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Dictionary Spammer Fined $55,000 for Spam Attack

Lawrence_Bird writes "In a first, a Japanese district court has ordered a spammer to pay restitution to NTT DoCoMo for abuse of their imode system. 'The damage caused by large amounts of e-mail not reaching their destinations should be covered by the sender,' said the judge. The fine is about $55,000 and was based on an estimated cost to NTT of 1.2 yen per undelivered spam ($0.01) for the 4 million spams that were undeliverable. What is most startling is NTT DoCoMo assertion that of the 950 million emails they receive each day, 880 million are not deliverable!"

6 of 175 comments (clear)

  1. Great by captainclever · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If only there were more rulings like this one, maybe it would make spammers think twice if they knew they could be fined.

    I want to see this guy fined per DELIVERABLE message aswell though.

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  2. "880 million" by rf0 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think that it should be clearer that those 880 million are sent to *non-existant* addresses. The slashdot article makes it looks like that their infrastructure can't cope...

    Rus

  3. Well... by acehole · · Score: 4, Funny

    They tried to email the judgement to him but for some reason thiscouldbeyou@riches.await.com kept bouncing...

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  4. A great precedent! by Bvardi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Now if only more countries would do this kind of thing - recognizing that spam has a financial impact on ISPs and on the end consumer, and that especially mass "dictionary" based attacks to randomly find accounts are the internet equivilent of dropping millions of leaflets from an airplane for advertising purposes. (In which case they'd be rightly charged with littering and other offences.)

    Plus they got zapped for undelivered email - avoids the whole "opt in/opt out" argument (difficult to prove always that someone didn't accidentally "opt in" at SOME point and you KNOW the spammer is going to claim that they did) AND it also is likely far more costly than targetted spam attacks. (If you send to a 90 percent valid email list chances are you are sending to a few hundred thousand addresses. You do a dictionary attack you are sending to MILLIONS of addresses... which would you rather see them get charged cash for?)

    It's a good start if you ask me (though of course part of me thinks that locking them in a small room with one angry ferret per 1000 emails would be a good way too... but that might be going too far. Probably. I mean, think of the poor ferrets?)

    Bvardi

  5. Re:Damn! by $rtbl_this · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think you'll find they're just being blackholed. *rimshot*

    Ew. I really wish I hadn't just used the syllable "rim" in that context.

    --
    "Are you being weird, or sarcastic?" said Emma. I said I didn't know because I get the two feelings mixed up.
  6. Say no to excessive "costs" by morcheeba · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I like the verdict and think that the fine is appropriate, but I don't like how it was calculated. Maybe the article misrepresented it, but charging $0.01 per spam seems excessive.

    The article says 880 million undeliverable emails are sent every day. At a penny a piece, that's USD$8.8million / day, or $3.2 billion/year. The company does $42 billion in sales per year, I doubt that they spend 7.6% of their income on spam. Or, for that matter, give me $3b/yr and I'll provide the equipment to totally filter all of their undeliverable mail -- they'll save their shareholders $200 million!.

    I just wish they said "it cost us 1 man-year of work to stop this guy" and cost it that way instead of making up numbers per message. It's this kind of unjustified damage estimate that "cost" sun $80 million of money that was good enough to tell a judge under oath, but too bogus to tell their shareholders. A doubt NTT has a $3.2b line-item on their annual report.

    (and, as others have pointed out, this 880milMsg/day is misaddressed mail - trivial to filter out and it never consume any expensive RF bandwidth)