FTC Chief Bashes Anti-Spam Bills
teutonic_leech writes "According to an MSNBC report FTC chairman Tim Muris has indicated that the antispam laws being considered by Congress 'just won't work and may even be counterproductive - some of the proposed laws could be harmful, or at best useless.' He further concluded that 'In the end, legislation cannot do much to solve the spam problem, because it can only make a limited contribution to the crucial problems of anonymity and cost shifting.'" Other spam bits: an anti-spam service has a funny interview with one of their users, and reader der.hans submits a story and some pretty pictures discussing the quantity of Sobig.f virus emails.
My boss, Bill, bashes spammers. No really, he does. We're one of the first ISPs to sue spammers. Check last months (2months ago? don't remember) Time magazine. Awwwh yeah.
- Anti-Spam bills being considered currently inadequate: 100% correct
- Anti-Spam legislation not a primary solution: 100% incorrect.
Legislation is the ONLY way to get rid of spam. Effective legislation and prosecution, that is. The "they will all go offshore" excuse is BS. Sure, some might, but many won't. And then, the country that harbors the offshore spammer is squeezed just as korea was (do you see any korean spam any more? well, yes, but nowhere like the torrents we all received a year ago).Spam is a social problem, not a technological one. Social problems can only be solved by social contracts or laws. Technological solutions fail. Even bayesian filters, those much heralded bleeding edge anti-spam flavor of the moment, are being beaten regularly--my SpamBayes filter catches still a good deal, but more and more slip through despie over 150,000 'training' emails as the spammers get smarter. And, bayesian filters (even at the ISP level) don't begin to address the crucial problem of bandwidth use.
Legislate Now. Not big brother, not slippery-slope BS about john ashcroft in your inbox - just reasonable, progressive legislation to eliminate the spam epidemic.
As long as there is profit to be made, there will be an enterprising capitalist there to take advantage. Especially in the case of spam, where there is no real barrier to entering. If you get a miniscule response, you can make a huge return on a limited investment.
It's akin to regulation of the traveling snake-oil salesman of the nineteenth century. That sort of charlatan is no longer allowed (by law), and the same could happen with strong (and strongly enforced) spam laws.
Stop corporate
A government figure who actually admits there's not a whole lot they can do. Nice to see a guy with a little common sense (on this issue, at least) giving voice to his oppinions. Let's face it, he's right. Outlawing spam is -not- goingg to have an yeffect whatsoever. Look at underage drinking, pot use, etc. It's illegal, it still happens, and quite often. The 'spam bills' won't have any effect beyond making people think their senators are tech-minded.
best quote from the Knowspam.net interview:
At first glance, it sounds like the FTC cheif has his head up his ass. After reading the article, I realised the man just does not want to pass a lame ass law that makes it HARDER to prosecute spammers. He is looking for a simpler plan to make it EASIER to shut down mass-spammers. Sounds like he needs our help, not our hostility.
JP
The facts expressed here belong to all, the opinions to me. The distinction between fact and opinion is yours to decide.
Is it just me, or is C/R spam filtering, really, intensely, annoying?
If I e-mail someone, and I get one of those "I think you're a spammer, prove you're not" messages back, then fuck it, you're not getting my e-mail. Challenge/response breaks the whole concept of e-mail.
I personally use SpamAssassin to drop mail scoring 5-10 into a crudbox, and 10+ just gets bounced.
I don't get much spam anymore.
How people spend so much time complaining about spam (unauthorized use of bandwidth) yet have no trouble at all making unauthorized use of someone else's data (file trading).
There shouldn't be much problem with a spam policy provided the proper definition of spam is included: bulk, unsolicited, commercial e-mail.
Defining spam as "any e-mail I don't want" is probably part of the problem with having a working anti-spam policy. It is also an incorrect definition of spam.
It also makes it impossible for people to do business, since it will be impossible for people to introduce themselves through e-mail.
Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
It is more problematic than just stopping the spammers. Any legislation should be based upon these criteria.
1) Spam cannot be routed via spurious methods.
2) Spammers can not blanket-target domains.
3) The companies who emply spammers should be held responsible.
4) The advertising should follow current laws and guidelines, with the consideration that minors may be using the internet. In general, follow the guidelines for movie trailers.
5) Transactions between companies and these 'advertising agencies' must be recorded.
6) Both the spammer and the company which sells the product must be held culpable.
Any deviation from these guidelines will only prove to make the anti-spam legislation exactly what the claims state it is, useless and filled with loopholes.
