed the lawyer's address as well, what is happening to the lawyer and the law firm?

  4. Re:Dupe alert! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There's quite a lot of duplicate news stories here, most often citing the same URL as the previous story. I'm wondering, how much work would it be to adapt the "enter new story" script the editors use to do a search for similar urls or stories in say the past month? Given the article posting rate and the amount of readers /. has, the server won't even notice, and with a search engine already in place I doubt it would be hard to implement. So what's keeping them from adopting a simple technological measure to improve the quality of their site?

    Lourens

  5. Re:bored this sunday morning by hardcode · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Cool, missile addresss, now to link him to Al Queda...

  6. Re:Feedback? by Basje · · Score: 2, Interesting

    LOL. All the junkmail arriving there will actually drive the price of the house down too. Imagine, his whole lawn strewn with it

    --
    the pun is mightier than the sword
  7. Re:Spammers?John Poindexter is getting a taste too by TheLink · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's not a taste of his own medicine.

    A taste of his medicine would mean everyone keeping track of where he is going and what he is doing. e.g. everyday someone sticks gps modules on his cars and puts the info on a website. Someone pointing a webcam at his front door (not his bedroom window).

    People calling up his home phone number and pestering him or his wife is something totally different. That's like telemarketing.

    BTW the article sucks too. No imagination. Sure you don't like that person or what he's doing, but how does asking members of the public to call his home phone help?

    The article also talks about California seceding. Where does CA get water from? They are going to have to build a lot more waterworks from north to south. Not sure if north CA has enough water to cover the south's needs as well as its own. I'm sure some states would be fine with CA leaving, since they'll have a better chance of getting their fair share of water. Mexico might even start seeing the Colorado _river_ again.

    The US-ca could start charging California a lot more for electricity from the Hoover Dam too.

    Then the US-ca could indulge in a bit of schadenfreude: watching everyone in California battle each other over the power and water issue: the usual "no nuclear power", "no fossil fuel plants", "not in my backyard" etc.

    Silly article.

    --
  8. Re:Dupe alert! by tdemark · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Forget given them a tool they have to use -- make it automatic.

    As part of the subimission process, compare the included URLs to the URLs of previous stories and generate a warning page if there are matches.

    Something along the lines of:

    WARNING: Duplicate URL
    http://www.example.com/foo/bar.html
    Date: Dec 14, 2002
    Article: Article Title

    and

    WARNING: Similar URL
    http://www.example.com/foo/bar.htm
    Date: Dec 2, 2002
    Article: Article Title

    Continue with story submission?
    -Yes- -No-

  9. Ralskys House by spacefight · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I guess you're all interested in this, ok, more or less :) Yes, the Jaguar actually followed the spotter and he got threaten on his voice mailbox. Mirrors here.

  10. How many lifetimes has he wasted? by sbaker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was always impressed by Steve Job's comment to the guy who was writing the Mac bootstrap code. The guy was complaining that it wasn't worth optimising the bootstrap loader any more because it was fast enough already. I don't Steve's exact words - but it was something like: We will sell 100 million of these machines - if each of those people boots their machine once a day for five years - then that's 15 billion reboots. If you can save just one second from the reboot time of the Mac then that's 480 YEARS saved.

    So shaving one second of the boot time is like saving the lives of 50 people. What
    could be a more noble activity than saving human lives like this.

    So - applying that math to this spammer: If he sends out ten million spams a day and it takes 1 second to delete each one - and if this guy does that every day for five years - then that's morally equivelent to murdering 50 people.

    Just because the damage he does to each individual is small, the cumulative damage is huge.

    There is another story (probably apochryphal) about the guy writing the banking system software who changed the code to take the roundoff error (less than a half cent) from every interest calculation and direct it into his personal account. The story goes that he made tens of thousands of dollars a week. This story probably isn't true - but should such a person be considered any less a criminal because the money he stole was spread so thinly? Obviously not - he stole those thousands of dollars and that's that.

    This spammer deprived the people of the world of 50 human lives - he should be considered a mass murderer and treated accordingly.

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
  11. Re:In case you missed it the first time... by jonadab · · Score: 3, Interesting

    > the satisfaction of signing Mr. Ralsky up for a few more mass
    > mailers

    Signing him up for mass mailers lacks imagination and is easy for
    him to counter. (Bulk mail is usually obvious and easy to sort
    out.) Some better ideas...

    * Send him a personal letter in a hand-addressed envelope.
    (Don't be nasty; that would just be grounds for a lawsuit.
    You could explain why you don't like spam, though, and ask
    to be taken off all his lists. But be courteous about it.)

    * Send "pen pal" mail to a few hundred thousand third-graders
    with his name and return address. (This one might be illegal;
    consult a lawyer first. IANAL, just brainstorming here.)

    * Send him a can of Hormel product, nicely wrapped, with a
    gift card.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.