Slashdot Mirror


Good Guys 2, Spammers 0

JoeJob writes "A couple of victories in the legal war against spammers. First, a Washington resident has been awarded a $250,000 decision against a spammer that sent him 58,000 copies of a spam. Second, looks like the spammers who are trying to sue Spamhaus, SPEWS, and other spam blacklists have decided to tuck their tails and run. Let's hope this trend continues." If you care to celebrate this, one food springs to mind.

415 comments

  1. This is what it has come down (to) by trolman · · Score: 4, Interesting
    When you look at the big picture CAUCE and the likes will prove to be the Open Source solution to the problem. Those other guys are just doing it for the banner ads.

    Back in the day; when the debate about allowing comerical interest on the Internet fired up, many predicted that today' situation would be the outcome... *soft crap destroying the backbone and .com(ers) diluting the content to the lowest common denominator.

    1. Re:This is what it has come down (to) by AchmedHabib · · Score: 1

      Those other guys are just doing it for the banner ads.
      Ahrm, this is not 1999. Income from banner ads are not enough to bills.

  2. I won't be happy till by greechneb · · Score: 5, Funny

    i won't be happy until there is no spam at all.... That, or capital punishment. Nothing like deterring spam with a good caneing. Anyone who recieves a copy of the spam gets to give the offender a whack. In extreme cases (porn sent to childrens email address, etc.) the spammer is sent to a federal -pound me in the ass- prison. Don't even ask about what happens for the penis enlargement senders ;)

    1. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't you mean corporal punishment?

    2. Re:I won't be happy till by Tyrseil · · Score: 1

      So, essentially, we just institute the kinds of things Thailand and Singapore do?

      I can see the policy now, 1 hit with the cane for every 250k of spam you send.

      Life would be good.

      --
      Everything I say is a lie...
    3. Re:I won't be happy till by autopr0n · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      In extreme cases (porn sent to childrens email address, etc.) the spammer is sent to a federal -pound me in the ass- prison.

      I just want you to know that I sincerely hope one day you're arrested for something you didn't do, and analy raped in prison by someone with AIDS.

      --
      autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    4. Re:I won't be happy till by why-is-it · · Score: 4, Insightful

      i won't be happy until there is no spam at all....

      Then I guess you won't be happy.

      Look at the articles that show that there are enough gullible people out there to give the spammers a viable (if repugnant) business model.

      I figure the bogus lawsuits against spamhaus present a good way for us to fight back. If we can take down some of the main offenders, it won't necessarily reduce the amount of spam we get, but it might act as a bit of a deterrent for some of the other pond scum.

      We need to fix the SMTP protocol to put these guys out of business for good. That, or a bullet...

      --
      *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    5. Re:I won't be happy till by lehyeong · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing they get sent to the same prison?

    6. Re:I won't be happy till by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      We need to fix the SMTP protocol to put these guys out of business for good.

      Just because there is spam doesn't mean the protocol is broken. Get a grip.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    7. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You opposed to this because of personal experience?

    8. Re:I won't be happy till by RollingThunder · · Score: 2, Informative

      AFAIK, caning is "corporal punishment", not capital. Capital = death, corporal = physical.

      And I agree - bring back the cane!

    9. Re:I won't be happy till by EvilNTUser · · Score: 1

      "That, or capital punishment. Nothing like deterring spam with a good caneing."

      Damn. And I thought the electric chair was a cruel way of killing people. Still, very creative indeed! Have you ever considered a career at the RIAA?

      --
      My Sig: SEGV
    10. Re:I won't be happy till by wolrahnaes · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, a "fixed" SMTP or a new protocol will drastically reduce spam.

      SMTP is a trusting protocol. It relies on the sending computer to correctly identify the sender.
      This is how spammers send out millions of messages with bogus From: addresses. If a new protocol was implemented that required the sender to prove their identity (or at the very least, made sure the From: domain is actually in the network being served), that would make it harder for spammers to BS their addresses, thus making it much easier to block them.
      Unfortunately the spammers don't seem to understand that if we have a spam filter enabled, WE DON'T WANT THEIR CRAP! All it does by slipping past our filters is piss us off.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    11. Re:I won't be happy till by Moonshadow · · Score: 4, Funny
      I can see the policy now, 1 hit with the cane for every 250k of spam you send.

      I think you made a typo. There's not supposed to be a "k" after 250. :D

    12. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm. Let me guess. Porn website. Upset about attacks on spammers. Smells like a spammer to me. Look forward to seeing you modding to oblivion troll spammer.

    13. Re:I won't be happy till by austad · · Score: 2, Informative

      You mean a replacement like this:

      http://amtp.bw.org/

      I saw something the other day that it now has its own RFC.

      --
      Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
    14. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "Capital = death, corporal = physical"

      Capital = of the head, Coporal = of the body

    15. Re:I won't be happy till by a_timid_mouse · · Score: 1
      > i won't be happy until there is no spam at all.... That, or capital punishment. Nothing like deterring spam with a good caneing.

      Um, I'm sure you mean corporal punishment, not capital punishment. Capital punishment equates to a death sentence. But maybe when we're talking about spammers both are appropriate?

    16. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "Unfortunately the spammers don't seem to understand that if we have a spam filter enabled, WE DON'T WANT THEIR CRAP!"

      Yes they do.

      > All it does by slipping past our filters is piss us off.

      And make them lots and lots of money for doing little work.

    17. Re:I won't be happy till by osjedi · · Score: 4, Funny


      I won't be happy until someone sends me 58,000 copies of a spam message and I get paid $250,000 for it. That's $4.31 per message. I would love it and ask for more. I would even invest in more bandwidth and a server farm so they could send it to me faster.

      --
      -=-=-=-=- osjedi uses Debian GNU/Linux. -=-=-=-=-
    18. Re:I won't be happy till by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1
      Um, I'm sure you mean corporal punishment, not capital punishment. Capital punishment equates to a death sentence. But maybe when we're talking about spammers both are appropriate?
      If the caning were delivered by each of the millions of people who received the penis-pill spammer's crap, don't you think it would end up being capital punishment?

      I'd imagine his body would be a bleeding hamburger after being smacked with a cane 5 millions times over.
    19. Re:I won't be happy till by ePhil_One · · Score: 2, Informative
      SMTP is a trusting protocol. It relies on the sending computer to correctly identify the sender. This is how spammers send out millions of messages with bogus From: addresses. If a new protocol was implemented that required the sender to prove their identity (or at the very least, made sure the From: domain is actually in the network being served), that would make it harder for spammers to BS their addresses, thus making it much easier to block them.

      Um, no.

      Which is sort of the problem with all these folks bitchin about the protocol being broken, they don't understand the existing protocol but think they can fix it.

      Almost all mail servers correctly identify the source IP of the sender. Its in the mail headers. Technically it could be faked, but spammers aren't really working at that level. They use open relays to hide their source IP's, but thats hardly SMTP's fault.

      And how do you verify that the "FROM:" address is actually in the network being served? There is currently no resource that can affirmatively state that 192.168.1.2 belongs to mydomain.com. And if there was, it could easily be added to current SMTP server implementation. There is no need for a new spec.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    20. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, if you asked for more... it wouldn't be spam

    21. Re:I won't be happy till by why-is-it · · Score: 1

      And how do you verify that the "FROM:" address is actually in the network being served? There is currently no resource that can affirmatively state that 192.168.1.2 belongs to mydomain.com

      Have you ever heard of nslookup? Subnet(s) are registered to the organizations and domains that own them. The downside of what you are proposing is that not everyone owns their own IP space...

      --
      *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    22. Re:I won't be happy till by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      That, or capital punishment. Nothing like deterring spam with a good caneing..... Don't even ask about what happens for the penis enlargement senders ;)

      I have long wanted to enlarge the penises of some spammers. And not in the way suggested by my login name either. I think a caning is too generous.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    23. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. You have a court judgement for 250K.
      2. Try to collect.
      3. Spend more time/money trying to collect it.
      4. Profit (Ha Ha)

    24. Re:I won't be happy till by JBird · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately nslookup won't help for 192.168 addresses as they are private IP addresses and are owned by nobody. In fact they should be completely unreachable from the Internet at large.

    25. Re:I won't be happy till by JerkBoB · · Score: 2, Informative

      And how do you verify that the "FROM:" address is actually in the network being served?

      SMTP+SPF

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    26. Re:I won't be happy till by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      Here's the current list of the 4 proposals that I know about.

      RMX proposal

      SMTP+SPF proposal

      DMP proposal

      DRIP proposal

      All (4) of those perform pretty much identically, with various trade-offs. The 2 key questions that an SMTP server needs answered are:

      - does this domain have reverse-MX information?

      - is the origin IP address authorized to send e-mail for the purported origin domain?

      And possibly a 3rd question for farther down the road (although this is possibly over-kill):

      - has the e-mail been properly signed by the sender of the e-mail

      IIRC, NSLookups fail because it makes the assumption that everyone is in control of their reverse IP info and that people don't service multiple domains from a single IP address.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    27. Re:I won't be happy till by why-is-it · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately nslookup won't help for 192.168 addresses as they are private IP addresses and are owned by nobody.

      So where is the problem? If the reverse records do not map the address space to the same domain that the mail server claims to represent, the MTA should drop the connection. RFC 1918 addresses do not route on the Internet anyways.

      --
      *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    28. Re:I won't be happy till by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      Please explain how a spammer makes money by pissing us off.

      Their spam passing by my filter does not gain them a single cent.

      Almost anyone who can properly set up a spam filter will delete any spam that slips thru on sight.

      Getting by filters does not help anyone. It's the morons who actually buy the junk they sell who keep spammers around.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    29. Re:I won't be happy till by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      What about a listserv that bounces all spam from ONE addy to ALL member addys? Oh, and member addys are all spammers. Would that be punished?

    30. Re:I won't be happy till by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So people who send porn and other explicit things to childern or lure them to websites should not be punished for being the pedophiles they are?

  3. Virus Spam by schnarff · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Too bad it'd never be feasible to penalize all of the people who aren't patching their systems and thus flooding people's inboxes with virus spam. I'm still getting hundreds, sometimes thousands of fscking "Your Details" e-mails every day -- despite the fact that the problem was widely publicized and (supposedly) widely patched. In a way, this is worse than spam, because not only do I often get more virus mails than regular spams, I *know* I'm using a lot more bandwidth on all the SoBig.F crap...but until it's ever feasible to punish folks who won't/can't patch their systems, I guess we're stuck with this crap, too.

    1. Re:Virus Spam by grub · · Score: 3, Informative

      You can filter at the server end based on subject:
      # "Subject" blocks
      LOCAL_CONFIG
      HSubject: $>Subject
      D{Subject}Re: My details
      SSubject
      R${Subject} $#error $: "553 Reject - Likely worm infection."
      Of course if you don't run your own server, you're SOL.
      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:Virus Spam by WellAren'tYouJustThe · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well aren't you just the mail server king of your junior high school.

    3. Re:Virus Spam by grub · · Score: 1, Offtopic


      Yup, and when we play "Compare the Dinkies" in the junior high school washroom I always win. Likely because I'm 37 years old..

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    4. Re:Virus Spam by schnarff · · Score: 2, Informative
      # "Subject" blocks
      LOCAL_CONFIG
      HSubject: $>Subject
      D{Subject}Re: My details
      SSubject
      R${Subject} $#error $: "553 Reject - Likely worm infection."

      You've probably got a good point here -- but it'd be an even better one if you mentioned what mail server this little recipe worked with. Would you be so kind as to post that info, so I and other mail server admins might be able to use it?
    5. Re:Virus Spam by giftzwerg · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I *know* I'm using a lot more bandwidth on all the SoBig.F crap...but until it's ever feasible to punish folks who won't/can't patch their systems, I guess we're stuck with this crap, too.

      The problem is that these new-age "viruses" aren't lethal enough - infected systems spew digital crap for years without themselves being affected.

      What some helpful soul should do is wait a week after a new virus appears, so that everyone has plenty of time to patch against it, and then release a version of that exact virus that wipes out any infected system completely.

      GZ

    6. Re:Virus Spam by grub · · Score: 1


      Yeah I thought of that after submitting.
      That's for Sendmail 8.ish and goes in the sendmail.mc file. Please don't get going on "(Postfix|QMail) r0x0r5, 5endm41l sux0r5". :)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    7. Re:Virus Spam by dipipanone · · Score: 0, Troll

      Likely because I'm 37 years old..

      In that case, playing the game of 'Comparing the Dinkies' at your local junior high school is a somewhat inadvisable choice of recreational pastime.

      You wouldn't run the mail server for your local Catholic diocese, by any chance? ;-)

    8. Re:Virus Spam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      ha, great comeback :)

    9. Re:Virus Spam by PhoenixRising · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's a huge problem with this approach. Satisfying though it might be to punish such people, it's typically not their fault that they are ignorant. How can someone's grandma, who's still trying to figure out this "email" thing, be expected to know that she needs to purchase a firewall and install it, keep up to date with all the Windows patches /and/ all the patches for other applications that she has, and purchase a copy of an anti-virus program and a subscription to their update service? Even sometimes people who /are/ knowledgable legitimately can't get patches out on time; often rolling updates out to a production environment takes a long time, and with new patches coming out almost weekly for Microsoft OS components alone, you're simply never going to catch up.

      You're looking to put the blame in wrong place, I think. Why should we have to put up with products that require patch after patch after patch? The people whose feet we should be holding to the fire are the developers who fail to adequately test their products before sending them out. It's a travesty that we permit them to disclaim all liability in a EULA; try that in any other industry and see how far you get.

    10. Re:Virus Spam by schnarff · · Score: 1

      Well, 5endmA1l *does* sux0r...but you already knew that, apparently. ;-)

    11. Re:Virus Spam by rayvd · · Score: 1

      Check these out. If you're using SpamAssassin or a SpamAssassin powered tool (like SAProxy), these catch most all of the notifications...

    12. Re:Virus Spam by evanbd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is this different from regular maintenence on a car? I'm required to keep my car up to date on polution standards; if I don't keep my car well maintained and the breaks fail and cause an accident, I'm liable for the damages (though insurance exists for that), etc, etc. How is expecting a random pc user to keep up to date on patches any different than expecting a random driver to keep up to date on state inspections? And before you complain about expecting too much of people, if they were legally required to keep up to date within a month, there would be a market for computer techs to keep them up to date. And before you complain that paying people to do that is too expensive, note that unsafe cars are far, far cheaper, but you aren't allowed to sell them because they have been deemed bad for society. How is this different?

      I should note, however, that I generally agree with you that blaming developers is probably a better idea. But if you do that, I think you need a reasonable system to allow for occasional mistakes that are fixed in a timely manner, and also a way to allow distribution of developmental projects.

  4. american jurisdiction by CoffeeCrusader · · Score: 1

    Well now, this is certainly a laudable decision, that the court made, but isn't the judge overdoing it a bit by making the spammer pay 250,000?

    1. Re:american jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Screw that. If the RIAA can charge people $150,000 per song, scumbag spammers should have to pay us $250,000 per e-mail!

    2. Re:american jurisdiction by CoffeeCrusader · · Score: 1

      you got a point there. Additionally I forgot to read that that guy got 58000 mails. that certainly justifies the 250 000

    3. Re:american jurisdiction by introverted · · Score: 3, Funny
      isn't the judge overdoing it a bit by making the spammer pay 250,000?

      According to the article, Washington State law would have allowed the guy who filed the suit to receive 29 million dollars. He only asked for a quarter million. (Presumably because it was "enough.")

    4. Re:american jurisdiction by gregfortune · · Score: 1

      58,000 copies? If you read the article, each message is worth $500 a pop. You do the math... Mr. Featherston could have asked for a whole lot more.

    5. Re:american jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      forgot to read?

      Next time, forget to comment!

    6. Re:american jurisdiction by canfirman · · Score: 1
      ...but isn't the judge overdoing it a bit by making the spammer pay 250,000?

      I think the spammer got off easy! It costs a lot more in people's time to delete unwanted spam from your e-mail (not to mention wasted bandwith, server space, time trying to filter these messages), and all for what? I keep getting "enlarge your penis" e-mails, no matter how many filters I can put on my private e-mail system. Let's face it, spammers can change the "from" in your e-mail address to a phrase or even a random sampling of letters.

      So, no, I don't think $250,000 is too much.

      --
      It is not our abilities that show what we truly are... it is our choices.
    7. Re:american jurisdiction by joepeg · · Score: 1
      The judgment relies upon Washington state's tough anti-spam law, which says each spam can cost the sender $500. Although Judge Bruce Hilyer was convinced Featherston received 58,000 illegal e-mails, the plaintiff only asked for $250,000, rather than the $29 million to which he could have been entitled.

      The defendants are no strangers to legal troubles sparked by their spamming. In March of last year, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed suit against the two, accusing them of...promot[ing] a "get rich quick" chain mail scheme via spam and Web sites, promising participants they'd receive $10,000 in "gifts" within a "short period."


      The defendant should have taken the $29 million. These spammers have apparently been brought to court before for breaking the law, with no apparent change in their behaviour. Depending how well their scheme worked, $250,000 may not put them in their place, as it could be pocket change. I would have taken the full amount due by law proving to illegal spammers that it will not be tolerated.

      --

      ZEN is a prime number in base-36

    8. Re:american jurisdiction by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Not according to the law as written. In fact, both the judge and the plantiff were letting the spammer off easy.
      As the article stated, the law allows for a penalty of $500 per email. This guy had received 58,000 emails, so some quick math:
      $500 * 58,000 = $29,000,000
      Compare that to the $250,000 he got nailed for, at the moment (I expect an appeal), and you can see that he got off real light. Much too light, IMHO, he should have been forced to pay the entire 29 million, that'd be a hell of a deterent to him restarting his spam business.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
  5. Now that's sleazy! by El · · Score: 4, Funny
    "We are not satisfied that petitioner presently possesses the character and general fitness requisite for an attorney and counselor-at-law," wrote the state's Supreme Court panel [regarding Attorney Mark Felstein]

    When a group of lawyers thinks you are too sleazy to join them, then that's really saying something!

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    1. Re:Now that's sleazy! by Trigun · · Score: 1

      fitness requisite for an attorney and counselor-at-law

      That's why there's so many IANAL posts on Slashdot.
      And to think we can't even compete against Perry Mason.

  6. Wow by elid · · Score: 5, Funny

    58,000 separate offers to make $10,000 each = a lot more $$$$ than the $250,000 he got He obviously picked the wrong option in suing

    1. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I responded to all the spams sent to me, and now my penis is 472 feet long! Plus, I have hundreds of new Nigerian friends!

    2. Re:Wow by cowsgomoo666 · · Score: 1

      read the article he only wanted the $250,000

  7. Musubi by drpentode · · Score: 5, Informative

    Spam and rice is what my Hawaiian college buddies called it. You could smell it all the way down the drom hall. And it tastes really good. Really. ;) Kind of reminds me of sushi, only saltier.

    1. Re:Musubi by Knara · · Score: 1

      Spam (the food not the digital slang) is apparently really popular in Hawaii. I have no idea why.

    2. Re:Musubi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason is because, historically, it's difficult to get fresh meat in Hawaii. Therefore, canned meat becomes very popular. Or so says my Hawaiian wife.

      Steve

    3. Re:Musubi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? It's because we like pork :) It is easy as pie to get fresh meat. Now fresh beef, that's another story.

    4. Re:Musubi by drpentode · · Score: 1

      Also popular in my dorm ... spam quesadillas.

      Grill some spam, melt some cheese, wrap in a flower tortilla.

      I invented these when the Hawaiian guys wouldn't share their rice. :(

    5. Re:Musubi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Japan there are other musubi (o-musubi, more politely, sometimes o-nigiri), that are much better than Spam musubi! For an accessible page, see here, though there are certainly more delicately flavored ones.

    6. Re:Musubi by Dolly_Llama · · Score: 1
      The reason is because, historically, it's difficult to get fresh meat in Hawaii. Therefore, canned meat becomes very popular. Or so says my Hawaiian wife.

      This may have been true back in the day, say in WWII, but there's plenty of beef in Hawaii. In fact Parker Ranch on the big island is one of the largest ranches in the United States. 35,000 head of cattle on 175,000 acres.

      --

      Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. -- Carl Sagan

    7. Re:Musubi by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Actually, fried spam smells like nothing more than burnt hair and rancid grease.

      Which is what spam is, incidentally...

  8. Similar to RIAA tactics by indros13 · · Score: 1
    Anti-spam litigants seem pretty similar to the RIAA in their tactics of making it hurt--financially--for illegal activity. I will be interested to see if each side continues to be successful and if it ultimately causes the behavior changes (in spam and music file-sharing) that they desire.

    Unfortunately, I think that the RIAA's financial clout is likely to give it a greater chance of success than individual anti-spam activists.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    1. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by McDutchie · · Score: 1
      Anti-spam litigants seem pretty similar to the RIAA in their tactics of making it hurt--financially--for illegal activity.
      WTF are you talking about? It was the spammers (ie: Mark Felchstain and the alleged members of his "organization") who sued.
    2. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Little guy suing big guy is good. Big guy using army of full time lawyers to threaten hundreds of little guys with million dollar lawsuits and then settling for thousands because the little guy can't afford to fight is bad.

      I am not sure how you can even remotely draw the comparison.

    3. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      Anti-spam litigants seem pretty similar to the RIAA in their tactics of making it hurt--financially--for illegal activity.

      In what way are the tactics similar? You don't say, and I certainly don't see any similarities. Perhaps you could elaborate?