There's no need for a human to get involved. Have a protocol whereby in order to the receiver's machine automatically issues a small, dynamically-generated math problem which requires the sender's computer a few seconds of computing time to solve. The email only gets "authorized" if a correct solution is received. This would have very little impact on a regular user, but a spammer who sends out hundreds of thousands of emails would be facing some pretty prohibitive computational costs.
The bold print giveth, and the fine print taketh away
I agree that the proposed spam legislation is inadequate to solve the problem, and I commend the FTC for standing up, rather than passing more useless laws and backing an inneffective solution just to be able to say "look what we've done"
However, my problem has lately has not been the tradition UCE spam (Spamassasin does a pretty good job taking care of that); my problem lately has been outright criminal messages reaching my inbox.
Recently, I've been getting more and more messages spoofed as being from Paypal, Citibank, my ISP, etc, saying that my account has been suspended, and I need to verify my password, credit card number, even my mother's maiden name(!) These messages are getting more sophisciated, and appear to have (for example) a paypal.com address for me to click on.
After getting a few of these in a week's time, I checked the headers, and all seemed to come from China. I'm not sophicicated enough to trace them back any farther, but since these are so blatently criminal, I dont think they'd be originating in the US, as the potential for prosecution is so high.
Unfortunately, these messages are the most dangerous, and the hardest to stop (if they truly originate overseas.) I'd like to see some sort of internation cooperation to track and prosecute these degenerates.
OK...
I can do this. I am, after all,
a superhero!
It seems like these guys lay low so that geeks like us can't find them and harrass them. But, this has always begged the question in my mind, how do their customers find them?
Not that I want to spam mind you, but it seems like they have more than a few customers, and yet, it seems next to impossible to find a point of contact for these people.
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I think the SPAM problem could be largely mitigated by altering the SMTP protocol to include cryptographic signatures which are used to authenticate the email address listed in the email's "From" field. The receiving SMTP server contacts the server listed in the From field to obtain a copy of the claimed sender's public key which the receiving server uses to authenticate the sender's true identity. The public key is user-settable so that alternate From addresses may be used as long as the sender is authorized to use that address in From fields.
"In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
Legislation isn't always the correct tool to fighting something. Whenever we consent to Congress passing more and more laws, we are sure to lose some of our freedoms along the way.
I hate spam as much as the next guy, but it isn't worth letting Congress think up some hair-brained, rights-destroying scheme that probably won't work anyway.
Too bad they don't realize this on most issues out there.
"You spoony bard!" -Tellah
Now, a good anti-spam law can contribute by driving spam further into the criminal underworld, but let's face it, it's most of the way there already, and you're not going to cut it down much more in that direction.
The key point is anonymity. If you can send email anonymously, you can send spam, legally or illegally. If you are willing not to receive anonymous email, you can receive zero spam (using whitelisting), or next to zero spam (counting on blacklisting of known spammers by name). Contrary to what some people say, the existing technical SMTP protocols are perfectly adequate for spam-free email: you just need a virtual email network using smtp, to which anonymous users are not admitted. I think it quite likely that MSN, AOL, etc. will be setting this up within the next 12-24 months. They might screw it up by trying to lock out competitors, but it can only be useful if it's reasonably inclusive.
Personally, I want to receive anonymous email, from people who've seen my web sites, or old friends who've looked up my address, or whatever. But to get these emails, I'm bound to get spam as well, legally or illegally, and I'm prepared to live with it.
I'm all for fighting spam, but so far, there are 3 problems:
First, there seems to be this naive belief among politicians that if they pass an anti-spam law, spammers will actually obey it. The majority of spammers have little regard for the law and their entire business model is based on deception and other activities of questionable legality. Any anti-spam laws will be ignored (and tied up in the courts by legal challenges).
Second, is enforcement. You can write all the laws you want, but they are meaningless if not enforced. If I am deluged by spam that violates an anti-spam law, who do I complain to? Who will investigate my complaint and take appropriate action - all the way through to prosecution? If you think about this for a minute, you quickly realize that *MEANINGFUL* enforcement of anti-spam laws will take a lot of resources -- i.e., it will be very expensive.
And finally, there's the international nature of the internet. Routing spam through a mail server in a foreign country is trivial. The only likely outcome of anti-spam legislation is that spammers will use foreign servers for their e-mail and websites.
The FTC is not blasting the concept of passing an anti-spam law. They're bashing the existing anti-spam bills that are about to become law. They're essentially saying we need better laws.
In Soviet Russia, I ruled you