      In this judgement, an individual plaintiff convinced a judge that massive bombardments of get-rich-quick scam emails was prohibited by a specific anti-trespass law and was awarded far less than the statutory damages for it.

      In the RIAA lawsuits, a massive corporation is tracking down petty criminals (like a 12 year old girl who thought she was legally downloading music) and threatening them with massive lawsuits, generally settling out of court. Have there actually been judgements against any of those attacked by the RIAA, or have they all been out-of-court settlements by people afraid to go toe-to-toe with an entity with bottomless legal funds?

    4. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by pirhana · · Score: 1

      What the hello are you talking ? RIAA is suing victims which inclue even 12 year old girl.They even target people who are sharing files for THEM and not for any business purpose. Anti spammers are suing those who are running huge business by flagrantly abusing internet email which was otherwise an excellent tool for communication.

    5. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? It was the spammers (ie: Mark Felchstain and the alleged members of his "organization") who sued.

      There were two cases mentioned. You apparently only read about the second one.

    6. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by pyrrhonist · · Score: 3, Funny
      It was the spammers (ie: Mark Felchstain and the alleged members of his "organization") who sued.

      LOL! That made me almost spew coffee all over my laptop, and I'm not even drinking coffee.

      --
      Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
    7. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      Heh. Too bad I can't take credit, I stole that shamelessly from nanae.

  9. Correction... by evilninja · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...good guys: 2, Spammers 1,943,238,345,753,261 (today alone)

    1. Re:Correction... by 514x0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i wouldn't mod this as funny....more like depressing.

      --

      !(^((ri)|(mp))aa$)
  10. Blacklists. by Tantrum420 · · Score: 0, Troll

    While I have no love for spammers or their tactics, I am happy at least that Joe Jared and his Osirusoft list is done for. Other blacklists owners were responsive and provided a genuine service. Joe is just a vindictive ass.

    1. Re:Blacklists. by grub · · Score: 2, Informative


      Bah to that.

      I used the Osirusoft lists for a good while. They helped me reject more spam than you can shake a stick at. I don't care about the guy's personality that runs the show (Joe), I just like his product. Just as I like OpenBSD. ;)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:Blacklists. by lx805 · · Score: 1

      While I have no love for spammers or their tactics, I am happy at least that Joe Jared and his Osirusoft list is done for.

      So, what you're saying is that you support the use of DDoS attacks to silence people who are critical of unethical (and in some states illegal) activities? Because that's exactly what happened to Joe and Osirusoft.

      Agree or disagree with SPEWS, it's pretty damn sad that nobody here on /. (besides me) has commented on this. I was always under the impression that freedom of speech was important to people here...

    3. Re:Blacklists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      errr, someone needs to tag this a troll. The Osirusoft RBL has been dead for a while now. It blocks 0.0.0.0 as spam, hell yeah I bet it does block a good bit of spam .. it tags every IP address as spam.

    4. Re:Blacklists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it's dead; I found out when all my mail started bouncing. I should have clarified and meant *used* to use.

    5. Re:Blacklists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree or disagree with SPEWS, it's pretty damn sad that nobody here on /. (besides me) has commented on this. I was always under the impression that freedom of speech was important to people here...
      Where the fuck do you get "freedom" of speech concept here? UCE or more commonly known as SPAM is NOT considered "free speech" I have to take the time(costs $)/storage space(also costs $) and I have no choice beforehand to listen/read something that I didn't want to.
      As others have pointed out your right to free speech ended at my saying that I didn't want to listen but with spam I don't have that chance you have already burdened me with the storage/disposal costs that NO court in the USA would allow you to "ask" for a nickel to listen to your drivel.

    6. Re:Blacklists. by lx805 · · Score: 1

      Point of advise: read the post you're replying to *BEFORE* you start typing.

      You've essentially made the same point as I have in an earlier post. My "freedom of speech" statement referred to Joe Jared's freedom to host a secondary SPEWS DNS server without getting the crap packeted out of him.

    7. Re:Blacklists. by Tantrum420 · · Score: 1

      Bah to that.

      I used the Osirusoft lists for a good while. They helped me reject more spam than you can shake a stick at. I don't care about the guy's personality that runs the show (Joe), I just like his product. Just as I like OpenBSD. ;)

      --------

      So, what you're saying is that you support the use of DDoS attacks to silence people who are critical of unethical (and in some states illegal) activities? Because that's exactly what happened to Joe and Osirusoft.

      Agree or disagree with SPEWS, it's pretty damn sad that nobody here on /. (besides me) has commented on this. I was always under the impression that freedom of speech was important to people here...


      ----------

      Bah Indeed,

      While I didn't intend to troll, I don't care that I'm labeled as such. I don't mind the idea of blacklists when they are kept current and have a responsible maintainer. I feel that it is one of the best and only few effective ways to stop Spam at its source. When you are responsible for effectively censoring people you need to act in a responsible way. What I don't like is not so much a personality issue as the fact that he willingly would just let people hang on his list just to make them suffer. If you were added to his list (or any list) there are devices for getting yourself removed from the list. You have to show that you fixed your problem and are no longer open relaying (or whatever). When his devices were no longer available due to the DoS's, there was no way to get removed from the list. Even before he was DoS'd, his response was not very good but it was at least functional. If his systems were not allowing retry submissions, he should have found an alternate way to receive submissions or he should have pulled the list. Obviously those that used it were still getting updates to add IP's but he wasn't taking any removals. Those that tried to contact him directly from a different machine automatically got that IP added to his list as well. When he finally closed the list, rather than notify people, he just blocked the world. That was a DoS in and of itself. As far as supporting DoS attacks to silence people who are critical of unethical practices, I do not. I do not support DoS attacks to silence anyone, even anyone who uses a blacklist to silence anyone he sees fit. All I know is that it's got to be difficult to be critical of unethical practices when you are employing them yourself. Two wrongs do not make a right and karma's a bitch!

      T

  11. the wondrous thing that is the Internet, and spam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How can we keep the internet a place of free exchange of ideas and NOT have spam? The problem with spam is, is the creators show an incredible lack of originality and creativity. I'd tolerate spam better if it had something truly interesting to say, or presented something that is intrinsically dull or boring in a new or interesting way. Why don't spammers use irony? Ironic spam would be a welcome addition to my daily email.

    We want unlimited sharing of music files, we want free software like linux and freebsd, we want the internet to remain the wide open wondrous interface that it is...I don't see how we can have all these things and NOT have spam.

  12. Filters... by JAgostoni · · Score: 1

    So far my Bayesian filter has been very effective in de-spamming me. Has anyone tried training one to filter out legitimate email and keep the SPAM? I suppose that's technically what it's doing anyway.

    1. Re:Filters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      I wish slashdot had such filters. Having to hear about someone's Bayesian filter on each and every spam story is starting to drive me nuts. It's geting as bad as beowolf, etc.

    2. Re:Filters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Step 1) Welcome our spam sending overlords
      Step 2) ???
      Step 3) Beowulf of grits in your pants

    3. Re:Filters... by JAgostoni · · Score: 1

      I wish they had the filters too. The comments complaining about the Bayesian, Beowolf, whatever comments actually far outnumber that of the original post. I'd mod myself -1 for the Bayesian comment, but you should get -more for posting AC...

    4. Re:Filters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, How about a beowulf cluster of bayesian filters?

    5. Re:Filters... by JAgostoni · · Score: 1

      Sweeeet!

  13. So.. by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

    If you get the capital punishment you will be happy?

    You must really hate that spam.

    --
    How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    1. Re:So.. by Frymaster · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You must really hate that spam.

      or really hate freedom.

      nobody likes spam, sure, but this whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication. i find it amazing that the slashdot crowd who are usually such virulent defenders of an unfettered internet are more than willing to give the government more control when it comes to penis-pill ads!

      if you don't like spam, do something about it. filter, build a honeypot relay, whatever. but don't go whining to the feds demanding they regulate a free and open communications channel.

    2. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      find it amazing that the slashdot crowd who are usually such virulent defenders of an unfettered internet are more than

      We only support freedom if it doesn't bother us.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    3. Re:So.. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication

      Actually, from reading the original comment, it sounds like he is in favor of allowing the recipients of the spam to discourage spamming, in particularly painful ways...

    4. Re:So.. by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      Actually, what I meant was that, the way he phrased it, it sounded like he would only be happy if he got the capital punishment himself.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    5. Re:So.. by Dimensio · · Score: 4, Insightful

      or really hate freedom.

      Good point. I mean, if I want to spray-paint advertisements on the side of your house, and then charge you for the materials used, that's my right! Free speech and freedom and all that, right?

    6. Re:So.. by Eggplant62 · · Score: 4, Informative
      You must really hate that spam. or really hate freedom. nobody likes spam, sure, but this whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication. i find it amazing that the slashdot crowd who are usually such virulent defenders of an unfettered internet are more than willing to give the government more control when it comes to penis-pill ads!
      We love freedom, freedom from assholes who think that they own our inboxes. A marketer's right to push his information into my living room ends at my doorstep, whether it be physical or electronic. This isn't about freedom of speech in this case at all, as it's been determined before that commercial entities have a very limited right to freedom of speech.

      See U.S. Supreme Court
      ROWAN v. U. S. POST OFFICE DEPT., 397 U.S. 728

      Chief Justice BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court:

      "Nothing in the Constitution compels us to listen to or view any unwanted communication, whatever its merit.... The ancient concept that 'a man's home is his castle' into which 'not even the king may enter' has lost none of its vitality.... We therefore categorically reject the argument that a vendor has a right under the Constitution or otherwise to send unwanted material into the home of another. If this prohibition operates to impede the flow of even valid ideas, the answer is that no one has a right to press even 'good' ideas on an unwilling recipient. That we are often 'captives' outside the sanctuary of the home and subject to objectionable speech and other sound does not mean we must be captives everywhere.... The asserted right of a mailer, we repeat, stops at the outer boundary of every person's domain."

      You can read the entire Supreme Court decision on the FindLaw web page (http://www.findlaw.com/). The specific URL is http://www.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=US &vol=397&invol=728.

      Then of course, there's the CyberPromo/AOL lawsuit, in which the judge held that CP had no First Amendment right to send UCE to AOL's customers. The transcript for that case can be found at:

      http://www.leepfrog.com/E-Law/Cases/Cyber_Promo_v_ AOL.html

      Note: Most of this was lifted verbatim from Message-ID: 343A9BBF.4340@stanford.edu

    7. Re:So.. by DoctorPepper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      but don't go whining to the feds demanding they regulate a free and open communications channel.

      Actually, it's not a free communications channel. You, me, and everyone else that connects to the internet has to pay for that connection.

      Unlike television and radio, where advertisements are a necessary requirement in order to enjoy free reception (if you have cable, it's your own fault! TV and radio are broadcast free to you) of the programs, spam actually unnecessarily consumes bandwidth and time, especially for those on dial-up and/or metered accounts, and enriches no body but the spammer.

      Spam is like all that junk mail you get in your snail mail box every day, except the spammer doesn't even have to pay bulk postage rates.

      Whereas TV and radio ads are a kind of symbiosis, where you agree to watch the ads (whether you really do or not), and you get the programming for free, spam is like a parasite. It rides along on the internet, not paying for the bandwidth it steals from people, and clogging their in-box with worthless junk.

      --

      No matter where you go... there you are.
    8. Re:So.. by Oliver+Wendell+Jones · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We only support freedom if it doesn't bother us.

      We only support freedom/rights as long as they don't overlap our own freedom/rights.

      In other words,

      Your right to walk down the street swinging your arms around like a windmill ends where the tip of my nose begins.

      Your right to listen to your choice of music at your choice of volumes ends at the point where I can hear it.

      Your right to speak (including sending spam) ends at the point where I decide I don't want to hear it any more.

      In my opinion spam is worse than telemarketing phone calls and if there can be federal regulations that keep somewhat legit telemarketers from interrupting my dinner, there is no reason there can't be similar legislation that stops spam from filling my inbox.

      It's Wednesday afternoon and my 'Probable Junk Mail' folder already has 228 messages in it since quitting time last Friday. Someone sold part of our corporate e-mail list to a spammer and I'm one of the lucky few to be in that group. I can't even begin to imagine how much spinning drive space is currently occupied by spam messages in my employer's computer systems (dozens of GB I'm sure) let alone the entire world...

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
    9. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Funny

      Your right to speak (including sending spam) ends at the point where I decide I don't want to hear it any more.

      I then, to prove a point, revoke your right to speak as I don't want to hear it anymore.

      Thank you, and have a nice lifetime of quiet solitude. I appreciate it.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    10. Re:So.. by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between legitmate, possibly anonymous speech and blatantly fraudulent speech. That's why it's illegal to yell "fire" in a crowded theatre. ALL our freedoms are regulated. They need to be to prevent abuse (see the "fire" example). By complaining about common sense regulation of these freedoms, you just marginalize yourself. Then, no one cares what you think when something bad actually is happening.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    11. Re:So.. by Oliver+Wendell+Jones · · Score: 2, Funny

      But... but...

      Damn...

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
    12. Re:So.. by pizzaman100 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I then, to prove a point, revoke your right to speak as I don't want to hear it anymore.

      You're misinterpreting his point. There is a difference between public and private free speech. Slashdot is a public forum, so we can say what we like. But we can't break inside your house and make you be a captive audience.

    13. Re:So.. by shamino0 · · Score: 1
      nobody likes spam, sure, but this whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication.

      No. It's about making thieves pay for what they steal.

      When a junk-mailer sends you an ad in the mail, he pays the postage. When a telemarketer calls you (as much as you may hate it) he pays for the call.

      When a spammer sends you junk mail, he doesn't pay for it. He is routing the mail through unwilling third-parties (which has been ruled as criminal trespass in several court cases). He is making your ISP pay the cost to download and store that mail, and is making you pay (in time) to download the message in order to delete it.

      This is the reason junk faxes are illegal. The sender doesn't pay for the paper and toner that his ad is consuming.

      If the spammers were paying the costs of the spam, then you'd have a point. But they aren't.

      The Constitution grants you the right to speak. It doesn't grant you the right to steal other people's property in order to be heard.

    14. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      You are pretty funny for a guy with no rights :)

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    15. Re:So.. by shamino0 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I then, to prove a point, revoke your right to speak as I don't want to hear it anymore.

      Go right ahead. Add him to the "Foes" page of your SlashDot account and configure it to mod all his articles down to -1. Voila, you don't have to hear it anymore.

      This forum is a perfect agument against you - anybody can speak, and you can choose to block anybody you don't want to listen to.

    16. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      You're misinterpreting his point. There is a difference between public and private free speech. Slashdot is a public forum, so we can say what we like. But we can't break inside your house and make you be a captive audience.

      An email address is a public thing, so people can say what they want?

      Don't get me wrong, I think SPAM is bullshit. I don't think there should be criminal laws against it though. I'd be happy being able to send a nice bill for my time, but I'm really not that motivated.

      If you don't want people emailing you, setup a whitelist. I filter my spam out, and I get a lot of it. It's no big deal. Even at the corp. offices we get a holy crapload of spam and it gets filtered very reliably.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    17. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Go right ahead. Add him to the "Foes" page of your SlashDot account and configure it to mod all his articles down to -1. Voila, you don't have to hear it anymore.

      You missed the point, but he got it.

      Foe'ing him is the same as filtering spam. Moderating and removing his ability to speak to me is also the same. If I don't want certain people to send me certain types of information it's my responsibility to limit my freedom. It's not my responsibility to limit others freedom.

      This was my whole point, in a very round about way.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    18. Re:So.. by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1
      nobody likes spam, sure, but this whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication. i find it amazing that the slashdot crowd who are usually such virulent defenders of an unfettered internet are more than willing to give the government more control when it comes to penis-pill ads!

      You make an interesting point, but I'm afraid I must disagree with you. The Slashdot crowd tend to advocate broad rights to communicate freely, but with such rights come responsiblity. The spammers completely shirk the responsiblity to use this freedom wisely, and must be dealt with appropriately, or the freedom Slashdotters cherish will be diminished for all.

      To clarify what I am trying to say, suppose a motorist thinks the government should raise the speed limit along the highway. This would be less government fettering of his driving. But, he might also want stiffer penalties for drunk drivers, because without getting them off the road, drunks at the higher speed would get people killed.

      Or, as another example, I am a firearms enthusiast, yet would argue for stiffer penalties for gun-related violent crimes than most people who are not gun-rights advocates. Why? Because dealing harshly with such criminals is the only way to avoid an across-the-board solution that would cost even non-criminals like myself a right that I cherish.

      In short, the spammers are the bad apples that threaten to ruin unfettered Internet communication for everyone. I would much rather see a strong, narrowly-focused solution directed at those people who are blatantly abusing their communication freedom than to have everyone suffer from either spam or some blanket solution that costs everyone their freedom.

    19. Re:So.. by Epistax · · Score: 1

      I am against this argument in every way shape and form. I see absolutely no connection between freedom of speech and press, with that of advertising. And even aside from that it's not advertising being targeted, it's misuse of a medium. If you want to pull a freedom of speech defense, then look at it this way: Everyone running for every position anywhere in the (your country here) sends you multiple messages telling you to vote for them and why, even if they aren't even in the same voting area. When these people ask my mom if she wants her penis enlarged, they immediately show they do not have a targeted audience for a given product, but are merely making electronic graffiti.

      But back to what I said originally-- advertising is not speech. There are no people preaching freedom of speech in Maine where billboards along the interstate are illegal. What do you see? McDonalds next rest stop. That's not a billboard-- I don't know if I'd even call it an advertisement, more of a public notice.

      What if someone got a ham radio system and broadcasted over every public frequency an ad, say every 5 minutes? What if they could write them all over the sky such as the batman light? Is capability excusability?

    20. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      A marketer's right to push his information into my living room ends at my doorstep, whether it be physical or electronic.

      This is true. However, this is either inapplicable to email or places email outside of your door. Certainly the analogy is lacking; email doesn't work like a house.

      This isn't about freedom of speech in this case at all, as it's been determined before that commercial entities have a very limited right to freedom of speech.

      That's flatly untrue. Commercial speech has been acquiring more and more parity with regards to first amendment protections for decades. At this point the largest limit specifically to commercial speech are compelled disclosures (e.g. nutritional information on food). Other limits are of general application, such as that against fraud.

      Nothing in the Constitution compels us to listen to or view any unwanted communication

      That's true. But that doesn't mean a hell of a lot. Spammers cannot force you to read spam. That is not the same as saying that spammers cannot SEND spam.

      As the Rowan court says In this case the mailer's right to communicate is circumscribed only by an affirmative act of the addressee giving notice that he wishes no further mailings from that mailer.

      In sum: if you don't want spam, it's up to you to hold yourself out as not wanting spam so that spammers know not to send you spam.

      If you don't do that, all else being equal, you're out of luck.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    21. Re:So.. by Senior+Frac · · Score: 1

      Foe'ing him is the same as filtering spam.

      Not even close. I choose to come to slashdot, where his opinion is stored, and get it (even if I filter it on server-side). This is not quite the same as him trying to push it onto my system without my permission. It's a subtle point lost on those who don't understand the procotols HTTP vs. SMTP.

      In this case, the owner of the bandwidth and server storage is slashdot. And, they've made it abundantly clear they want most peoples opinions on the topics.

      You don't get free storage on my machine or free bandwith without my permission.

    22. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      I really hate the fire example.

      Aside from the fact that the case it dates back to is no longer good law, people always, always fuck it up. Go read Brandenburg.

      For example, you fucked it up. It's perfectly legal, in fact it is ADMIRABLE, to yell 'fire' in a crowded theater. If there's a fire.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    23. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      advertising is not speech

      Yes it is. It's speech intended to get you to buy something, generally. It's hardly distinguishable between purely political speech which is often intended to get you to vote for someone.

      Feel free to make your assertion, but you'd back it up a lot more by providing some sort of legal basis for it, since that's what's important here, basically. But you won't find one since no one knowledgable about the subject really agrees with you.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    24. Re:So.. by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "An email address is a public thing, so people can say what they want?"

      So is your address and telephone number. And yet there are laws limiting telemarketing.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    25. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Not even close.

      Oh really?

      I choose to come to slashdot, where his opinion is stored, and get it (even if I filter it on server-side).

      You choose to get an email address, or an email server, and have that email address available to people who might send you unsolicited email. Much like you will receive unsolicited comments here.

      This is not quite the same as him trying to push it onto my system without my permission.

      Apparently it is you who doesn't understand SMTP. By running an SMTP server, you are granting permission to anybody to send an email to an address. There is no ToS for SMTP, and unless you setup a white list, it is a publicly accessible system for delivery of email.

      If you setup a webserver, do you bitch that people will visit?

      You don't get free storage on my machine or free bandwith without my permission.

      You give me permission by running an SMTP server that is accessible over the internet. The SMTP server you run is doing exactly what it was designed to do. The people sending you spam are sending you exactly what the SMTP server is expecting it to get. The email you check is email that was delivered according to the guidelines on your email server.

      So quit with the over-dramatic bullshit and do server-side filtering if you don't want spam.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    26. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      So is your address and telephone number. And yet there are laws limiting telemarketing.

      No laws via your address, as long as it is legitimate mail (not a fraud offer.) Telemarketing is different though, because it interupts your daily life. Like dinner. If email had to make an annoying ringing sound and your only option were to miss all your emails or deal with your computer ringing all through dinner, there would be laws against it.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    27. Re:So.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely disagree.

      Your rights end where they infringe on the rights of others.

      If you send porn to children that is illegal, and it doesn't matter if you don't know if they are minors or not.

      On a side note, harassment and sexual harassment are also illegal, and it doesn't matter if you harass someone in person or through email.

    28. Re:So.. by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1
      As the Rowan court says In this case the mailer's right to communicate is circumscribed only by an affirmative act of the addressee giving notice that he wishes no further mailings from that mailer.

      In sum: if you don't want spam, it's up to you to hold yourself out as not wanting spam so that spammers know not to send you spam.

      If you don't do that, all else being equal, you're out of luck.


      I don't think so. Here, check this out:

      smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name NO UCE

      Directly from my /etc/postfix/main.cf file. Shows up anytime anything connects to my mail server.

      What's difficult to understand about that, pray tell? It's told to the assholes each time they connect to my mail server, right in the SMTP transaction. It should appear in their logs. It should be taken as a sign that I don't wish their crap on my server.

      Right along with the 39 rejects that I found in my logs in the 24 hours from 0000 UTC -0400 9 Sept 2003 to 0000 UTC -0400 10 Sept 2003, all of them tagged with the SMTP 554 repsonse, right along with a message explaining why their spam bounced. Yet it still arrives. Why? Have I not told them I don't want their email enough times already?

      How many times must I opt out of their mailing lists? How many hours a day must I spend to click on the remove links or emailing them to get off their lists.

      I'd rather see it become de rigeur for them to *NOT CONTACT ME WITHOUT MY PRIOR PERMISSION*, especially if *I'M FOOTING THE BILL*!! Italy gets it. The EU gets it. Both have implemented opt-in legislation. What's so difficult for spammers to respect my right to JUST SAY NO??
    29. Re:So.. by 1ucius · · Score: 1

      As a practical matter, how much bandwidth does spam really take? If I do the math right, spam costs 0.5 MB/day worth of bandwidth (I seem to get 250-300 spam messages before hotmail complains about exceeding my 2 MB storage, and get about 50 spams/day). 0.5 Mb is 1 minute of surfing or 20% of a shared mp3. Email traffic presumably has a low priority to boot. Am I missing missing something?

    30. Re:So.. by Zach978 · · Score: 1
      Spam is like all that junk mail you get in your snail mail box every day, except the spammer doesn't even have to pay bulk postage rates.

      Spamming isn't free, yes cheaper but not free. Servers/bandwidth, etc. I'm just glad it doesn't kill trees like traditional spam.
      --

      "I told you a million times not to exaggerate!"
    31. Re:So.. by Epistax · · Score: 1

      I am by no means a good arguer, so don't expect anything else from me on it. Don't expect anything else on it (for at least a long while) from any talking heads as they all committed themselves to the battle in ways which do not make logical sense.

      Just to restate: An advertisement is a self promoting dialog usually addressed at some particular audience. If it is to be deemed protected speech, then there must be some category that it would fit under, as most would agree not all forms of speech are protected (such as grafitti, which is a passage of words that is thoroughly against the law), speech creating a public disturbance, or causing a panic (yelling 'fire' in a movie theater is against the law, for instance), or just being insulting to people.
      Many advertisements are made to do several of these things. Drug companies are very well known for causing panics, as were companies hoping to scoop profits after September 11th. Advertisements are insulting in that they target audiences with obvious disinterest in the product. Advertisements are a public disturbance-- this is an opinion of the public, and afterall that's what matters.
      No, I think the only reason for the spam people to argue is how would things work without it, and that's simply not a valid argument.

    32. Re:So.. by TPFH · · Score: 1

      or really hate freedom.

      This reminds me of A patriot's guide to debating the war on terror for some reason.

      I'll tell you what. I won't be happy until they execute spammers by removing all of their organs one at a time live on television. On Fox! (Right after The Simpsons.) I won't be happy even when I eat chocolate or even if John Zorn were to put the entire Tzadik cataloge on emusic.com.

      However, there is a difference between having the feds regulate communications, and streamlining the legal system for civil action against commercial entities who abuse the system (and commit fraud) to such an extent that it renders the communication medium useless.

      Actually, the fraud alone should be enough. If spammers were just required (and nailed to the wall if they didn't) not to forge their headers so that we could effectively filter then I would be happy.

      (But lots of experimental music would help too.)

      --
      This signature used to contain a cute kitty virus with ansii art. Please set the slashdot editors on fire. Thank you
    33. Re:So.. by Malcontent · · Score: 2, Informative

      There are limitation as to what somebody can send you in the mail. Also mail fraud is a federal offence and there are strict laws dictating what can be mailed and how. What do you think would happen so somebody who mailed unsolicited pornography?

      Also 99% of all spam is fraudulant in nature. Those pills will not make your dick bigger and there is no money secreted away in nigeria.

      If the govt put the same restrictions on spam that they do n mail and telemarketing I would be very happy.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    34. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well, it may not be sufficiently clear notice. A real-world no solicitors sign is great for keeping out door-to-door salesmen, but it has no effect unless the salesmen are actually aware of it, or unless the sign is sufficiently prominent so that they should have been aware of it. Your thing is probably the best that can be done under the circumstances, but I honestly don't know whether or not it's good enough.

      However, let's assume for the sake of argument that it is. In that case I have absolutely _no_ problem with laws prohibiting their behavior, or your seeking recourse against them.

      But I think that that the burden does lie on the recipient to indicate that he doesn't want further communications. Spam cannot simply be banned en masse. Since we don't like fraud, fraudulent spam can be. Since we don't like harassment, harassing spam can be. And since we don't like people who violate 'no further communication' notices (where relevant -- there's far less you can do about being solicited if you're out in public, since solicitors have a right to be there and to speak there), that sort of spam can be.

      That's certainly a lot of spam, but it is merely a subset of all spam.

      If you get truthful, non-harassing spam in the absence of your telling spammers to leave you alone -- that can't be banned, even if it's bothersome.

      Of course, there is an issue of it being potentially harmful to free speech to be able to arbitrarily ban people from communicating with you on pain of penalties. It's not out of the realm of possibility that it's a good idea for communication to be, on the whole, unrestricted from government intervention. So it probably is a good idea to remain cautious, and err on the side of spam lest we do something bad. Spam at least we know we can live with and still privately filter.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    35. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Ah, okay, I see your mistake.

      You're confusing speech with conduct associated with speech or the effect of speech.

      The only form of speech per se that is unprotected AFAIK is obscenity. Everything else that suffers a limit is by virtue of some aspect of the overall situation that is not in fact speech, just speech-related.

      Grafitti isn't barred on the basis of the _content_. It's legal to rent a billboard and put up your grafitti there. We're regulating the damage done to other people's property when we regulate grafitti. Doing it in a different manner wouldn't be objectionable.

      Causing a public disturbance is illegal likewise because you're causing a public disturbance. The words themselves aren't at issue. (and incidentally the fire example is awful, and no longer good law, and you got it wrong) Plus it's not that easy to be successfully charged under this if all you did was speak. Incitement is a tough charge.

      And being insulting to people is NOT illegal, all else being equal. That was settled quite some time ago in the Cohen case, wherein a guy wore a jacket that read "Fuck the draft" on it and when prosecuted for violating obscenity statutes won and had the statutes overturned since the government interest in keeping people from being insulted is puny compared to the first amendment.

      (Fighting words would fall under the incitement thing though, since again, you're trying to pick a fight -- the words aren't important, it's the context and the intended and likely results)

      Advertisements as a rule don't rise anywhere near to the level of being non protected speech. There is a lesser amount of protection, but it's not much lesser, and the gap has been closing for a long time now. Basically ads can't be fraudulent (which most spam is, which means we don't need an anti-spam law as long as we can operate under an anti-fraud theory -- anti-spam laws would in fact only be good for _truthful_ spam, which really shouldn't be banned), and in some cases must include disclosures of additional information. (e.g. with food, drugs, etc) There's little else that springs to mind.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    36. Re:So.. by lelnet · · Score: 1

      Well, some (deluded, IMHO) people think government solves problems, despite all the evidence of history that the most a government has ever done with a problem is to manage it.

      On the other hand, most of the anti-spam solutions I've seen bandied about are ones that do not require any government action.

      (I have numerous disputes with the proposed requirement for every mail server to get an SSL certificate, for example, especially if SSL certificates remain at their present market price, but one thing that plan doesn't do is require or indeed utilize any action by government one way or the other.)

    37. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      There are limitation as to what somebody can send you in the mail.

      Because you can cause physical harm, or mail fraud (which is illegal, through the USPS) and such. If email just had to be delivered by a person in a blue suit, there would be limitations on that, too. But then again, email wouldn't be free then, either.

      Also 99% of all spam is fraudulant in nature. Those pills will not make your dick bigger and there is no money secreted away in nigeria.

      The nigeria scam would be considered mail fraud if someone mailed that to you. The dick enlargment wouldn't, as it's an advertisement for a non-FDA approved herbal remedy. You can probably buy the same herb at your local drug store.

      If the govt put the same restrictions on spam that they do n mail and telemarketing I would be very happy.

      You are comparing apples and oranges.

      It breaks down like this: If you run a mail server, aggressively filter out spam. If you don't, setup aggressive spam filters.

      I would be happy if I could pursue civil action, but making it a criminal offense is wrong. Civil action exists, so it's perfectly fine.

      The system works, you lazy SOBs just need to start suing more spammers.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    38. Re:So.. by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      You must really hate that spam.
      or really hate freedom.

      Yeah. I hate the idea of having the freedom to use my email account, which I pay for, for purposes that I choose.

      Sorry, but I don't give a shit about the "freedom" of con men and porno-pushers who want to shove their crap into my mailbox 100+ times a day.

      Your idea of freedom sucks, because it means that I have no rights.

    39. Re:So.. by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      I've noticed your sig several times, saying "SPEWS dead? Think again!" with a link to spews.org. But it doesn't come up... So what's the deal?

    40. Re:So.. by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      Commercial speech has been acquiring more and more parity with regards to first amendment protections for decades.

      Yeah. That Do Not Call law is just a government coverup for giving more first amendment protection to the telemarketers. How silly of us not to have noticed.

      I rememeber you. You're the guy that claims that spam doesn't cost anyone anything. You also pretend to be a lawyer, but can't understand even the basics of the law. I'm betting your a DMA puppet.

    41. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      It is still not even close. My e-mail address is mine. Slashdot belongs to the people running it. I can choose to stop visiting Slashdot and I'll never hear from whoever I don't want to hear from again. But spammers won't stop sending me mail, and they even try to get around my filters. How you can even compare these is beyond me.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    42. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      But spammers won't stop sending me mail, and they even try to get around my filters. How you can even compare these is beyond me.

      You can stop checking your mail.

      You can stop visiting Slashdot.

      Shit, was it that hard? Your email address belongs to the people running the domain. They can change it, turn it off, make it forward to something else. An email address is not a piece of property, it is purely a label.

      Do you own your address? No. You own the property the address points to. You can't stop someone from sending you letters, either.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    43. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      What if I run my own domain?

      Also, mail and web are still different in that I choose which pages to open, while I cannot choose which mails to receive.

      And I can stop people from sending me snail mail advertising.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    44. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Also, mail and web are still different in that I choose which pages to open, while I cannot choose which mails to receive.

      How the hell can you not choose which mails to receive? Ever hear of a whitelist? Or a blacklist? Or filtering?

      And I can stop people from sending me snail mail advertising.

      I can send you a postcard every day for the rest of your life saying, "Hi, I hope you are doing well today." and you cannot stop me.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    45. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "How the hell can you not choose which mails to receive? Ever hear of a whitelist? Or a blacklist? Or filtering?"
      I have to spend time setting up those filters. And spammers do everything they can to force me to read their mails.
      "I can send you a postcard every day for the rest of your life saying, "Hi, I hope you are doing well today." and you cannot stop me."
      Except I could probably sue you for harassment. But if not, it still isn't the same because you would have to pay for sending those postcards. When spammers spam me, I pay for my own bandwidth, and I have to spend a lot of time filtering and working to get rid of the spam.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    46. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Except I could probably sue you for harassment. But if not, it still isn't the same because you would have to pay for sending those postcards.

      Now, what if I got to send free postcards if the other side of them had an advertisement on? And also, you need to look up the definition of harassment.

      When spammers spam me, I pay for my own bandwidth, and I have to spend a lot of time filtering and working to get rid of the spam.

      Setup a whitelist. And how much do you pay for bandwidth that even the most spamfilled months require? Probably $0.00 because you don't ever go over your bandwidth cap, or it's ran off of your homeline.

      If you are really worried about bandwidth, you are getting ripped off by your providor.

      This is my beef with the anti-Spam arguments: They're all bullshit. It takes about 5 minutes to setup a spam filter. If you can actually setup a proper email (SMTP) server, than you can setup a spam filter. If you can't, you have no business having your own email server. 5 minutes is so much time, and your precious bandwidth is a bullshit argument.

      Pick a new one. The real reason why we don't like spam is because it's annoying. End of story.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    47. Re:So.. by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well, there are some interesting challenges that can be made to the FTC's Do Not Call list.

      Overall though, I support it, but I do not believe that it is a government restriction on speech. Fundementally, it is a method for individuals to provide notice to telemarketers to not call them, much like in the real world individuals can put up 'no solicitors' signs but the government cannot ban solicitors of its own accord. (and there have been cases to that effect)

      I'm very much in favor of PRIVATE action -- such as providing notice -- to stop spam. I don't think a 'do not spam' list would work, due to the difficulty of international litigation, but then that same caveat applies to any proposed spam regulation!

      You also pretend to be a lawyer, but can't understand even the basics of the law. I'm betting your a DMA puppet.

      I don't pretend to be a lawyer. My sig here makes that awfully clear. However, if all goes well, I expect that I _will_ be a lawyer sometime next year. Gotta finish up my last semester, then take the bar. I do think that I have a decent understanding of the law though, but I'm sure it could be improved.

      And I'm not a DMA puppet either. I just have a strong, sincere belief in the importance of the freedom of speech. No matter how distasteful I find spammers (in fact I probably hate all advertising, everywhere, more than most people here -- you should see how agressive my web filters are) I do respect that they have a right to speak that the government should not casually interfere with.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    48. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      No, the reason why we don't like spam is because it's annoying, costs us time and money, and because it is being forced down our throats. It's got nothing to do with free speech either. Banning spam does not affect free speech.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    49. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      No, the reason why we don't like spam is because it's annoying, costs us time and money, and because it is being forced down our throats. It's got nothing to do with free speech either. Banning spam does not affect free speech.

      It costs you time and money if you are a fucking idiot, as I've illustrated. A monkey with cerebral palsy can setup spam filtering that works. If you can't do it, well, I think that's pretty clear.

      The time and money argument is just a stale, overused, but factually incorrect argument. Pick a different one.

      You don't even seem to understand that I don't like spam, but the reason why people bitch about it on Slashdot is just retarded. I'm pretty sure that nobody on Slashdot who bitches about the time and money aspect of it actually maintains email servers large enough to care.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    50. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "It costs you time and money if you are a fucking idiot, as I've illustrated."
      No, you have not illustrated this. You have illustrated that you are ignorant about the facts of the matter.

      Consider for one second someone who cannot set up a filter because filters can trash mail that should have been read. As such, filtering is not a solution.

      Now please read up on some of the facts at hand before you continue your flow of misplaced attacks.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    51. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      No, you have not illustrated this. You have illustrated that you are ignorant about the facts of the matter.

      Yes, I have illustrated this. You are choosing to not understand that setting up a filter, whitelist, or blacklist takes 5 minutes. It doesn't cost you money, either.

      Consider for one second someone who cannot set up a filter because filters can trash mail that should have been read. As such, filtering is not a solution.

      Then they are a fucking idiot who shouldn't have a mail server.

      Now please read up on some of the facts at hand before you continue your flow of misplaced attacks.

      Sorry, how many mail servers to you admin? I'm currently building a whitelist challenge/response signed email system for exim. What are you working on?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    52. Re:So.. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      It was up when I posted it, and down later, then up again later in the day. It seems to be coming up and down due to some crook's attack on the webserver (not that the attacks do anything to the DNSbls which is how mail is filtered -- the website is just an information zone).

      Try again later in the day and you might have better luck. Also look at http://www.spews.org/ -- which goes up and down at the same frequency. In any case, I know of a few mirrors, and some of them are currently functioning (spews.sorbs.net)

    53. Re:So.. by vladb · · Score: 1

      I can tell you are one of those dimwit spammer types?

      Your hiding behind freedom of speech and playing on the sentimental values of the slashdot audience is pathetic.

      As many have pointed out, your freedom to invade my inbox simply does not exist. Let jocks like yourself loose and in a year or two the Internet as we know it might as well not exist. Even today, spam permeates virtually every network on the web. As if you already didn't know it, spam messages also do take up some disk space. Added all up and you have masses of useless information clogging up scarce network resources.

      Thanks to the short-sighted, self indulging weenies like you, I now have to waste my time figuring out how to filter my mail. Although I'm setting up the MailGuard tool, I wish I didn't have to do it in the first place! I have better things to do in my life than f***ing someone's mailbox.

    54. Re:So.. by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Sure, freedom.

      It costs money to recieve spam.

      If you give me your address, I could help your love of freedom by throwing bricks with notes written on them through your window. Sure, it costs you money to recieve each 'message', and it's a pain in the ass to clean up, but Lord knows we woudn't want to obstruct freedom here.

      Bitch.

    55. Re:So.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      You clearly do not understand this at all, so I will stop wasting my time on trying to educate ignorant individuals such as yourself, who continue to spew out their misguided drivel.

      I tried to explain to you that filtering is simply not an option to many, because they have to be absolutely sure that no mail is trashed without being verified as spam. Your inability to understand this simple issue shows me that you are not ready for a continued debate about spam.

      Come back when you have educated yourself.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    56. Re:So.. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      You clearly do not understand this at all, so I will stop wasting my time on trying to educate ignorant individuals such as yourself, who continue to spew out their misguided drivel.

      Sorry, I'm spewing things called "facts" -- and if you think someone who is working very intricately with exim and courier on a regular basis is ignorant, I would suggest you grab a dictionary.

      I tried to explain to you that filtering is simply not an option to many, because they have to be absolutely sure that no mail is trashed without being verified as spam. Your inability to understand this simple issue shows me that you are not ready for a continued debate about spam.

      So you picked one of the three options I presented, and harped on that because you couldn't argue with the other two.

      You do remember the other two, right? Whitelists and blacklists. They work really well, especially whitelists. And you can do challenge-response whitelists which is even simpler.

      I guess it's easier to pretend that you are winning the argument than to actually listen to the other person.

      Come back when you have educated yourself.

      Translation: I don't know shit about actually setting up a real SMTP server, but I know I hear people complaining about false-positives doing filtering.

      BTW -- you can do bayesian filtering that has less than one percent false-positive rates after downloading spampacks and having it train. I'm sure you knew that though, because you are so educated and informed.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  14. First time I've heard of CAUCE by Trigun · · Score: 5, Informative

    you can sign up at their How Can I Help page, and apparently it costs nothing to join.

    If you're not in the U.S., you can sign up to their international chapters:
    EuroCAUCE - Serving the entire continent
    CAUBE.AU - Serving Australia, New Zealand, and all of the Pacific Rim
    CAUCE Canada
    CAUCE India - Serving Asia and the Indian subcontinent

    I'll be signing up today.

  15. Too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that they didn't bail and had their butts handed to them on a platter.

    And too bad that illegal means (DDoS) are being used to try to limit the effectiveness of RBLs for those who would choose to use them.

    And too bad Osirusoft caved in in such a lousy way. I'm not suprised Osirusoft quit, and I don't blame Joe for bailing. I do think he did many a grave disservive by his means of announcing it - not announcing a damned thing and blocking all. Many folks who would have bought him a beer now consider throwing the bottle at him.

  16. Suing SPEWS, etc. by Kalewa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't think it's right to sue someone because they're trying to help block spam, but I think the way that some blacklists go about it is very much wrong and harmful to innocent bystanders, and they really should be held more accountable than they are.

    1. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      You should hold accountable forced services governments and the like. If people dont like what spews is doing they are free to stop using it, ask there ISP to stop using it or move to an ISP thats not using it. You should not be able to sue somebody so they have to listen to you.

      Persoanly I filter at the client level rather than with a blackhole list. But my mail is at a hosting center incoming bandwith is free. I had a spammer steal an entire /19 from me this spring when it stoped being advertised. It got on some filters working around those filters when it went back up was trivial. Getting off the lists was not that complicated either. It took a few weeks and a bunch of emails but all told were talking about an hour of my time. Should I sue the RBL's for listing my /19 no should I sue the spammer that forged information and lied in writting yes. Actualy I got the local cops to put out an arrest warent for him it's as simple as a couple phone calls and a trip to a notery to send down the paperwork. Will they ever find the spammer probably not but I can hope.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    2. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      Goes to show the mentality of these spammers.

      Maybe we can help them along the road to recovery. I'm thinking we should create a spamaholic group and charge the spammers $2500 annually (admitance charges you know). They after all paid $3000 for their spam group. We're cheaper and can help them overcome their addiction to spam.

      Just a thought.

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    3. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      You should hold accountable forced services governments and the like. If people dont like what spews is doing they are free to stop using it, ask there ISP to stop using it or move to an ISP thats not using it.


      Yes, but...
      People aren't free to choose if when they're being feed disinformation.

      Boycott organiziers like SPEWS should be accountable for what they "say" via their lists.
      If, for example, they claim to list only spammers, and ISPs that support spammers,
      but they also list anyone who owns a rabbit, then they are publishing disinformation.
      It would be completely unfair to bunny owners, and they should be held accountable for that.

      If, on the other hand, they disclose that the list is spammers and bunny owners, then that's fine.

      SPEWS didn't just list spammers and spammer support organizations,
      but they only disclosed that fact in the "fine print" so to speak.

      -- this is not a .sig
    4. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      SPEWS does (not past-tense -- the SPEWS DNSbls are still active and up-to-date and the SPEWS info website is accessable when some crook isn't pingflooding it) disclose that they list spam-support organizations and that they are a list of that and not just "spammers" very clearly in their FAQ. It's not the fault of SPEWS if no one reads the documentation.

      SPEWS does not represent their lists as just being spammers. If they did, then you might have a point because falsely labelling someon a spammer would be libel.

    5. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      As somebody that has used spews before I think they made it clear enough technicaly that they would ban /32 then decrease the mask as more incidents were reported. I think they should have used arin etc to get there blocks from but they never claimed to do it in that maner. Spews did what they stated they would do technicaly, while there PR spun it to be less damaging that it was. If you can sue over spin I think the politicians will fix that one quick.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    6. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by Eggplant62 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      People aren't free to choose if when they're being feed disinformation.

      Boycott organiziers like SPEWS should be accountable for what they "say" via their lists. If, for example, they claim to list only spammers, and ISPs that support spammers, but they also list anyone who owns a rabbit, then they are publishing disinformation. It would be completely unfair to bunny owners, and they should be held accountable for that.
      SPEWS never said it would only block spammers or single IP spam sources. SPEWS exists to block spam-friendly service providers. Where's the disinformation? Listing starts at the single IP, and maybe the /24 he's occupying. If the spam stops, the listing is lifted. If the spam continues and further complaints are ignored, the blocking expands, sometimes until an entire ISP's delegation is covered.

      Again, where's this "disinformation?" Having trouble comprehending the SPEWS FAQ?
    7. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      SPEWS does (not past-tense -- the SPEWS DNSbls are still active and up-to-date and the SPEWS info website is accessable when some crook isn't pingflooding it) disclose that they list spam-support organizations and that they are a list of that and not just "spammers" very clearly in their FAQ. It's not the fault of SPEWS if no one reads the documentation.


      SPEWS didn't (past-tense) disclose that they would increase listing size until the upstream did something.

      They do now, but look at where it's mentioned.

      The implication in the FAQ is still that they only list spammers and spam supporting organizations,
      but the reality is that they include "people who sign up for service with ISPs that have spammers in them" in the "spam supporting organizations" category.
      That little gem of information is not obvious from a first reading.

      -- this is not a .sig
    8. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AnotherBlackHat
      Had to make this one easy for us, didn't you?

      So, what spam friendly ISP do you work for?

    9. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by Senior+Frac · · Score: 1

      I think the way that some blacklists go about it is very much wrong and harmful to innocent bystanders, and they really should be held more accountable than they are.

      I can assume you don't like some of the blocklists listing criteria. May I suggest you not use their lists for blocking, then?

    10. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      In what universe is an upstream that allows an ISP that allows spammers to live there not a 'spam supporting organization'? It boggles my mind that people somehow don't get that everyone, in any way, shape, or form, that (delibrately) provides any connectivity for a spammer, is 'spam supporting'.

      Of course, I don't use the term 'spam supporting' at all...they're all just spammers. Spam comes out of their network and they don't stop it just to keep a customer, they are causing that spam to exist, QED, they are spammers. It's driving the car for a bank robbery, and claiming you aren't a bank robber.

      You are fully responsible for everything you let people continue to do to others over your network, period, no exception. Doesn't matter if there are four people reselling bandwidth between you and them. If a downstream refuses to do something, you terminate the downstream.

      It really is that simple. There will be no waffling, it doesn't matter if they are half your income. You terminate them, or you, and all your customers, will be unable to email others. There will be no more blocking just the spammer..

      And eventually your upstream will face the exact same choice: Terminate you, or be blocked.

      And if your upstream keeps you, their upstream will face it.

      SPEWS is possibly the most brilliant spam-stopping idea, ever. And, yes, it will block email from 'legitimate' sources...but spam's going to destroy email in a few years if nothing's done, so while the cure is painful, it's nothing compared to the disease killing the organism.

      SPEWS is like radiation therapy for spam, except the cells next to the cancer keep whining.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    11. Re:Suing SPEWS, etc. by Kalewa · · Score: 1

      This is not the same as "you don't like Windows, don't use it" It's more like "I don't like the Internet, I'm afraid anyone wishing to contact me will have to use other means"

  17. "Good guys 2, Spammers 0" by mao+che+minh · · Score: 5, Funny
    When I saw that header, I was hoping that the article would involve ballistics, automatic weapons, and close-range muzzle burns. Instead, it's only about litigation.

    You can imagine my dissapointment.

  18. Whoa! by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Isn't Grouch Marx supposed to have said "I don't want to join any club that would let me be a member" ... maybe this is the reverse case, maybe the supreme court panel is saying the guy isn't sleazy enough ...

    1. Re:Whoa! by El · · Score: 1

      No, he represents spammers... they're right below child molesters on the popularity list. So the problem must be that he doesn't have sufficient moral character to be a lawyer. That's kinda like not having sufficient education to work at McDonald's!

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  19. ISPs? by gregbaker · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Would it not be possible for large ISPs to lauch similar suits as class-action? Imagine AOL suing spammers on behalf of all subscribers in Washington, with any judgement distributed among the receivers (minus whatever fees come off a class-action suit).


    You'd have people signing up for AOL, just to get the spam.

    1. Re:ISPs? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      Earthlink, among several others, is already doing this. And winning.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    2. Re:ISPs? by lx805 · · Score: 1

      Why not sue 'em out of Virgina where spamming is a criminal act? That might just be a suitable deterrent...

    3. Re:ISPs? by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1
      Would it not be possible for large ISPs to lauch similar suits as class-action? Imagine AOL suing spammers on behalf of all subscribers in Washington, with any judgement distributed among the receivers (minus whatever fees come off a class-action suit).


      Why use Washington's law when Virginia, where AOL is located, has a much more effective law with stiffer penalties?

      You'd have people signing up for AOL, just to get the spam.


      I dunno, AOL still sux.
    4. Re:ISPs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually AOL has sued various spammers - dating back at least oh....3 or 4 years that I can recall. Doing a quick google seach here - yep, cases dating back at least to 1998 - mostly won, mostly default judgements. Looks like the most recent set were filed in April of this year against 5 spammers - filed in US District Court in Alexandria - at least one of the defendants (the guy from MD) claims to have gotten out of the spamming business because of the suit.... that and the other guy who posted his email and telephone number on the web......

  20. 250k! thats it? by greymond · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Now 2.5mil woul be painful, but 250k doesn't seem like much. But at least another one bites the dust. And hopefully this will encourage others who have the means to continue to sue spammers. I have the will, but no means. As in I have a desire and a bunch of email records yet I have no money for a lawyer and googling for free info seems to bring up useless adds for stuff I don't need.

    On another note I was eating dinner wiht a friend and she told me in VERY strong terms that spam would "never go away" and as a business practice it works great and she supports it. She said in her company's case they "send" out their marketing material to harvested emails that are sold to them froma third party. Yet inthe next sentence she complains about getting penis enlargemtn emails and breast enhancers.....

    meh!

    1. Re:250k! thats it? by Misch · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, look at it this way. SLAPP isn't going to rake in the big bucks. In fact the largest SLAPP award that we've seen so far in the US was for $500,000 when everyones' favorite nut cult tried to kill a lawsuit against it.

      The big money will come in the punitive damages.

      --

      --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    2. Re:250k! thats it? by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      Now 2.5mil woul be painful, but 250k doesn't seem like much.


      58,000 * $500 = 29 million.
      That's how big the judgement could have been.

      But $250,000 is a lot less likely to garner sympathy for the defendant.
      In many ways, it's more damaging than 1 or 20 million would be.

      -- this is not a .sig
    3. Re:250k! thats it? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Do you need an alibi, and how did you do it? Poison in the wine?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    4. Re:250k! thats it? by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      I was eating dinner wiht a friend and she told me in VERY strong terms that spam would "never go away" and as a business practice it works great and she supports it. She said in her company's case they "send" out their marketing material to harvested emails that are sold to them froma third party.

      Some friend. Do me a favor - tell her to go fuck herself with an uzi.

  21. Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by notsewmit · · Score: 3, Informative

    The best anti-spam tool I've found so far is SpamBayes, a great open source app that lets you decide what is spam and what isn't. Just train it for a few days (perhaps longer depending how much Spam you get in a day) and it'll filter all the junk mail to a separate folder. If there are any false positives (or negatives), just move it to a "good" folder and train it again. After a week of training, it hasn't failed once!

  22. But will he collect? by redwoodtree · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is all well and good, but it will be news for real when the spam house pays up. The chances of ever collecting on this judgment are slim and none.

    Actually finding and garneshing their accounts is possible but I can not imagine that will be easy or practical.

    The other question I have is, how about a class action law suit. I know about 100 million people that would like to sue, the ULTIMATE class action.

    1. Re:But will he collect? by javatips · · Score: 1
      I know about 100 million people


      How do you keep track of all the people you know?

    2. Re:But will he collect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy,

      Class A addresses, Class B addresses, Class C addresses. :-)

      But you're a smark alleck.

  23. Com'on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Tech solutions will beat legal ones in this fight. Check out Mailinator

    1. Re:Com'on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tech solutions will beat legal ones in this fight. Check out Mailinator
      ---->

      Sure, it sounds good now, but what happens when it achieves sentience and decides to run for Governor in California? *hmm* wait... is sentience even required for that?

  24. Welcom'... by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Da only thin' I can 'tink of is:
    I, fo' on', welcom da' new musubi cookin' overlords

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  25. Hey everybody by stratjakt · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Lets see a thousand posts about how you set up a bayesian filter!

    Oh yeah, and keep your laws away from the internet, be they anti-spam, anti-porn, anti-terrorism, anti-hatespeech.

    This is a problem easily solved with technology, thanks.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:Hey everybody by advocate_one · · Score: 1
      This is a problem easily solved with technology, thanks.

      If only that were true...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    2. Re:Hey everybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets see a thousand posts about how you set up a bayesian filter!

      I wonder if slashdot might start to use bayesian filtering to combat the crapflooders who lurk at -1. All that goatse ASCII art and tedious GNAA detritus might be consigned to the dustbin of history, where it belongs. Just a thought.

    3. Re:Hey everybody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I give troll, flamebait and offtopic a +4 bonus because I find that stuff more interesting than the groupthink and constant parroting of redundant information.

      I cant stand sycophants.

      I don't care if your opinion is right or wrong, but when it's not even your own, it drives me crazy.

      I mean, we already know "the" slashdot opinion on every issue. Microsoft bad. SCO bad. Apple good. OSS good. Indy music good. Commercial music bad.

      And we already know what buzzwords are going to be tossed around like a chimpanzee flinging turds. Bayesian. WiFi.

      So all that stuff is worthless to me. Anything opposing to those views is -1:Troll. So a lot of the stuff down there is stupid or sophomoric, a lot of it is good, valid opinions - but opinions that don't jive with the cult of RMS.

      I used to have a lot of respect for this place as a source of alternative news. Now I find it funny to see how technologically ignorant these self-professed geeks are. You know "linux is awesome on the desktop!!!" and "Apples are well worth the money!!!" type stuff.

      Oh well.

    4. Re:Hey everybody by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      This is a problem easily solved with technology, thanks.

      This does not appear to be true, demonstrated easily by the fact that spam is still a problem. Either it's not solvable by technology or not "easily", then.

      Spam filters at the user's mail client don't prevent billions of spams from pounding AOL's mailservers every single day.

    5. Re:Hey everybody by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      What if someone applied a bayesian filter to slashdot?

      Would it learn to recognize troll posts?

      Could it moderate?

      And if it could, would I get Insightful?

    6. Re:Hey everybody by spinlocked · · Score: 1

      I agree with much of what you say, and that's mostly why I (mostly) browse at -1. You have to admit though, there's a awful lot of crap. Would the world be a poorer place if you never saw another goatse picture, or "GNAA aquires SCO press statement"?

      Slashdot opinion is fickle. A few years ago Sun were (relative) heroes and apple and IBM peddlers of proprietry evil-ware. It's bollocks. I know from experience that IBM, Sun and Apple are like any other computer hardware manufacturers - a bunch of well meaning engineers just trying to churn out decent products while the idiots at the helm try to understand what's going on - and the marketing department don't even bother, they're only interested in the colour and which buzzwords they can put on the box.

      We all know that the moderation system is badly broken, but any distributed moderation system is bound to result in the most popular stuff (and the not necessarily the technically correct stuff) rising to top the pile and as we know moderators are often substance abusers. Oh well, maybe they could apply the bayesian filter only to posts at 1 and under.

      As for technical ignorance. Err, this is slashdot - or should I say "teh slashdot". What do you expect? I bet more than 50% of slashdotters have never seen a computer more powerfull than a 2-way PC - and I bet 3/4 of them have only come across ia32. Then there's the arrogance of youth...

      --
      # init 5
      Connection closed.


      Oh... ...bugger.
  26. Grand Spamming by ikkonoishi · · Score: 0, Funny

    I can't wait till grand spamming is a crime.

  27. Re:Fuck SPEWS by jchawk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You run a site that promotes porn, if someone disagrees with porn should they DDos you? The answer is no, they just shouldn't look at your site.

    SPEWS is pretty much the same thing, if you don't like them don't use them. If you don't like that your ISP uses them, switch ISP's or have them remove the spam filtering on your account, it's that simple.

    It's very apparent you have never had to deal with spam and angry users at the ISP level, it's a whole different ball game, don't advocate DDos of the tools that we need to protect our users. You shouldn't advocate DDos for anything, not even spammers.

  28. 500$ per email?! by mrtroy · · Score: 0

    "Washington state's tough anti-spam law, which says each spam can cost the sender $500."

    Come on clicking delete isnt that expensive.

    How can you prove the damages are $500 per email. That seems a little outrageous. The bandwidth doent cost more than a penny. The time is at most a second that you use to delete it. So what are the damages for? Anyone have a link/answer?

    --
    [I can picture a world without war, without hate. I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it]
    1. Re:500$ per email?! by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why, the damages are punitive my good sir. YANNL (Youse Ain't Not No Lawyer)

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:500$ per email?! by azaris · · Score: 1

      How can you prove the damages are $500 per email. That seems a little outrageous.

      Those are punitive damages. The idea is to deter people from spamming. Besides, when you factor in all the millions of people who receive the spam, look at it for a second then hit delete it quickly adds up those cents.

      Spam erodes the Internet and wastes everyone's time. Just because a single piece of spam is easily dealt with does not mean e-mail is not suffering a death of thousand cuts as we speak. All the Bayesian stuff, SpamAssassin, DNSbl's and Habeas are doing is buying some time until the inevitable.

    3. Re:500$ per email?! by Godeke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's called "punative damages". I surely don't cost $10,000 just to pick up the phone (although, there's a goal to strive for...) but the new federal "Do Not Call" list has just that as the penalty for bypassing it.

      Fines are usually *not* based on the "cost" but instead of "deterent value". If the fine was a penny, the spammer might just pay it.

      --
      Sig under construction since 1998.
    4. Re:500$ per email?! by BigDumbAnimal · · Score: 0
      Come on clicking delete isnt that expensive.
      How can you prove the damages are $500 per email.

      A deterrent.

      When your parking meter expires does it really cost the city $25? When you keep a library book past due does it actually cost the library $0.10 a day? (actually, that's a bad example)

    5. Re:500$ per email?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you just misunderstand the sentence. Try this on for size:

      Washington state's tough anti-spam law which penalizes a spammer $500 for each email sent.

    6. Re:500$ per email?! by lx805 · · Score: 1

      How can you prove the damages are $500 per email.

      Easy. Lets say I run a mail server. Let's say it's my employer's mail server. Let's say we pay for bandwidth based on utilization. Let's say we pay for and maintain all the hardware and software on the mail server.

      Now, let's say we get flooded with spam. Let's say that, on average, each employee in the company gets between 60 and 100 spam messages a day. And let's say that said spam consumes 1/8 of your hardware and bandwidth resources.

      So, the formula you're looking at is something like:

      cost of spam = employee wasted time + sysadmin wasted time + (hardware maintenence costs * 1/8) + (bandwidth costs * 1/8)

      You can see where $500 per email starts to get realistic. Mind you, I just neatly extracted this complex mathematic formula from the darkest recesses of my arse, so I don't know just how accurate it would be, but you can at least start to get the idea.

      Now, magnify this exponentially. Instead of a corporate mail server, let's say it's an ISP mail server. Lets say the ISP has tens of thousands of subscribers. Let's say that, even though they offer filtering to their customers, they don't actively block any spam to avoid the possiblity of accidentally blocking non-spam.

      Now you can begin to see that there are costs involved in spam that the average end user never sees.

    7. Re:500$ per email?! by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Dude, it's a punitive value. The value is chosen as to be larger than any possible benefit from spam, else it would be useless.

      Ie; if it was $1 an email, and a spammer makes $2 per email on average, then hell, it's just a business expense.

      So you make it arbitrarily large, also to compensate for the "they'll never catch me!" factor.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    8. Re:500$ per email?! by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      How can you prove the damages are $500 per email. That seems a little outrageous.

      Statutory damages, not actual damages. The practice is detrimental in ways that cannot be accurately quantified, so the legislature specified minimum damages (as in court awards) for the offense.

      This is similar to the USA-wide ban on junk faxes for which the recipient can sue for $500 (possibly tripled) per offense. Of course, hardly anyone utilizes these laws, which means junk faxers are still around, making profit on illegal activities.

    9. Re:500$ per email?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what I was thinking! SPAM costs me around a dollar fifty. Of course, I only get SPAM every once in a while and it just sits in my pantry for a long time until I'm absolutely starving and have nothing else to eat. Then I get another one. $500 seems a bit steep. The cost of living must be pretty high in Washington.

    10. Re:500$ per email?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spam wastes my time, a commodity that I find infinitly valuable, as I only have a finite amount of it.

    11. Re:500$ per email?! by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Note the tripling is for doing it deliberately, which basically all the junk faxers are.

      And with regard to the junk fax laws, someone sued fax.com for 2.2 TRILLION dollars about a year ago, and has the faxes to prove the case.

      Hilarious quote from him: "I'd be very happy if we just got $100 billion."

      fax.com claim to send 3 million faxes a day, and have been in operation four years.

      Fun with calculator time: That's 4,380,000,000 faxes. That's 6,570,000,000,000 dollars, which is coincidently almost exactly the national debt last I checked.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    12. Re:500$ per email?! by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      Fax.com is a nasty outfit. Read this dossier on them. Also read this story and this FCC report and this lawsuit by the California Attorney General's office which detail the kind of sleazy behavior fax.com and its constituents engage in.

  29. Why are you dissapointed? by Absurd+Being · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Litigation is a fate worse than a thousand deaths. Lawyers have powers to destroy that far exceed anything mere torturers have available. Sticks and stones can break your bones, but names can be used to forever dissolve your sense of security, seal away prosperity, call down imprisonment, tortures, and exile, and to confuse you, and kill you in installments, wasting your time away with convoluted garbage. Being flayed alive to death doesn't quite match being nickel-and-dimed to death. One torment lasts hours, another lasts decades.

    --
    Karma: Excellent^(-t/Tau), Tau=Wittiness/Trollishness
    1. Re:Why are you dissapointed? by PD · · Score: 1

      I hope someone saves that and finds a way to slip it into a fortune file somewhere.

    2. Re:Why are you dissapointed? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Being flayed alive to death doesn't quite match being nickel-and-dimed to death. One torment lasts hours, another lasts decades.

      The hyperbole here's too thick even more me. If you'd honestly pick having your skin slowly stripped off by lashes or knives over being poor and in debt to the court system for life, you've got some serious priority issues. Having no financial future isn't that bad. Sheesh.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    3. Re:Why are you dissapointed? by Absurd+Being · · Score: 1

      Being forced to fill out paperwork, and to live with no dreams nor hopes is a hell. I may have exaggerated, but it is still a hell.

      --
      Karma: Excellent^(-t/Tau), Tau=Wittiness/Trollishness
    4. Re:Why are you dissapointed? by daniel_yokomiso · · Score: 1
      Lawyers have powers to destroy that far exceed anything mere torturers have available.
      Hmmm, let's see... Victims of torture that develop serious trauma and psychological disturbs ~ 100%. Victims of lawsuits that develop more than minor trauma ~ 1%.
      I guess you never met someone who was tortured. I choose lawsuit over torture each day, the same goes for the people I love.
      --
      Disclaimer: If I disagree with you I'm probably trolling...
    5. Re:Why are you dissapointed? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Oh, the angst! Nail the back of my hand to my forehead.

      You know nothing of hell, kid. Ask a Vietnam vet sometime what hell is. Ask someone who's been in federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison with violent offenders sometime what hell is. Ask a victim of child abuse what hell is. Ask a battered woman what hell is.

      I don't know what sort of pampered life you've lived up until now, but face the fact that you will done day have to fill out paperwork and give up large chunks of your hard-earned cash to the government or face jail-time. It's called paying taxes, and millions of people deal with it every year without slitting their wrists or crying themselves to sleep while listening to emo.

      If you can't think of a way to live happily after being sued into poverty, then maybe your life had no meaning without your material wealth, and that's just fucking sad. If you think life is only worth living when all your options are open, and you're completely free to go wherever and do whatever you want to, then prepare for a rude, cold splash of water in the face once you get out of college. The world out there is all mortgages, childrearing, and 40+ hour weeks for the vast majority of Americans. You know what? That too lasts for decades, and it's called life. People deal with it.

      Hopes and dreams are what you make of them. Slaves had hopes and dreams. Prisoners have hopes and dreams. Crippled veterans of war have hopes and dreams, and even people who have lost everything to the courts can still have hopes and dreams. People who've never seen the inside of a courtroom can fritter them away, and it's completely up to as to whether or not you have them.

      American courts don't have power to ruin lives anywhere close to the power that the secret police and prisons of dictators have. You need to read some books on torture psychology and treatment as well as some testimonials of torture survivors before equating legal trouble in America with the sort of hardship that some people in other countries have to go through. If you knew any POWs, you'd whine a lot less about litigation. Being sued is nothing compared to being physically and then mentally broken. Nothing.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  30. But the spam was true! by pgpckt · · Score: 1

    The FTC says Childs and Lightfoot promoted a "get rich quick" chain mail scheme via spam and Web sites, promising participants they'd receive $10,000 in "gifts" within a "short period." Recipients of the e-mail and visitors to the Web sites were asked to pay a one-time $41 membership fee.

    $250,000 is more then $10,000. Profit!

    --
    Lawrence Lessig is my personal hero.
  31. I'm not a spammer by anotherone · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But I'd still like to see SPEWS sued into the stone age. If you want to block spam, that's fine... but you just can't convince me that blocking thousands of legit servers, just because they're close to spam servers, is in any way a good practice.

    --
    Username taken, please choose another one.
    1. Re:I'm not a spammer by Lost+Race · · Score: 1

      Spews doesn't block anything. It lists persistently spam-friendly networks, that's all. Any lawsuit against SPEWS would be frivolous and stupid.

    2. Re:I'm not a spammer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we all know that, but a lot of braindead admins subscribe to every antispam list under the sun. It's no excuse.

    3. Re:I'm not a spammer by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      But I'd still like to see SPEWS sued into the stone age.

      Show me one mail admin who was forced to use SPEWS.

      Any admin who relies completely on one RBL (especially SPEWS) to decide whether or not to block incoming mail deserves to have his MCSE certificate shoved up his ass.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    4. Re:I'm not a spammer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Falsely claiming that the owner of the IPs are also spammers? Falsely claiming that the new owners of other IPs that ONCE belonged tos pammers are spammers and refusing to remove the listing?

    5. Re:I'm not a spammer by merc · · Score: 1

      First of all, SPEWS didn't just list servers (or IP addresses of servers) that spam. They listed IP blocks of ISP's that were negligent in terminating spammers' websites, domains, providing spam support services, direct spam sources, etc. Only after repeatedly ignoring complaints to abuse@ISP did network segments get included on the SPEWS zones. If SPEWS failed so miserably then why is it that tier-1 providers were falling all over themselves (at least on n.a.n-a.e) to have their listings removed as soon as they were published?

      Secondly, SPEWS did not block anything. They only (publicly) published a list which folks were free to (or not to) use. Last time I checked publishing information is a constitutionally protected activity still. It was the network and system administrator's (such as myself) that decided whether to use the lists (or published zones of the SPEWS list), or not too. As far as I see nobody was forced to use SPEWS.

      A common misconception is that the Internet is a public resource. Rather, some recognize it as a collection of private networks, private property rights prevail. If I decide to ingres filter e-mail accounts that begin with the letter 'Z' on Tuesday, and you don't like it then go pound sand. My server, my rules.

      -m

      --
      It's true no man is an island, but if you take a bunch of dead guys and tie 'em together, they make a good raft.
    6. Re:I'm not a spammer by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      It's the same reason you cant post abortion doctors Names, Addresses, Phone numbers on a website.

      --
    7. Re:I'm not a spammer by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      But I'd still like to see SPEWS sued into the stone age. If you want to block spam, that's fine... but you just can't convince me that blocking thousands of legit servers, just because they're close to spam servers, is in any way a good practice.

      You believe rogue and clueless providers force spammers to sit in one spot within their networks? How quaint.

    8. Re:I'm not a spammer by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      But I'd still like to see SPEWS sued into the stone age.

      What, exactly, would be the basis for such a lawsuit? That they report accurate information? That ISPs voluntarily use that information to reject their mail, even though they have absolutely no obligation whatsoever to see that your mail arrives on their private equipment?

    9. Re:I'm not a spammer by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      So then your problem is with braindead admins, not SPEWS. Stop blaming the messenger.

    10. Re:I'm not a spammer by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1
      It's the same reason you cant post abortion doctors Names, Addresses, Phone numbers on a website.

      Not at all. Theres no real privacy issue here, nor is there a legitimate threat to someones life and safety.

      --
      Why?
    11. Re:I'm not a spammer by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Falsely claiming that the owner of the IPs are also spammers?

      SPEWS doesn't do this.

      Falsely claiming that the new owners of other IPs that ONCE belonged tos pammers are spammers and refusing to remove the listing?

      I'm sure that you can provide documentation of this happening.

    12. Re:I'm not a spammer by Eggplant62 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      But I'd still like to see SPEWS sued into the stone age. If you want to block spam, that's fine... but you just can't convince me that blocking thousands of legit servers, just because they're close to spam servers, is in any way a good practice.
      So, gimme a better incentive for an ISP to clean up its network than being blocklisted to hell and back for supporting spammers? MAPS tried to do it by the single IP and they damned near got sued out of existence, or at least into irrelevance. Other lists have concentrated on listing single IP spam sources and have had only limited effect on the problem.

      It took the folks behind SPEWS to get ISP's around the world to sit up and take stock of their problems with hosting spammers, spammish websites and providing dns to spammers. Nothing hits home like listening to a customer tell you about how you're going to leave their service unless they clean up their network space.
    13. Re:I'm not a spammer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then I guess I should just block each IP spam comes from.

      Oops, the ISP is telling me they removed the spammer and that IP is an innocent so I guess I will remove it. And would you look at that, the spammer re-appeard on another IP. Guess I will block that one instead.

      Repeat several times.

      Ok, enough of this shell game. Since the spammer some how manages to get a new IP address, I am from now on blocking just IP numbers spam comes from.

      Again, repeat several times.

      Would you look at that, the ISP now has all their servers blocked! Oh well, since I can't trust them or care to waste my time checking, I am never going to unblock them.

      Gee, maybe I should just find a list that starts at the spammers ip, and increments the range when said ISP fails to boot the spammer. And unlike my solution, they will be able to get out of a block list if they clean up their act.

    14. Re:I'm not a spammer by Senior+Frac · · Score: 1

      If you want to block spam, that's fine... but you just can't convince me that blocking thousands of legit servers, just because they're close to spam servers, is in any way a good practice.

      I don't have to convince you, because you don't get to decide my blocking criteria.

      You seem to have a different definition of "legitimate" than I do. I do not consider legitimate any provider who does not take action against abusers on their system.

    15. Re:I'm not a spammer by anotherone · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean legitimate provider, I meant legitimate content. The provider is simply a channel. Should they get rid of spammers if it's in their power? Yes. Should they be punished if they don't? No. That's stupid. It would be like if your phone company decided to not allow phone calls from Indiana, because there are telemarketers there.

      --
      Username taken, please choose another one.
    16. Re:I'm not a spammer by Senior+Frac · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean legitimate provider, I meant legitimate content

      Sorry. You don't get to decide what is legitimate traffic across my networks and what is not. Thanks for your opinion, though.

      The provider is simply a channel. Should they get rid of spammers if it's in their power? Yes. Should they be punished if they don't? No.

      Absolutely they should. Otherwise, they continue to profit while their peers clean up the mess their abusive customers make. This behavior was unknown 10 years ago, then it became common with ignorant ISP startups. It will no longer be tolerated, and the DNSbls are starting to proliferate enough to make them reform.

      Boycotting is not only the correct thing to do, but essential. No amount of baysian-filtering-touting idiots, resdesign-SMTP fools, or technophobe congresscritters are going to fix the spam problem without social pressure against rogue providers. It's a social problem, not a technical one.

    17. Re:I'm not a spammer by crapulent · · Score: 1

      If you don't like SPEWS' policies, don't use their blacklist.

      If your mail is blocked because of SPEWS, make sure to inform both the recipient and their ISP that SPEWS blocked legitimate mail.

      But what you can't do, is tell someone that they aren't allowed to publish a list of IP ranges that they feel should be boycotted. That's all this is. No one behind SPEWS is blocking anything (except perhaps their own personal systems.) The mail blocking is being done by hundreds or thousands of email administrators out there that are fed up with spam and have found SPEWS better than no SPEWS. It is not your right to tell people what they can or can't do with thier own personal machines. You can tell them that you think what they are doing is wrong or bad -- and you should if you feel that way. Indeed, if everyone that had legitimate mail blocked informed the recipient's postmaster, then the public perception of SPEWS efficacy would be changed. That is the only true way to change the situation, you need to drop this notion that somehow it's illegal to publish a list of IP addresses that you feel are contributing to some perceived act of spam.

    18. Re:I'm not a spammer by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Are you RETARDED??? SPEWS is an OPT-IN list. If your ISP is shady enough to harbor spammers, that maybe after you are blocked you'll convince them to chuck the spammers, or switch.

      It's a harsh, proactive solution.

    19. Re:I'm not a spammer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SPEWS doesn't take the ISP off the list once the spammer has been chucked. Once you're on spews, you're on it. There's no way to contact them to have your server removed.

  32. Re:the wondrous thing that is the Internet, and sp by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    Ironic spam?

    How about this:


    Do you need a larger, thicker penis?

    Of course you don't, you have no girlfriend you frigging loser!

    Come join us at slashdot.org!

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  33. Why don't spammers use irony? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't spammers use irony

    You could read a book, you know, or watch TV, if you wanna be entertained. Don't ask for so much out of fucking spam. Next thing you know you'll be complaining because your phone book won't sing you a lullaby.

  34. Does this frighten anyone? by PD · · Score: 5, Funny

    According to the article, there is an FTC commissioner named Orson Swindle.

    1. Re:Does this frighten anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There's a Republican administration now. What do you expect?

      ~~~

    2. Re:Does this frighten anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orson Swindle was sworn in as a Republican Commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission December 18, 1997.

      Yes Republican but sworn in under Democrats.

  35. Re:Where did they find this lawyer? by lx805 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Thats the funny thing: they *DIDN'T* find the lawyer.

    Mark Felstein is not only the representing council for EMarketersAmerica, he's also their sole corporate officer, and as far as anyone can tell, their only member. The EMA was formed mere weeks before the lawsuit was filed.

    One of the defendants assertions has always been that EMarketersAmerica was formed for the sole purpose of filing the lawsuit. In fact, somewhere on the NANAE threads was a remark that Felstein admitted that he would dissolve EMarketersAmerica at his earliest opportunity once the lawsuit was resolved.

    Of course, the defendants might have a thing or two to say about that...

  36. Enlargement senders by phorm · · Score: 2, Funny

    Don't even ask about what happens for the penis enlargement senders

    They are sent to Federal PMINTA Prisons, and their cellmates are given viagara and enlargment pills that work?

  37. Question about email lists ?????? by TigerTime · · Score: 1

    I've been getting emails about email lists being sold with 100's of millions of email addresses. It would seem to me that it would be illegal to sell someone else's information (email address) without their consent. Is this not the case?????

    1. Re:Question about email lists ?????? by javatips · · Score: 1
      It is in Quebec, Canada. Since the latest Civil Code reform, sharing of personal information should be authorized by the person. This authorization must be gained for each transaction.


      Opt-out are also not permitted. If you subscribe to a magazine for example, the form should not contain "Check here if you don't want us to share your info".


      here is the text of the law

  38. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Geekboy(Wizard) · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    The problem isn't my ISP using them, it's other people using them. If my network neighbor spams you, how the fuck is it my fault? How is my ISP being a dork about it my fault?

    Under your "logic" (note the quotes), you would encourage a city to put up military roadblocks, and prevent anyone from going in, when they find one crack dealer in your neighborhood. And when you go to complain, noone exists. Not "you know their name, but don't have access to them", but "nobody knows their names, and we won't tell you".

    Fuck spews. Fuck them until they bleed, then fuck them harder.

  39. This is wrong. by Jerk+City+Troll · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm sorry, but 58,000 emails is not worth 250,000$.

    We bitch and we moan about how the RIAA wants to sue people who share music hundreds of thousands of dollars despite how trivial the issue really is.

    Receiving a spam is annoying but I don't think a single spam email is worth ~4.31$. When you think about the bandwidth, storage, and time to delete, I think it is nowhere near that much. I think you could argue on the order of 0.50$ or so for each email. Cleaning them up should be relatively easy because if they came from the same source, they should have very similar characteristics.

    I hate spammers, and I think what they do sucks. Nevertheless, this response is overkill. It's like putting someone in jail for 20 years because they were growing cannabis.

    1. Re:This is wrong. by silas_moeckel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      lets leave bandwith and storage out of it and fixate on time lets say it takes you half a minute to delete each spam. If you make $120 an hour then thats a buck to delete the email. Yes I relize thats roughly a quarter of a million dollar sallery but it's not unreasonable people make that mucha nd more. Actualy I think the damages are supposed to be punitive not compensitory. With punitive damages it's a fine that they person that files suit gets to collect sort of a prize for actualy spening all that time on the suit. Compensiory damages are for actual costs incured.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    2. Re:This is wrong. by Houn · · Score: 1

      ...the point of setting high damages was never to give the victim back that which they lost - it has always been about penalizing the party found to be responsible. I don't know about you, but if I was a spammer, and was told to pay up $300, I'd laugh my ass off and pull out my checkbook. $250,000, though, and I might have to rethink my choice of business.

      --
      The longer I'm a member of the Human Race, the more I believe Apocalypse is a valid solution.
    3. Re:This is wrong. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      This is about punishment. It is not a "break even" scenario.

      In Washington State the penalty for a single piece of spam is $500.00. This spammer got of easy.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  40. Except that... by phorm · · Score: 1

    according to stats, a lot more people share music than do spam, and eliminating the major spammers would probably contribute a lot more to killing spam than sueing a bunch of 12-year-olds would to killing P2P.

    RIAA has bigger resources, but also a much larger spread target

    1. Re:Except that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when did one become a bunch?

  41. Somehow... by JFMulder · · Score: 3, Funny

    a Washington resident has been awarded a $250,000 decision against a spammer that sent him 58,000 copies of a spam
    Somehow, I fell like I'd really like to receive a lot of SPAM now.

    1. Re:Somehow... by JFMulder · · Score: 1

      Yeah I know, it's FEEL, not FELL. That should teach me not to press preview on short posts.

      See I did it on this one tough. :)

    2. Re:Somehow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See I did it on this one tough.

      Really? So you previewed and accepted your mispelling of "though" ?

      Stick with the "preview" excuses. It's better than certifying you're a 4th grade speller.

    3. Re:Somehow... by trolman · · Score: 0

      Did you read the settlement. The lawyers got $202k up front.

    4. Re:Somehow... by JFMulder · · Score: 1

      The guy still received 48k, and that ain't bad either! :)

  42. Re: $250,00 a fair settlement? Certainly.... by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Don't forget, these spammers are actually making considerable profit doing what they do!

    At first, you might feel it's excessive to make someone pay out $250,000 for dumping a bunch of spam mail on somebody (presumably by accident, since they couldn't think it made any kind of business sense to send mail tens of thousands of times to the same address?).

    If the punishment isn't high enough to make the spammer think twice about his/her actions though, it won't function as a deterrence. (It's fine and good that settlements make amends for wrong done to the person suing, but in cases like this, it's sensible to ensure the money awarded is sufficient to deter the accused from doing the same thing to somebody else. Why cause more people to tie up the court system with similar cases brought against the same guy, if you can put a stop to it the first time?)

  43. The most important part... by phorm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not about the money, it's not about the individual spammer, it's about a little thing called precedent

    In the end it's about winning in court - and a $250,000 win in court would be would more than twice that in settlement. Spammers, time to duck and cover, because I see only more of this type of legal retaliation in the future.

  44. Simple Solution by freedomchild · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, It seems to me that there is a simple solution to all of these spam related problems.

    Instead of relying on a technological solution that will be circumvented sooner or later, why not follow the money?

    Going after the spammers themselves seems to be a losing proposition because they have become adept at being elusive. The people in this equation that cannot afford to be elusive are the ones that are actually collecting money from the targets of spam. The people that are paying the spammers for their services are the ones that need to be penalized. When the spammers are no longer useful they will die out.

    Making money from spam should be made illegal. I think it would be a lot more effective at reducing spam than the methods that are being used now.

    If my logic is in any way flawed, please let me know.

    --
    We have caught the sniper like a duck in a noose. We understand that hearing us say this is important to you...
    1. Re:Simple Solution by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      Define "making money from spam". Then prove that a given spammer is, in fact, making money from spam. Then demonstrate that it's possible to track the spammer down and prove (1) that they were the person sending spam, and (2) that they were the one profiting off it.

      I can just see it - people start sending out thousands of emails advertising Britney Spears' newest album, in an attempt to get her arrested for spamming . . .

      Saying "making money from spam should be made illegal" is all very nice, but unfortunately, the reality of implementing that is *much* nastier.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    2. Re:Simple Solution by ebsf1 · · Score: 1

      Maybe Britney should be singing about Penis pills...

  45. Re:the wondrous thing that is the Internet, and sp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ironic spam is spam advertising Pop Up Blockers.

  46. Re:Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by advocate_one · · Score: 1
    Just train it for a few days

    no use for me then... I only get around 3 spams a month... :)

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  47. Good Guys 2, Spammers 0? by psiphre · · Score: 3, Funny

    it seems to me more like this puts the score at "good guys: 2, spammers: 93856299376591".

    maybe I'm just pessimistic?

    1. Re:Good Guys 2, Spammers 0? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more like "good guys: 2, spammers: s4321dajGF65H2klHGJ3Z424D3AskfdkjaA"

  48. Heck - I'm still getting bogus infection reports. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    I'm still getting hundreds, sometimes thousands of fscking "Your Details" e-mails every day -- despite the fact that the problem was widely publicized and (supposedly) widely patched.

    Heck. I'm running a completely non-microsoft shop and am still getting bogus bounces from mail transfer agents warning me that I might be infected, because the darned worm found my "Rod" address in somebody's address book and is masquerading as me.

    (But at least the author of ONE of the darned MTA firewalls had the cluefullness to include mention that it might be somebody masquerading rather than an actual infection.)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  49. Can't get his house, unfortunately... by rkhalloran · · Score: 1

    Much as I'd love to see the guy's house taken away and then dropped on him, Florida's one of those wonderful states with an unlimited homestead exemption (used by any number of South Florida real-estate swindlers to cover their posteriors when the suckers, er, investors found out they actually HAD bought swampland...)

  50. One way I like to celebrate victory over spam: by kaseyH · · Score: 0

    Before you can prepare musubi, you must first harvest using Hormel's new PCMCIA adapter.

  51. Earn thousands from the comfort of your own home! by Psyx · · Score: 3, Funny

    A new multilevel marketing business...

    Here's how:

    1) Move to Washington state.
    2) Set up an email account.
    3) Populate the web with your email address.
    4) Collect the spam.
    5) Sue for thousands.

  52. Government debt. by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 1
    Lets allow spammers to be hit with a cane for every 250 spams that they send. Then allow people to pay $5 for for the privilege of being allowed to hit the spammers.


    That could pay for the war in IRAQ. It also remands me of the scene on Airplane where everyone was lined up to slap the screaming woman.

    1. Re:Government debt. by Ryokos_boytoy · · Score: 1

      I'd fuckin sell my house for that, how many swings for $5?

      --


      If you don't say anything, you won't be called on to repeat it. -- Calvin Coolidge
  53. ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These recent so called "victories" in the war on spam are so trivial as to not merit mentioning. I still receive hundreds of spams per day, for viagra, enlargement, what have you. I can only note that the volume increases daily. Sincerely, bob.smith@hotmail.com

    1. Re:ridiculous by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      I still receive hundreds of spams per day, for viagra, enlargement, what have you. I can only note that the volume increases daily

      You mean to say that shit works?!

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  54. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Thuktun · · Score: 3, Informative

    Under your "logic" (note the quotes), you would encourage a city to put up military roadblocks, and prevent anyone from going in, when they find one crack dealer in your neighborhood.

    Please. SPEWS is intended for blocking email, not EVERYTHING.

    I have the freedom to associate with whomever I want. So do you. Do not our servers have the right to associate with whichever servers we choose? Apparently not, in your opinion.

    And when you go to complain, noone exists. Not "you know their name, but don't have access to them", but "nobody knows their names, and we won't tell you".

    There's a reason for that, too. Simply running a blocklist, no matter how gentle, will get you harassment from spammers, death threats, frivolous lawsuits, etc. Those who formed SPEWS simply wanted to avoid all that. (I am not SPEWS, nor do I know who is.)

  55. Ahh, spam and rice by cbdavis · · Score: 1

    The 2 major food groups!

  56. Maybe I've been watching too much sci-fi... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    ...but the first image that came to mind when I read your post was Anubis from Stargate SG1. "He was banned from the system lords because his crimes were unspeakable, even for them."

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  57. Good Guys 1, Spammers 1 by gorbachev · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Filthstein is trying to voluntarily drop the case against the individuals listed on his frivolous suit in an attempt to avoid paying for the legal fees in behalf of the defendants.

    If he gets his wish, he's won. The only purpose of that lawsuit was to cause as much cost as possible to the defendants in legal fees and otherwise. It was such a blatant attempt to stiffle free speech, that Filthstein should be disbarred for it.

    The lawsuit also exposed him as the quack as he is. He should be disbarred for that reason as well. You guys should read the motion to dismiss from the defendants' lawyers. It's absolutely hilarious on how it points out the glaring errors in Filthstein's suit. It's not just factual errors regarding the issue at hand, but procedural errors any competent lawyer would've caught before he would've filed the suit.

    For the "FUCK SPEWS" crowd out there, this suit had NOTHING to do with SPEWS. Filthstein and his buddy, convicted cocaine trafficker Eddy Marin, were suing the most vocal critics of Eddy's spam empire, that's all. They just wrapped it around the "we hate SPEWS" banner, because otherwise it would've been too obvious that the suit was nothing but a SLAPP suit.

    Proletariat of the world, unite to kill spammers

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
    1. Re:Good Guys 1, Spammers 1 by abhisarda · · Score: 1

      You shouldn't be worried about Wellborn recovering his legal fees.
      Felstein will have to pay up otherwise he will be in contempt of court.
      Even if the case is withdrawn, Wellborn has access to the charges filed by Felstein.
      And that is what he meant by saying that he is going to go after Felstein's clients.

      As somebody else stated, once this case is settled,it will set a precedent.

  58. Re:Fuck SPEWS by dissy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > If my network neighbor spams you, how the fuck is it my fault?

    It isnt. And no one said it was. (Or if they did, they are wrong.)

    > How is my ISP being a dork about it my fault?

    Again, it isnt. Nor is anyone claiming it is.
    You are not being blocked.
    Your ISP is being blocked, and rightfully so.

    9 times out of 10, the ISP (be it local or backbone) is willingly and knowingly faking records to show that the spam came from your ISPs space, or another of their customers IP blocks. That is why ISPs like UUnet do not allocate IP space correctly (SWIP it with arin.) Its because if they SWIPed some space but not others, then we could easily block UUnets spammers by rejecting mail from non SWIPed IPs.
    But UUnet will purposly not SWIP your ISPs block, or your block, to you. This way they can hide spamemrs in their IP space and no one but UUnet can tell who is doing it.

    When a backbone or ISP does this, they become listed by SPEWs.
    Fuck you and any ISP that willingly hides spammers amongs innocent customers.

    And as a final note, you dont need to contact SPEWs admins EVER.
    Why would you? What do you plan to say?
    YOU are not listed, thus YOU can not be removed.
    Your ISP, or their ISP is listed. Only they can be removed.

    Atleast as of now, it is still totally legal to boycott any company you choose to, and they are not suppost to be able to pass a law to FORCE you into buying a companys products you dont want.

    SPEWs is a boycott of email.
    You bitching about how your spam loving backbone is having an adverse effect on you is just like the RIAA bitching about people not buying their CDs so they pass laws to get their money anyway.

    If your ISP hosted 95% kiddie porn, would you be as quick to bitch that the world blocks them (and thus you), and still insist that they are 'ok guys' and you shouldnt be blocked?

  59. They did point out by The+Tyro · · Score: 1

    that his name is pronounced "swin-DELL"

    But yes, I was thinking the same thing... delighfully named indeed!

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  60. SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SPEWS is a hideous, hideous service. It's like saying, OK, we have 1 spammer in Brazil, let's send nuclear weapons to everything south of LA. Or, more technically, let's block an entire state in Brazil because of 1 spammer!

    Fuck SPEWS, fuck the zealotry they stand for. They are 5000 times worse than spammers, easily.

    SpamAssassain on the other hand is a terrific service (to show you I'm not pro-spam).

  61. Re:Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by Keeper · · Score: 1

    I used to be like that. Believe me, you will get more. Eventually the guys who spam you now will sell their list of addresses to otherspammers, who will sell it to other spammers, and so on ... and then you get to be in the hell that I am, where I get 200 spams a day...

  62. Re:the wondrous thing that is the Internet, and sp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    exactly.

  63. in on the Hawii Spam joke by avandesande · · Score: 1

    Because of its isolation and the army bases spam is a very popular food.. There are many recipes for using spam that are popular on the islands.

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
  64. Good call... by dacarr · · Score: 1

    Like this guy's style. Keep going after them. I hope he kicks their butts.

    --
    This sig no verb.
  65. The ultimate solution by JamesP · · Score: 2, Funny

    Make the RIAA copyright "pen1s enlargement", "v14gr4" and stuff.

    Now, what will happen if they send (not share) thousands of copies of it

    Im all too happy with that

    --
    how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  66. Try CENSORSHIP=1 EFF=0 by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 0, Troll

    Getting govt laws stopping spam is like getting censorship laws. And when the govt OKs them, they probably wont ever come off.

    Course the Govt has to define SPAM. Wonder how 'right' the definition is, and who the exemptions to the law are?

    --
    1. Re:Try CENSORSHIP=1 EFF=0 by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Shhh, it's only "censorship" when someone tells you to shut up.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Try CENSORSHIP=1 EFF=0 by lx805 · · Score: 1

      The EFF's position on spam sounds good, but is unrealistic. They fail to take into account the costs related to spam. They also fail to take into account the private property rights of the individuals and organizations that own and operate mail servers.

      I don't know about you, but I'm not sending in my donation until they seriously re-evaluate their stance on this issue...

      And forget about the Government doing anything effective. Until the anti-spam movement has a lobby as powerful as the DMA, we'll never make any progress at that level.

  67. Re:Where did they find this lawyer? by lx805 · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected. Apparently there are two other people listed with Mark Felstein. Adam E. Miller, an attorney, and Bari Nemeroff, who is an IT recruiter. This thread in NANAE has some info on these other guys.

  68. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Alranor · · Score: 1

    How many times does this have to be repeated.

    Spews won't list a whole ISP until they've repeatedly ignored complaints about spam. If you don't like it, complain to your ISP, they're the ones ignoring the problem and profiting from spam.

    Or just move away from them and find an ISP that doesn't offer its services to spammers, if it hurts ISP's financially when they allow spam then eventually they won't do it anymore.

    The internet is not a public place, it's made up of lots of private servers that you are invited onto provided you agree to play nicely, why should my ISP be forced to accept traffic and use up the bandwidth that it pays for when it's coming from an ISP that abuses the net like that?

  69. It's not damages, it's a fine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can you prove that littering is $1000 worth of damages?

    How can you prove that speeding is $X.XX worth of damages?

    It's not about damages, it's about a fine.

    If I have 60,000 emails in my inbox and 58,000 are spam, it is too worth $500/email in damages for me to filter through them looking for my valid business leads.

  70. Everybody hates certain freedoms by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Such as granting someone the freedom to kill anyone with impunity.

    1. Re:Everybody hates certain freedoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In your infinite? wisdom you still have the "right" to kill anyone with or without impunity. You also now have the right to be tried by a jury of your peers along with a speedy trial. I can do ANYTHING I want! I just have to be as willing to accept the consequences of my actions. That is what is called "living" in a civilized world.

      It's also common sense which is an oxymoron because common sense isn't common.

    2. Re:Everybody hates certain freedoms by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      Impunity: Exemption from punishment, penalty, or harm. What part of that don't you understand?

  71. A pretty ineffective DDoS by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    While your praise of a criminal act of vandalism is telling of your personality, it's interesting to note just how ineffective the DDoS against SPEWS really is. It's so far knocked the main SPEWS information website offline (though there are active mirrors) and it's taken out one DNSbl that happened to incorporate, among various other lists, the SPEWS level 1 list. The other DNSbls with SPEWS information are still up and running and up-to-date, allowing admins to filter out traffic from known crime-ridden netspaces as they please.

    Not to mention that if SPEWS really did die, the consequences would be rather dire. For all the venom and bile spit at SPEWS, the alternative -- permanent blocklisting in thousands of individual filters -- is arguably much worse. That is the reason that the netspace that once belonged to AGIS is now effectively "no man's land" on the 'net.

  72. Is TEOS a good thing? by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    CAUCE is touting Trusted Email Open System as the solution to spam. I've been reading about it, and it sounds like if it becomes a reality, I'll have to buy a "trusted computer" running Windows if I want to send email to anyone using the system. Naturally, Bill Gates is all for it.

    Am I missing something?

    1. Re:Is TEOS a good thing? by Trigun · · Score: 1

      I read TEOS as the same thing as a verisign certificate. If handled in a free and open environment, then it would work.

      Handled any way else, it'll really hurt.

    2. Re:Is TEOS a good thing? by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1
      Am I missing something?

      Probably not. I have a question though:

      I was looking through my mail logs yesterday, and there was quite a scary number of "relaying denied" entries over the last few months. Needless to say, it's nice to know sendmail is doing the right thing, but does anyone have any useful information as to what happens to these relay requests under Windows?

  73. WARNING: KARMA SUICIDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the parent has performed an illegal slashdot operation and will be modded down.

    you NEVER disagre with the status quo on /.! a good slashbot knows to hate spammers, microsoft, and never never never never speak rationally about /. "enemies" or even play devil's advocate.

    please try to not make similar mistakes in the future

  74. Yum! by MoeMoe · · Score: 1

    Mmmmmmmmm, Spam Musubi... Just like mom used to make... Oh wait...

    --
    Business \Busi"ness\, n.;
    A scam in which all people involved perceive as beneficial...
  75. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow - this really *was* informative. Now we're all informed about what a putz you are.

    If you don't like the way your admin runs his little part of the Internet, find another ISP.

  76. more than "0" by akb · · Score: 1

    I think at this point spammers have scored more than "0", perhaps they have scored a trillion or so by this point.

  77. Re:Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Don't worry. I just signed you up for a whole lot more

  78. !! MODERATE PARENT DOWN !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wtf. they are SPAMMERS DUDE. we wanna HURT THEM... ALOT. don't you fucking get it?

  79. Re:ISPs? (holy crap) by gosand · · Score: 1
    Would it not be possible for large ISPs to lauch similar suits as class-action? Imagine AOL suing spammers on behalf of all subscribers in Washington, with any judgement distributed among the receivers (minus whatever fees come off a class-action suit). You'd have people signing up for AOL, just to get the spam.

    Yeah, what we really need is to REWARD people for joining AOL.

    Holy crap, I think my sarcasm meter just caught fire....

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  80. I can beat that! by donkiemaster · · Score: 1

    I accidentally sent myself about 200,000 emails one time when testing some code that emailed errors when something really bad happened. It's scary to think that I could possibly be sued for fat-fingering an email address.

  81. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics (parent responds) by indros13 · · Score: 1
    The similarity, I thought, was rather clear. All I am saying is that the RIAA and anti-spam activists have laws that they believe support their position. Furthermore, they are willing to use the legal system to seek financial remedy from the perceived violators. Last, the similarity lies in the fact that, regardless of how the case is decided (settlement or verdict), the threat of financial penalty is likely to alter behavior (basic economic theory).

    I was not attempting to make a value judgment about the validity or moral imperative of either protagonist.

    Sorry for the confusion.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  82. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SPEWS sucks ass, they are a bunch of arrogant jackasses, and a lot of people are chosing to block email to people other themselves based on spews

    So is your point that admins should not have the right to decide what technology they use to defend their networks against spam? You contend that a denial of service attack is an appropriate response against any provider of spam fighting tools if you don't approve of how it works? I too see a bit of arrogant jackassness at play here.

  83. Why is .50c better than $4.31 for this spamming F? by FreedomOfSpea-MMNnnf · · Score: 1

    I don't understand your logic. If the number is going to be a round one, why not make it high. UNLIKE file traders spammers are not giving people the choice of whether to recieve the spam or not (unless you count the opt-out / double opt-in bogus links that are included in the mails). No way! If I want to allow other Kazaa users to download from me I will set my software to do so. It is, after all my bandwidth. I am paying for it, it has a cost and I decide the value of it not you and definatly not the spammers who think that value is = 0...

    --

    ~~I went to battle M.C. Escher, but drew a blank...~~

  84. Phew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing I don't have any friends.

  85. my new tactic for paying for college... by zorander · · Score: 2, Funny

    is to make my email as public as possible and hope to win a settlement...$250k should cover my $40k/year education plus a little grad school quite nicely....

    goaheadandtryme@elinxubox.com

    go ahead try...I'll see you in court

    Brian

    1. Re:my new tactic for paying for college... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must not be a lawyer! "go ahead, try" means that any messages you get are solicited.

      Don't quit your dayjob!

    2. Re:my new tactic for paying for college... by Fr33z0r · · Score: 1
      goaheadandtryme@elinxubox.com
      Good plan, you're going to have to learn to spell Linux before it'll work though :D
  86. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1
    I'm all for suing spammers, or even killing them. But SPEWS sucks ass, they are a bunch of arrogant jackasses, and a lot of people are chosing to block email to people other themselves based on spews (like say, an Admin blocking email for everyone who uses a service). I'm glad they're being DDoSed. bleh
    So, which spanked spammer are you? Ralsky? Scelson? Bubba Catts? Drew Amend? C'mon, fess up, we know your penis hurts.
  87. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
    If you don't like it, complain to your ISP, they're the ones ignoring the problem and profiting from spam.

    Except that you're wrong. The ISPs in my small city are listed because the main upstream available in the region also once hosted a spammer 1,500 miles away. I didn't spam. My ISP didn't spam. Noone in my state spammed, at least according to the blacklist details.

    Let's try this: I'm going to blacklist your family because your third cousin twice removed puked in the yard of someone who posts in the same newsgroup I frequent. Don't like it? Change your name or quit complaining! There are plenty of last names available; noone's forcing you to stick with the current one.

    Does that sound fair or reasonable? Of course not! But you have no problem punishing me because I live in a community that uses the same upstream as some lamer I've never met, will never meet, and have nothing otherwise in common with. Is that really any better?

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  88. $250,000? That's an expensive SPAM... by Mnemennth · · Score: 1

    ... can I try a slice with green eggs instead of my usual ham?

    A good victory though... even though I still feel like Sysyphos pushing that boulder every time I open my Inbox...

    Mnem
    "Hold my beer and watch this!" - Anonymous Texan

  89. All nice and dandy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The spammers get rich and the good guys play soccer.

  90. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics (parent responds) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In that case then why not compare it to every civil lawsuit? Heck, why not compare it to speeding tickets. If you use such a vaque comparison then you can put anything together. All civil and criminal cases have "laws that they believe support their position." All civil suits "use the legal system to seek financial remedy from the perceived violators." "the threat of financial penalty is likely to alter behavior" no matter what the case or situation.

  91. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Don'tTreadOnMe · · Score: 1

    That should have been modded up "Funny". You're trying to send someone e-mail and it was refused because they use SPEWS? Then they don't want your mail. Quit whining about it.

  92. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Eggplant62 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    The problem isn't my ISP using them, it's other people using them. If my network neighbor spams you, how the fuck is it my fault? How is my ISP being a dork about it my fault?
    Effectively, you've helped support the spammers also by providing the hosting ISP with your money to help them stay alive. Those of us who believe in the idea behind SPEWS feel that if you're paying a recalcitrant ISP for service, you're helping them stay alive and helping them to further support the spammers. Besides, why would you stay with an ISP that supports spammers?
    Under your "logic" (note the quotes), you would encourage a city to put up military roadblocks, and prevent anyone from going in, when they find one crack dealer in your neighborhood. And when you go to complain, noone exists. Not "you know their name, but don't have access to them", but "nobody knows their names, and we won't tell you".
    Tell that to the pizza shop two blocks over whose driver was beaten and robbed when he tried to deliver to the house next door to the crack house. It's nothing more than simply saying, "Until you stop providing support for Spammer X, we won't trade SMTP traffic with you."
    Fuck spews. Fuck them until they bleed, then fuck them harder.
    No, fuck you. Fuck you with a pitchfork.
  93. Necessary reply... by JFMulder · · Score: 1

    English is not my first language you insensitive clod!

  94. Re:Fuck SPEWS by jchawk · · Score: 1

    What you don't realize is your ISP's upstream repeatedly ignored requests to terminate the spammers account. SPEWS doesn't immediately ban the whole service provider. They block the offending IP's and work their way out as nothing is done to remove the spammer from their network. Obviously your upstream profitted from the spammer, and they continued to profit even after they were alerted a number of times that they were hosting a spam outfit. Your upstream choose to ignore the complaints and continue to host the spammer and take their dirty money.

    When the spam stops, and that means all spam, the blocks start to come off.
    I for one will continue to use SPEWS because no one should profit from spam.

  95. Freedom vs. Theft by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    or really hate freedom.

    Or really hate theft.

    nobody likes spam, sure, but this whole scene is really about encouraging the government to regulate communication.

    No, it's about the government preventing someone else's "communication" from costing us money. If you want to rent a blimp to advertise your penis-pills, go for it. If you want to pay to put an ad in the back of Rolling Stone, more power to you. If you want to buy time during the Superbowl, have at it. But don't waste my bandwidth and storage, costing me money, by sending your spam to me.

    if you don't like spam, do something about it. filter, build a honeypot relay, whatever.

    I do. I own the domain anti-spam.org. I use multiple filters and blacklists. I have a honeypot system that includes the time, date, and IP of the system that harvested the address off of my web page. I am a member of CAUCE. I do plenty about it already.

    but don't go whining to the feds demanding they regulate a free and open communications channel.

    I resent your use of the term "whining." It is rude and inaccurate. The whole problem with e-mail is that it is not "free" in the monetary sense. ISPs and corporations spend incalculable sums of money on bandwidth, servers, storage, backup, administration, filtering products, to deal with spam.

    According to Brightmail, roughly 40 percent of all e-mail traffic in the United States was spam as of March of this year. That means that four of every ten mail servers at major ISPs are needed just because of spam. It means that 40% of the bandwidth that the ISPs buy for e-mail is used by spam. It means that ISP's customers are paying for the spam.

    If I come over to your house and spraypaint an ad for my autobody shop on your car's hood, don't complain. It's just me exercising my rights to free speech.

    1. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 0

      the government preventing someone else's "communication" from costing us money

      First, I doubt that there's any material cost to you.

      Second, everyone who has resources consumed by spam can pretty safely be said to have known that there were costs involved in being connected to the network -- if they proceeded, they assumed those costs. It's what one of my profs refers to as the Superchicken rule. Postal mail and telephones cost the user money as well. When you get a telemarketing call, or junk mail, it costs you money. If you don't like it, don't receive mail or have a phone.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    2. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by Grakun · · Score: 1

      First, I doubt that there's any material cost to you. You're on slashdot. Do you realize how many people here actually DO have to pay for the excess bandwidth wasted by spam? What about the people who go on vacation only to come back and find out that an important email was never recieved, because their account had gone over it's quota, due to spam. Second, everyone who has resources consumed by spam can pretty safely be said to have known that there were costs involved in being connected to the network -- if they proceeded, they assumed those costs. It's what one of my profs refers to as the Superchicken rule. Postal mail and telephones cost the user money as well. When you get a telemarketing call, or junk mail, it costs you money. If you don't like it, don't receive mail or have a phone. Of course, we do realize that there are costs involved in "being connected". Although, the wise thing to do would be to try and minimize those costs, and not just ignore them. If someone scratches obscenities all over your vehicle on a regular basis, would you leave them alone and consider continuously repainting it as a cost involved in owning a vehicle?

    3. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by Grakun · · Score: 1

      First, I doubt that there's any material cost to you.

      You're on slashdot. Do you realize how many people here actually DO have to pay for the excess bandwidth wasted by spam?

      What about the people who go on vacation only to come back and find out that an important email was never recieved, because their account had gone over it's quota, due to spam.



      Second, everyone who has resources consumed by spam can pretty safely be said to have known that there were costs involved in being connected to the network -- if they proceeded, they assumed those costs. It's what one of my profs refers to as the Superchicken rule. Postal mail and telephones cost the user money as well. When you get a telemarketing call, or junk mail, it costs you money. If you don't like it, don't receive mail or have a phone.

      Of course, we do realize that there are costs involved in "being connected". Although, the wise thing to do would be to try and minimize those costs, and not just ignore them.

      If someone scratches obscenities all over your vehicle on a regular basis, would you leave them alone and consider continuously repainting it as a cost involved in owning a vehicle?

    4. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      First, I doubt that there's any material cost to you.

      Then you know practically nothing about the problem. Who do you think pays for the bandwidth used by spammers who send mail to your ISP's users? The ISP - and then they pass the costs on to you and the other subscribers.

      Second, everyone who has resources consumed by spam can pretty safely be said to have known that there were costs involved in being connected to the network -- if they proceeded, they assumed those costs.

      Wrong. That's analogous to saying that you knew that there were costs associated with owning a car so you have no right to complain when someone siphons gas out of your tank every night. By your argument, we all have to accept ever-increasing costs and burdens of spam because we knew that some immoral a**holes spammers existed when we connected to the network. I don't buy it and neither do most reasonable people.

      My server is my private property. I paid for it. I maintain it. I pay for the connection. It's my decision who I authorize to use it. There is not any kind of implied permission for every dickhead sleazy con artist who wants to tell me about penis enlarging ripoffs and debt consolidation scams to use my bandwidth, server, and storage to do so. Nor is there permission for them to run dictionary attacks against it to try to dig up addresses. Nor is there permission for them to harvest e-mail addresses off of my web page and, in fact, it clearly states that such use is prohibited.

      That said, I recognized your name from previous debates and I find it rather suspicious how you always come down on the side of spammers -- despite having been shown, repetitively, the fallacious reasoning behind your position.

    5. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Who do you think pays for the bandwidth used by spammers who send mail to your ISP's users? The ISP - and then they pass the costs on to you and the other subscribers.

      My costs have not wavered in years, however, from a wide variety of local ISPs around the country. The stability in ISP costs seems to belie your position.

      That's analogous to saying that you knew that there were costs associated with owning a car so you have no right to complain when someone siphons gas out of your tank every night. No, that's a non sequitur.

      My server is my private property. I paid for it. I maintain it. I pay for the connection. It's my decision who I authorize to use it.

      All true.

      There is not any kind of implied permission for every dickhead sleazy con artist who wants to tell me about penis enlarging ripoffs and debt consolidation scams to use my bandwidth, server, and storage to do so.

      No. You don't get to decide whether or not there is implied permission. Other people do. This is why it often behooves people to be explicit.

      What you can do is explicitly revoke implied permission -- but you have no say in whether in society as a whole there is implied permission or not.

      But there seems to be. Let's look at other forms of commercial communication: Salesmen are allowed to trespass on your property and knock at your door to sell you things; Phone solicitors can call you to sell you things; Junk mailers can mail you to sell you things.

      Due to how our society operates, it's implied that they're allowed to open communication with you.

      If you actively revoke that societally-imposed implicit authorization, then they no longer are allowed. (at least with regards to you)

      There's a good analogy in tort law. It is absolutely illegal for people to touch you without your permission, no matter how slight it might be. BUT if you were, say, on a crowded subway car, it's perfectly okay for people to jostle you in the absense of a stated preference otherwise, since this is part and parcel of our society -- we accept people will bump into us on the Green Line.

      Having an email address is an invitation to the world to email you; it's up to you to inform them otherwise.

      Nor is there permission for them to harvest e-mail addresses off of my web page and, in fact, it clearly states that such use is prohibited.

      I seriously doubt that that one is enforcable. And I think that it is probably best if it is not, since it is part of the recent regime of adhesive contracts that frankly has been amazingly annoying, if not harmful to numerous aspects of freedom.

      I find it rather suspicious how you always come down on the side of spammers

      That's because I always come down on the side of free speech. I hate spammers, but I defend their free speech rights. I hate Illinois Nazis too, but I'd defend their free speech rights as well.

      Figure out a way to get rid of spam that doesn't jeopardize free speech, and I'd be all for it. So far we have 'no spam' notices, laws against fraud, filtering, etc. If you've got something better up your sleeve, now's a good time to let us in on it.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    6. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by jark · · Score: 1

      >But there seems to be. Let's look at other forms of
      >commercial communication: Salesmen are allowed to
      >trespass on your property and knock at your door to
      >sell you things; Phone solicitors can call you to
      >sell you things; Junk mailers can mail you to sell
      >you things

      Last I checked it did not cost anything in order for a salesman to walk on ones property. It also does not cost the receiver of a phone call money to receive the call from the phone solicitor.

      The Junk Fax law was created with this intent; to ensure that the receipient did not have to pay for unwanted communications.

    7. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Actually there is a cost associated in both of those examples.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    8. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      My costs have not wavered in years, however, from a wide variety of local ISPs around the country. The stability in ISP costs seems to belie your position.

      So your costs have remained the same even though bandwidth cost and hardware cost at the ISP level have dropped precipitously. Has it occurred to you that the reason that your cost is remaining constant (rather than dropping) is because the cost of spam is eating up the savings your ISPs are realizing in bandwidth and hardware?

      No, that's a non sequitur.

      No, it's a valid analogy. In both cases (owning a car and using the net), you know that there are people who will steal from you. It doesn't mean that you should accept theft as a reasonable cost.

      No. You don't get to decide whether or not there is implied permission. Other people do.

      The people have spoken in survey after survey and said that there is no implied permission to spam them. It's just like S&M: A small minority of people enjoy being hit, kicked, etc. during sex. But since such people are in the minority, there is no "implied permission" to batter your sex partner -- whether you decide that there is or not.

      But there seems to be. Let's look at other forms of commercial communication: Salesmen are allowed to trespass on your property and knock at your door to sell you things; Phone solicitors can call you to sell you things; Junk mailers can mail you to sell you things.

      It costs me nothing for someone to deliver their message by knocking at my door, calling me on the phone, or sending me conventional mail. That's the key difference: With spam, the recipients bear the brunt of the cost. It's analogous to junk faxes, which were made illegal by Title 47 Section 227.

      You also ignore the restrictions placed on commercial speech of the specific types that you mention. If I don't want a salesman knocking at my door, I can inform them of that in a legally binding way with "no soliciting" and "no trespassing" signs. If I don't want a phone solicitor to call me, I can put myself on the recently-enacted "do not call" list -- or I can choose to tell a specific telephone solicitor to put me on their firm's do-not-call list. If I don't want sexually explicit ads mailed to me via conventional mail, I can fill out a Form 1500, (Application for Listing and/or Prohibitory Order). I can also designate any sender from whom I wish to receive no further mail.

      Having an email address is an invitation to the world to email you; it's up to you to inform them otherwise.

      Incorrect. As you pointed out, society gets to decide what's acceptable and society has decided that spam is unacceptable. And we're not talking a 51% to 49% decision.

      When my e-mail address is in the domain "anti-spam.org", how can you possibly say that someone has implied permission to spam me?

      I seriously doubt that that one is enforcable. And I think that it is probably best if it is not, since it is part of the recent regime of adhesive contracts that frankly has been amazingly annoying, if not harmful to numerous aspects of freedom.

      Spammers LOVE people like you. You are fighting for their "freedom" to suck my bandwidth with address-harvesting software and through spamming me despite my explicit prohibition against same. You want to do everything possible to keep there from being a legal way to notify them that spamming me is not permitted.

      Figure out a way to get rid of spam that doesn't jeopardize free speech, and I'd be all for it. So far we have 'no spam' notices, laws against fraud, filtering, etc. If you've got something better up your sleeve, now's a good time to let us in on it.

      The solution is very simple:

      Codify the majority belief that there is no implied permission to spam. Craft a law which recognizes that recipients bear the cost of spam and require that senders have explicit permission to send ads to each recipi

    9. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "Figure out a way to get rid of spam that doesn't jeopardize free speech, and I'd be all for it."
      Banning spam wouldn't affect free speech at all. Banning spam means banning forced speech. Spam is all about forcing people to listen to you. Spam is not free speech. Spam is forced speech. Spam is commercial speech. Banning spam does not affect people negatively, it affects companies that make a living by forcing people to receive mail from them.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    10. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      The people have spoken in survey after survey and said that there is no implied permission to spam them.

      Well, I'd like to see the surveys, but at any rate, you're making the same mistake again. If people say there is no permission, that's explicit. So even if there is such a survey as you describe, it's flawed, because the answer is to a different question.

      A better question would probably be: In general, are people allowed to initiate discourse via email with strangers, or must the stranger invite them to start sending email first?

      Which of course leads to the obvious problem with a lack of implied permission -- if they're strangers, wouldn't it basically be impossible to ever have any discourse? The person who wants to talk cannot until invited to do so, and the person who can make the invitation doesn't know anyone wants to talk to him until he's told about it!

      It costs me nothing for someone to deliver their message by knocking at my door, calling me on the phone, or sending me conventional mail.

      This is not true.

      You also ignore the restrictions placed on commercial speech of the specific types that you mention. If I don't want a salesman knocking at my door, I can inform them of that in a legally binding way with "no soliciting" and "no trespassing" signs. If I don't want a phone solicitor to call me, I can put myself on the recently-enacted "do not call" list -- or I can choose to tell a specific telephone solicitor to put me on their firm's do-not-call list. If I don't want sexually explicit ads mailed to me via conventional mail, I can fill out a Form 1500, (Application for Listing and/or Prohibitory Order). I can also designate any sender from whom I wish to receive no further mail.

      And you ignore that these are not governmental restrictions. Although enforced by the government, they are PRIVATE restrictions. That is, only the private person being communicated to can initiate these restrictions, and furthermore they must take affirmative action to do so -- by putting up a sign, or signing up on a list, or filling out a form, or telling people to go away.

      I think that this is PERFECTLY acceptable with regards to spam. And I have NO PROBLEM with the government providing a cause of action for people who give proper notice (what constitutes proper notice is an interesting question -- it's got to be something the spammer actually knows or reasonably ought to be aware of -- trivial forms of notice are insufficient) to spammers but where that notice is ignored.

      And broad governmental restrictions on fraudulent or harassing spam are also things that I endorse.

      But none of these is a broad ban against all spam. Truthful, non harassing spam that is not affirmatively rejected by the recipient should be entirely legal. There's no reason to ban it! But whenever people say 'all spam should be banned' they're necessarily including this, and that means they've gone too far.

      However, I will say that due to the possibility of spam originating overseas, it may be impossible in practice to get rid of it. A regulation on speech is already a bad thing no matter what, and can at best only be balanced out by some good that results from it. If the situation wouldn't change because spammers successfully avoid our jurisdiction over them, our regulations are probably inappropriate since they're causing harm without also having some good result.

      Codify the majority belief that there is no implied permission to spam. Craft a law which recognizes that recipients bear the cost of spam and require that senders have explicit permission to send ads to each recipient. Require that commercial e-mail have a valid return address, that it be identified via a header as advertising, and that there be a valid "remove" address.

      I don't believe that either of the first two aspects of your proposal would survive scrutiny.

      However, I'm fully supportive of the last part, with the exception that spam should NOT be

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    11. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Banning spam means banning forced speech.

      No, I think you've made a mistake here.

      Generally when people talk about forced, or compelled speech, they mean speech that people are forced to say whether or not they actually want to.

      For example, in 1942, the Supreme Court decided that it was unconstitutional to force schoolchildren to recite the pledge of allegience. (The recent Newdow case out west was actually about whether they could be pressured into saying it due to teachers being required to recite it, which would tend to lead the kids on)

      AFAIK the government is not forcing spammers to send spam.

      So I think that what you meant was that people are forced to receive or read or respond in some way to the spam. (either literally, or by doing what the spam advocates)

      But I don't believe that any of those contentions are true -- people do not have to receive spam. You can whitelist, blacklist, blackhole servers that send spam, or simply pull the plug on your email. Likewise, no one is compelled by the government to read or do anything in response to spam.

      Spam is all about forcing people to listen to you.

      Like I said, it's not. All the spammers in the world can't actually force me to read my email. They can _send_ me email, but they're capable of guaranteeing nothing further. As is well known, spam can be blocked or ignored at any time after it has been sent.

      Spam is not free speech. ... Spam is commercial speech.

      Commercial speech is free speech.

      Banning spam does not affect people negatively, it affects companies that make a living by forcing people to receive mail from them.

      You forget that 1) there are individual people that send spam as well, who would be affected negatively, 2) bans on spam could be dangerously far-reaching which is why whenever restrictions on speech appear, we must be extraordinarily cautious to ensure that they're benign, or at least as minimally malignant as possible, 3) companies have free speech rights as well, 4) the rights of individual recipients who WANT to receive spam (and spammers wouldn't spam if someone were not responding positively to it) would be harmed if you banned spam.

      Just because _you_ don't like spam, or even because _most people_ don't like spam is not itself enough reason to ban it.

      The first amendment is all about protecting unpopular minorities. Spammers qualify as one.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    12. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "All the spammers in the world can't actually force me to read my email. They can _send_ me email, but they're capable of guaranteeing nothing further."
      They clog up my inbox, potentially drowning legitimate mail. It's like phone salesmen calling you up all the time so no real calls can get through. I think you would find that somewhat annoying. No, you would find it intolerable and would want it to stop immediately.
      "spam can be blocked or ignored at any time after it has been sent"
      No. First, spammers do everything they can to avoid spam filters, forcing their way into your mailbox. Also, not everyone has the luxury of being able to filter mail, and has to read through every single mail, as they cannot afford deleting legitimate mail.
      "Commercial speech is free speech."
      But you cannot force anyone to listen, which is what spammers are trying to do. Like a salesman screaming into your ear to make sure you get the point. You have the right to express yourself, but you do not have the right to force people to listen to you.
      "there are individual people that send spam as well, who would be affected negatively"
      Irrelevant. They represent a business selling a product. Their rights as individuals would not be affected negatively by anti-spam laws.
      "bans on spam could be dangerously far-reaching which is why whenever restrictions on speech appear, we must be extraordinarily cautious to ensure that they're benign, or at least as minimally malignant as possible"
      Banning spam would not limit your ability to freely express your opinions.
      "companies have free speech rights as well"
      But they do not have the right to force people to listen to them, which is what spam is all about.
      "the rights of individual recipients who WANT to receive spam (and spammers wouldn't spam if someone were not responding positively to it) would be harmed if you banned spam"
      No, because if the recipient asked to receive it, it is no longer spam.
      Just because _you_ don't like spam, or even because _most people_ don't like spam is not itself enough reason to ban it.
      Spam costs us time and money, and it is forced down our throats. That is why it has to be banned.
      "The first amendment is all about protecting unpopular minorities. Spammers qualify as one."
      Similarly, the Mafia qualifies as an unpopular minority. We must therefore defend its right to bust kneecaps and force "protection" money out of people.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    13. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      They clog up my inbox, potentially drowning legitimate mail. It's like phone salesmen calling you up all the time so no real calls can get through.

      And yet, I'm not forced to pick up the phone. Or even have a phone. Or listen to them once I do pick up the phone. There's still no compulsion.

      I think you would find that somewhat annoying. No, you would find it intolerable and would want it to stop immediately.

      Actually I find all advertising intolerable. This includes spam, printed ads, billboards, banner ads, junk mail, and anything but the most subtle logos on products including clothes. I have difficulty shopping for sneakers because I won't buy any with prominent logos. (or hideous colors)

      Remember how back in the 80's generic products were sold typically in plain white packaging with plain black text indicating merely what the product was? (this was typically food products in grocery stores) I'd be perfectly happy if the whole world were like that. You can't imagine how much I hate advertisements of any stripe.

      I'd really like to simply filter my perceptions of the world so that I could live ad-free, forever.

      First, spammers do everything they can to avoid spam filters, forcing their way into your mailbox.

      That's allowed. I get junk mail in plain envelopes from time to time -- as long as it doesn't try to deceptively look like something other than an ad, it doesn't have to look like any particular ad.

      Also, not everyone has the luxury of being able to filter mail, and has to read through every single mail, as they cannot afford deleting legitimate mail.

      Maybe, but that's probably not that common, and at any rate not a sufficient concern to justify the government stepping in.

      But you cannot force anyone to listen, which is what spammers are trying to do.

      Except they're not. Sending me a whole truck full of junk mail does not mean that I am being forced to read it. Volume does not equal compulsion.

      Irrelevant. They represent a business selling a product. Their rights as individuals would not be affected negatively by anti-spam laws.

      Not in the least. If I send a spam to everyone I know and even a lot of people I don't telling them to buy a widget, that doesn't mean I'm a representative of the widget company. Similarly, there is such a thing as political spam. And spam for charitable organizations.

      And at any rate, businesses do enjoy significant first amendment rights, so your point is irrelevant anyhow.

      No, because if the recipient asked to receive it, it is no longer spam.

      I didn't say that. I said the recipient wanted to receive it. I didn't say he announced that. Some people like getting unsolicited catalogs or things in the mail. There's certainly plenty of people who like the Publisher's Clearinghouse junk mail but who did not sign up for it.

      Spam costs us time and money, and it is forced down our throats. That is why it has to be banned.

      Spam probably does not cost a sufficient amount of time or money to justify the evil of government intrusion into the realm of free speech, is not forced down anyone's throat as shown above, and is fundementally an aspect of free speech in a free society.

      No one ever said that living in a free society would be all sweetness and light. You're going to have to tolerate the fact that other people who you don't like are here too, and are just as free.

      Similarly, the Mafia qualifies as an unpopular minority. We must therefore defend its right to bust kneecaps and force "protection" money out of people.

      Battery certainly isn't a free speech issue. It's insane to even say that it is.

      Extortion _is_ actually, and has to undergo careful analysis (under Brandenberg) to be made illegal. And it is, but it's certainly nothing like spam. I've never gotten a spam that said 'read this or we'll burn down your dog,' have you?

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    14. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      This is not true.

      Yes, it is true and now you are just lying. I don't pay a fee when someone knocks on my door. I don't pay the Post Office when they deliver an ad to me. I don't pay the phone company when a telemarketer calls.

      If people say there is no permission, that's explicit. So even if there is such a survey as you describe, it's flawed, because the answer is to a different question.

      Quit playing games. The vast majority of people believe that spammers have no right to send them spam. Thus there is no implied permission. If 98% of people believe don't want you to punch them, then you don't have implied permission to punch everyone you meet.

      A better question would probably be: In general, are people allowed to initiate discourse via email with strangers, or must the stranger invite them to start sending email first?

      No, that's not a better, or even relevent, question. Someone who is sending spam e-mail with a forged, invalid return address which links to a domain registered with falsified contact information is not trying to initiate "discourse with strangers." And that describes most spam.

      A better question would be: Do you believe that people and businesses have the right to send you unsolicited commercial e-mail?

      The content of the speech is key. Commercial speech and non-commercial speech are different. That's why it is illegal for telemarketers to call you at 11 o'clock at night while your friend can call anytime. It's why adult advertising sent through the mail must be marked that way.

      Truthful, non harassing spam that is not affirmatively rejected by the recipient should be entirely legal. There's no reason to ban it! But whenever people say 'all spam should be banned' they're necessarily including this, and that means they've gone too far.

      Wrong. The only commercial advertising which should be legal via e-mail is that to which the recipient has opted in. What you are advocating is assuming that the recipient wants their bandwidth and storage used for someone else's ad unless they opt out. That's like assuming that you want me to spray-paint an ad on your car unless you specifically tell me otherwise.

      A regulation on speech is already a bad thing no matter what,

      Yeah, it's just awful that pedophiles aren't allowed to tell children about how they'd like to fuck them up the ass. Damn regulations on speech!

      If the situation wouldn't change because spammers successfully avoid our jurisdiction over them, our regulations are probably inappropriate since they're causing harm without also having some good result.

      Where the spam originates is immaterial. If some sleazeball in North Carolina pays some ISP in China to host his herbal Viagra site and pays some Brazillian ISP to send the spam, he's still the one responsible for it and would still be answerable under just about any well-crafted law. And the vast majority of spam received by Americans is spam sent from other Americans, whether through US ISPs or overseas ISPs.

      However, I'm fully supportive of the last part, with the exception that spam should NOT be required to have a header identifying it, provided that it did not otherwise disguise itself.

      So all you are in favor of is requiring a valid remove address? That's assinine. Opt-out is a favorite of spammers everywhere because it gives each and every spammer the opportunity to spam you and puts the burden on you to tell dozens, if not hundreds, of them every week that you don't want any more spam from them. "That spam was from John Hunt Enterprises. This is my new company, John Hunt Incorporated, so I can send you another spam. Next month I'll be sending you something from J. Hunt & Associates. Then I'll send it from John Hunt Company. Just keep opting-out." Yeah, great world you've cooked up.

      Making it too easy to filter spam via governmental mandate would be, I think, effective go

    15. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      I don't pay a fee when someone knocks on my door. I don't pay the Post Office when they deliver an ad to me. I don't pay the phone company when a telemarketer calls.

      There's still a cost, however. At a minimum there's a cost in time and perhaps even psychic well-being in receiving this stuff if only to dispose of it as quickly as possible. Yet, it's a cost that the recipient winds up having to bear.

      Someone who is sending spam e-mail with a forged, invalid return address which links to a domain registered with falsified contact information is not trying to initiate "discourse with strangers."

      Well, I'd say they are. However, due to the presence of fraudulent information in the spam -- the false return address and contact information -- I'd support recipients having a legal cause of action against such a spammer.

      Not because it's spam, but because it's false spam.

      The content of the speech is key.

      Yeah, and restrictions by the government based upon content are the hardest to enforce, short of prior restraints which are just about impossible.

      Commercial speech and non-commercial speech are different.

      True, but it's an increasingly pointless distinction.

      That's why it is illegal for telemarketers to call you at 11 o'clock at night while your friend can call anytime. It's why adult advertising sent through the mail must be marked that way.

      Well, it's not inherently illegal for telemarketers to call you late at night. First, there would have to be a law against it. Without such a law, it's fine for them to do so. And when there is such a law, it is inevitably a time/place/manner restriction. That is, such a law absolutely cannot be used to prevent a telemarketer calling at all, only to channel their calls to acceptable times when they still have a chance of reaching someone. I'd suspect that given the right circumstances (e.g. a night worker who's only awake and at home outside of regular hours) that it could nevertheless be skirted around since t/p/m restrictions aren't allowed to ban speech.

      As for adult advertising, I've never gotten any, but it's surprising that it has to be marked. What's your support for this?

      The only commercial advertising which should be legal via e-mail is that to which the recipient has opted in. What you are advocating is assuming that the recipient wants their bandwidth and storage used for someone else's ad unless they opt out.

      You're right; I believe that the first amendment basically demands that we have an opt-out assumption.

      Where the spam originates is immaterial. If some sleazeball in North Carolina pays some ISP in China to host his herbal Viagra site and pays some Brazillian ISP to send the spam, he's still the one responsible for it and would still be answerable under just about any well-crafted law. And the vast majority of spam received by Americans is spam sent from other Americans, whether through US ISPs or overseas ISPs.

      Well, discovery might prove to be a serious problem, but assuming that you're right, perhaps it wouldn't be as big of an issue as I'd thought.

      So all you are in favor of is requiring a valid remove address? That's assinine. Opt-out is a favorite of spammers everywhere because it gives each and every spammer the opportunity to spam you and puts the burden on you to tell dozens, if not hundreds, of them every week that you don't want any more spam from them.

      No. I'm in favor of requiring that the entire spam be truthful in all respects, including the claims made in the spam.

      At any rate, as the FTC list shows us, it ought to be possible to create a system of preemptive en masse opt-outs (much like a no solicitors sign) rather than having to do it on an individual basis, curing the problem you've identified.

      Indeed, the parallel is really there -- if you didn't have a sign, you'd have to tell each individual door to door salesman to leave. Presumpt

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    16. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      As for adult advertising, I've never gotten any, but it's surprising that it has to be marked. What's your support for this?

      I used to work for the USPS (in engineering) on their automated, computerized sorting equipment. Envelopes containing such items were invariably labeled something like "Adult Material".

      There's still a cost, however. At a minimum there's a cost in time and perhaps even psychic well-being in receiving this stuff if only to dispose of it as quickly as possible.

      But the legal and judicial systems have recognized that advertisers can take your time, which is not the same as cost-shifting for delivery.

      True, but it's an increasingly pointless distinction.

      I disagree. It's an important distinction that allows the government to protect consumers from unreasonable and unfair intrusions by commercial entities.

      Well, it's not inherently illegal for telemarketers to call you late at night. First, there would have to be a law against it.

      I suggest that you read this FTC page: http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/tmarkg/straigh t.htm

      From that page: "Calling times are restricted to the hours between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m." Some states, such as Colorado and Kentucky, have more restrictive state laws.

      You're right; I believe that the first amendment basically demands that we have an opt-out assumption.

      I don't think that the first amendment should be used as a means of cost-shifting from advertisers to consumers. We have a long-standing legal principle of not allowing such cost shifting and it is the reason why unsolicited ads sent via fax are illegal under 47 USC 227.

      No, I'm a law student. Perhaps the next time you're in Philadelphia you can look me up.

      Then please accept my apologies for my unfair assumption.

      To promote filtering more than this though strikes me of having the government censor spam. True, the dirty work is done by individuals, but the law would have been calculated so that such dirty work is pretty much an inevitability.

      I don't think that labeling requirement "promote filtering" or that filtering one's own e-mail is "dirty work." If you wish to read the spam sent to you, then you have the option of not filtering. The First Amendment guarantees your the right to express yourself, not a right to an audience.

      I think then that this would be impermissible action on the part of the government, since it really leads nowhere but mail being automatically filtered due to government intervention.

      That argument could be used for any number of required product labels. Informing consumers about the contents of something, whether e-mail or breakfast cereal, gives them the ability to make a decision. It's not unfair for the government to require that something be accurately labeled.

    17. Re:Freedom vs. Theft by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "And yet, I'm not forced to pick up the phone. Or even have a phone. Or listen to them once I do pick up the phone. There's still no compulsion."
      No one was forcing you to stand in that exact spot as my baseball bat swung and smashed your head.
      "Actually I find all advertising intolerable."
      I don't. I find spam intolerable for the reasons I have already outlined. A billboard does not flood my inbox, potentially hiding important mail.
      "Except they're not. Sending me a whole truck full of junk mail does not mean that I am being forced to read it. Volume does not equal compulsion."
      No, but the fact that they use deceptive subjects and try to get around spam filters does. See why spam is different?
      "I didn't say that. I said the recipient wanted to receive it. I didn't say he announced that."
      In that case, he should sign up for it. No need to bother the rest of us.
      "Spam probably does not cost a sufficient amount of time or money to justify the evil of government intrusion into the realm of free speech"
      Spam is not about free speech. Spam is advertising, and there are certain rules. You cannot use deceptive advertising to sell your product.
      "No one ever said that living in a free society would be all sweetness and light. You're going to have to tolerate the fact that other people who you don't like are here too, and are just as free."
      There are rules for me, and for commercial entities. Spam is a commercial thing, and as such, is regulated by rules that are different from those that regulate what I can say/do.
      "Battery certainly isn't a free speech issue. It's insane to even say that it is."
      Spam isn't a free speech issue. It's insane to even say that it is.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  96. Re:Similar to RIAA tactics (parent responds) by Thuktun · · Score: 1
    The similarity, I thought, was rather clear. All I am saying is that the RIAA and anti-spam activists have laws that they believe support their position. Furthermore, they are willing to use the legal system to seek financial remedy from the perceived violators. Last, the similarity lies in the fact that, regardless of how the case is decided (settlement or verdict), the threat of financial penalty is likely to alter behavior (basic economic theory).

    The FTC action against Miss Cleo was persued because the FTC
    • saw "laws that they believe support their position"
    • were "willing to use the legal system to seek financial remedy from the perceived violators"
    • and "the threat of financial penalty is likely to alter behavior".
    I don't really find anything significant about this observation. This is how the tort system works. (IANAL)
  97. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    What you don't realize is your ISP's upstream repeatedly ignored requests to terminate the spammers account.

    I'm well aware of that supposed procedure ("supposed" because, after all, who can verify it?). It still comes down to the fact that I can't send email to anyone with a SPEWS-crippled mailserver - not because of my sins, or my ISP's sins, or even their upstream's regional office's sins, but because of the old actions of someone in another part of my continent.

    I know that the idea is to increase collateral damage to the point that the pressure on the offending ISP. How would you recommend that I do that? I'm one of thousands of customers at my ISP. They are one of thousands of ISPs that use that upstream. What would you say is a more effective target of my efforts:

    • Getting some faceless bandwidth corporation to apologize to a nameless cabal about something done over a year ago by one of their customers in a remote locations, or
    • Telling everyone who'll listen that SPEWS is clueless and that they cause far more damage than they prevent.

    I'll leave you to guess which path I took.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  98. How appropriate by ncc74656 · · Score: 2, Funny
    JoeJob writes...

    How appropriate, that an article about spam would be submitted by a user named JoeJob.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  99. I just found out that my hosting company... by sirgoran · · Score: 1

    ..is a known spam host and open mail port. www.sentris.com. Been trying to move my domain for the last two weeks without success. They won't release the DNS or the domain.

    --
    Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  100. Imagine the Windows XP Login screen... by shawn99452 · · Score: 1

    Joe Sixpack
    58,000 new emails

  101. Woohoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look ma, look at them spammers runnin'! Here, little spammer spammer... HERE LITTLE SPAMMER SPAMMER come to papa! Yeeeeeeeeha! Round 'em up fellar's!

  102. Comcast/AT&T are the bad guys by mabu · · Score: 1

    Comcast/AT&T are harboring huge amounts of spammers, and abuse seems to go largely unregulated. Based on my logs, the largest source of open proxies is on AT&T/Comcast and no amount of reports seems to do any good - they continue to harbor spammers and don't seem to care. I strongly urge people to avoid Comcast for being a haven to spammers and open proxies. We're blacklisting huge chunks of IP addresses in their space because they simply won't take action. Just today, a large bank got caught in our net and after a discussion, I convinced their IT director to switch to Bellsouth so as to not be associated with this unethical ISP. I'm sick and tired of AT&T/Comcast spammers.

  103. Spam != Freespeech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is so hard to understand about this? It is commmercial speech, just about all of it is trying to sell you something.

    Besides, while you have the right to say what you want, I have the right not to listen to you. You do not have the right to foce me to listen to you.

  104. FIGHT! FIGHT! by Ryokos_boytoy · · Score: 1

    Funny Read

    This is how I picture spamers ... "His hair pulled tight in a ponytail, his sunglasses small, dark ovals, and wearing a dark suit and red tie, he looks like a Miami Vice extra"

    Wish I could have seen that, I'd know if I got in arms reach of a spammer, I'd be kicking some spammer ass too.

    --


    If you don't say anything, you won't be called on to repeat it. -- Calvin Coolidge
  105. Why don't you stop posting here and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go back to whining, jerking-off, and arguing with your fellow retards!

    That place is a good for a laugh... at the stupidity that thrives and breeds there. The most recent being the dumbasses that kept claiming that SPEWS was dead(it isn't) and that the fat-assed teenage moron fanboys at somethingretarded that thought they were responsible for it dying(SPEWS was being DDoS long before their inept script kiddies came along). I doubt in terms of effects they contributed as much as a slap on the wrist.

    You do know that DDoSing is illegal right? Given where you come from, I am not surprised you encurage and support illegal actions.

  106. Here are some ideas.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A) Cancel you account with your ISP, charge them for failure to provide you with the serivces you pay for and your relocation. Do some reasearch and then move to another ISP that ISN'T spam friendly.

    B) Stick with an ISP that harbors and supports criminals, with out any care about their customers. Also continue to whine and spread FUD about how no one wants to accept your email when you live in the dump that is your ISP.

  107. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's try this: I'm going to blacklist your family because your third cousin twice removed puked in the yard of someone who posts in the same newsgroup I frequent. Don't like it? Change your name or quit complaining! There are plenty of last names available; noone's forcing you to stick with the current one.


    Nobody is forcing you to change ISP. They are just configuring THEIR OWN servers to refuse mail from you as long as you are on the same subnet as spammers.

    If you stop returning my phone calls because my cousing puked there is absolutely nothing I can do about it.

  108. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are a moron from fark, where a lot of them were very happy in their thinking that Joe Jared was SPEWS and that SPEWS was dead. Same site that had a title implying that SomethingAwful(whos retarded followers got them blacklisted when they flooded an anti-spam newsgroup) was responsible the death.

    I wouldn't suggest going there unless you want to lose some IQ points. After what I have seen and read there, I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of them are spammers. They tend to fit the spammer profile and mentality.

  109. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Eggplant62 · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes, I remember it well. A bunch of whiny children showed up on NANAE and waved their tiny penes around about how leet they were and how they would show SPEWS who's who.

    I've seen the sadness that is their site. It suxors.

  110. Stupid ideas at that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    A) Did you read his post? He probably doesn't live in a big urban area with a lot of choices. It sounds like there may only be one ISP in his town. If that's true, where would you suggest he go? I lived in a smaller city once and there was only one broadband provider. I wouldn't have moved to dialup either.

    B) His ISP didn't spam. Are you SPEWS zealots too ignorant to know the difference between one ISP and another? He got blacklisted through no fault of his ISP. When I lived in the town I mentioned, there was only one upstream provider available in the whole region. Literally every single person in town had the same upstream. If that upstream did something stupid, then that whole town would have to suffer and there wouldn't be a single thing they could do except wait for the whole mess (that didn't involve them in any way) to get straightened out.

    Not everyone has the luxury to switch services every other week. Sometimes you just roll with what's available. I think that's why he doesn't like SPEWS. Theres probably nothing he can do about the situation.

  111. Worst. Analogy. Ever. by Gandhian_Rage · · Score: 0, Troll

    When will you SPEWS idiots learn?

    1. Re:Worst. Analogy. Ever. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      I like you how you just said that the analogy was bad without actually explaining where it goes wrong. Instead, you toss out a mindless ad-hominem regarding my pro-SPEWS stance.

    2. Re:Worst. Analogy. Ever. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, spammer! He really got your goat, didn't he? All the lawsuits you guys are losing must be getting to you. Only a matter of time before we track some of the DoS attacks back to you guys too.

    3. Re:Worst. Analogy. Ever. by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      When will you SPEWS idiots learn?

      Right after you assholes quit spamming.

      I don't bounce mail based on SPEWS or any blacklist - but I do use several blacklists to help cull the chaff from the wheat. I still get a chance to glance through the headers before all the junk gets tossed. I do that because I'm not willing to throw away any legitimate mail if I can help it. I'm sure I do miss some, now and then, because it's hidden in the middle of all the spam and comes from a blacklisted site.

      You, of course, blame SPEWS and the other blacklists. I blame the spammers who keep sending the same crap day after day. You probably blame child abuse and drunk driving on the police, not the people who actually do it.

  112. Re:Think of it as a parking ticket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $500 per spam is perfectly fair, just like $76 for parking for half an hour in a fifteen minute zone. In fact, it should NOT have to be up to citizens to sue to collect. Local municipalities should issue violations to spammers and mail them the tickets. Lower spam, increased revenue for cash-strapped cities - think about it. Everybody wins, except for the assholes who need to lose anway.

  113. Re:Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by Brainomac · · Score: 1

    I've heard really good things about SpamBayes but have yet to check that out. Although I recently stumbled across a service that uses SpamAssassin, and so far it has kept my inbox junk free with no false positives. Besides the filtering service (shadango.com) works well because it enables me to check both my students and hotmail at the same place. All I have to say is it's worth looking at.

  114. No spam for you! Shadango.com happiness. by Nat3d066y · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ya know, everyone admits that SpamAssassin kicks ass.. I personally have it catching about 95% of my spam, which is a level I'm very happy with. 1-2 spams a day isn't a lot to have to delete.

    The problem (at least with me and a lot of my friends), was that I have 5 addresses (I'm a webmaster for 2 different sites). The one site I really had control over had SpamAssassin, but the other ones were admin'd by someone else (who was too lazy to install SpamAssassin).

    I recently found a free service out there that not only uses spam assassin, but allows you to use it when viewing *ANY* of your email addresses. So now I've even got my @hotmail address being scanned with SpamAssassin.

    I don't mean for this to sound like a retarded plug, but I'm VERY happy with this service (well, as long as it stays free!). It even allows you to store files online and generate temporary accounts.. you should seriously check it out: www.shadango.com

    Nate Dogg

  115. Analogies are inherently logically flawed... by Gandhian_Rage · · Score: 1

    Look up the word in the dictionary. You're trying to make an argument, not appeal to the common man. Get you shit straight, Internet destroyer.

    1. Re:Analogies are inherently logically flawed... by Dimensio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When all else fails, fall back to mindless venom.

      I assert that spam is very much like spray-painting advertisements onto unwilling people's property and making them pay for the materials. In fact, I assert that spamming is actually doing exactly that. You seem to be trying to refute it through ridicule rather than intelligence.

      Not that I'm surprised. Your "Internet destroyer" comment means that you're either a spammer, or someone who is just as stupid as a spammer.

  116. SPEWS case #? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Let's see the SPEWS case ID. We can look it up and see for ourselves whether or not your listing is "justified".

  117. Very much like it... by Gandhian_Rage · · Score: 1

    but not at all. You're not talking to a bunch of Windows users, so spare the stretched analogy. Argue your point logically without analogies or don't argue at all. Spam is like spam.

    1. Re:Very much like it... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Spam is an imposed cost-shifted advertising wherein the unwilling recipient is required to pay for storage and resources used for the advertisement. That's just like someone spraypainting advertisements on your house and charging you for the materials.

  118. bla bla by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Yes, everyone who likes porn and does not like SPEWs is obviously a troll. All right thinking people love spews and hate porn, I forgot.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  119. spamhaus good, spews ... sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spamhaus is doign a great job, and this is great news for them, but spews !!! .. those bastards should rot in hell, instead of punishing the spammers they have fun messing up the ISP's / hosts who got screwed by the spammers too.

  120. Re:Fuck SPEWS by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    I have the freedom to associate with whomever I want. So do you. Do not our servers have the right to associate with whichever servers we choose? Apparently not, in your opinion.

    It depends on who uses your servers. If you run an ISP and have a service contract to provide email to people, then you don't have the right to arbitrarily censor people's email, in my opinion. SPEWS blocks more then Spam, they pretty open about blocking all mail from organizations that aren't as zealous about preventing Spam in order to cause economic pressure. They can and do prevent people from receiving email that is not Spam. That shouldn't ever happen. Boycott whatever you like, but it's immoral to boycott on other people's behalf just because you can.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  121. Re:Fuck SPEWS by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    Dude, you're on fucking cw.net. They host the bastards freelotto.com, which continually, despite getting 5xx errors for months keep connecting.

    They're also hosting the annoyences messagemedia.com and linkexchange/listbuilder.

    Oh, and skylist.net and lamailer.com.

    Those are just the ones that have annoyed me.

    For a most detailed listing of the spammers that are currently hosted by these fucktards, check here.

    THIRTY-NINE fucking spammers CURRENTLY listed.

    You're lucky you can talk to anyone. Forget SPEWS, you're in the damn SBL, dude.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  122. Re:Correction... from googlefight.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Number of results on Google for the keywords good guys and spam:

    good guys
    (6 250 000 results)

    versus

    spam
    (13 200 000 results)

  123. Re:Musubi [OT] by gykh · · Score: 1

    OMG...someone else in the world makes spam rice?

    Wow...Back in dorm-days, we'd have spam rice nites where we would send envoys to pick up ingredients and everyone would pitch in to cook and we'd all gather round a dvd or two.

    Haven't made it since I left uni, but golly do I miss those days.

  124. Re:Earn thousands from the comfort of your own hom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you don't have to move to washington state, you just register your email address to reside in washington state.. see http://registry.waisp.org/

  125. Two words: "Ford Pinto" by RMH101 · · Score: 1

    Catch my drift?

  126. Re:Hate Spam? Use SpamBayes by bigmouth_strikes · · Score: 1

    I don't want to stop spam when it's already in my machine. I could also buy a gun to stop burgulars in my home or I could employ someone to answer my phone to stop phone marketers, but that only takes care of the symptoms, not the cause.

    --
    Oh, I can't help quoting you because everything that you said rings true
  127. Re:Heck - I'm still getting bogus infection report by ananiasanom · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... which shows more "cluefullness": sending someone a message because you (inaccurately) believe they have a virus, or sending someone a message even though you realise they probably don't?

    In my opinion, the first shows forgivable ignorance, the second unforgivable stupidity.

  128. I love you now and always by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please be my boyfriend.

  129. Obvious Solution by NibbleAbit · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This is a late post, so it is likely no one will read it, but no matter.

    The problem is not with spam, nor with laws. The problem is with the SMTP protocol. There is currently no way to track the originator's IP, nor any way set 'content type' flags. If the originator's IP were known to be accurate and preserved, it would be easy(ier) for routers to implement "The first 200 emails in x seconds are fast, then kick down to one email per minute" or "When (threshold) emails from a source is reached, insert 'Bulk Mail' flag if it doen't exist". Mail readers could then be set to accept email from 'my favourite mailing list' but ignore all other 'Bulk Mail'. At this point, spamming becomes non profitable, as most people have it auto-deleted.

    This still allows people to send well targetted, unsolicited email in low volumes (Most of my clients appreciated getting an unsolicited email offering my services, because I did the research to find out they were looking for someone like me, but were unaware of me). The typical "spam" will disapear, because the volumes will not be received to make it cost justifiable.

    Any laws passed on the current technology will fail because not ALL countries will pass identical laws. A slight tweek to the protocol will allow filter/routers (yes higher layer than just IP routers) and readers to, over time, eliminate the problem.

    1. Re:Obvious Solution by crapulent · · Score: 1

      No, lack of an IP address is -not- a problem with SMTP. In fact you can look at any spam email and tell quite easily (if you know what you're doing) what the IP address of the machine that originated the email.

      The problem is not the lack of this information; rather, the issue is that in 99 out of 100 cases this origin is an unsecured or otherwise anonymous proxy. I don't care how many times you log the IP address in an email message, if that message originated from an anonymous proxy there is nothing you can do about it. The Received: headers already do a perfectly good job of this, and SMTP is not broken in that regard. Close all those thousands of open proxies and you'd make serious progress.

  130. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
    I don't know how many other ways I can say this: except for the cable company and a couple of out-of-state dialup services, my entire city is on cw.net. All of it. I have no option at all if I want to have server-capable broadband for less than the price of my own dedicated T1.

    And that's why I don't like SPEWS. I have no leverage at all to do anything about it. None. It's not like I'm tacitly supporting spammers by staying on with a spam-friendly ISP; I'm using the only broadband ISP in town, and they happen to use cw.net as an upstream.

    As it turns out, I think my ISP may be migrating to another upstream. If I were to verify that, do you think the powers-that-be would be generous enough to reward their move with the ability to send mail to SPEWS-crippled mailservers again? After all, they did the right thing - right?

    Out of curiosity, what blacklists are you showing me on? Now that Osirusoft went black, I think my problem may've resolved itself. I'm not in the Spamhaus Block List, and ORDB doesn't list me in their database. Even their 3rd-party blacklist search gives me a clean slate.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  131. Re:Fuck SPEWS by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
    It still comes down to the fact that I can't send email to anyone with a SPEWS-crippled mailserver - not because of my sins, or my ISP's sins, or even their upstream's regional office's sins, but because of the old actions of someone in another part of my continent.

    You just can't seem to grasp that anyone running what you call a SPEWS-crippled mailserver has decided that they don't want to talk to you. Like the spammers, you don't feel that they should have a right to say "No, go away".

    SPEWS doesn't force themselves on anyone. They publish a list, kind of like Consumer Reports. An admin can configure his machine to use that list, or not to use that list. There are a number of other lists available, or you can use none at all, or you can create your own. That's up to the admin.

    Different people have different standards. Some are willing to risk losing some legitimate email because they feel the benefits of getting rid of a *lot* of the crap outweighs the value of those emails. Others don't feel that way. The guy that owns the server makes the rules. You're mad because you don't get to make the rules for servers that you do not own. Funny how that works.

  132. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
    OK, this is my last post on the subject, because apparently there are a lot of people too locked into their little mindset to try to understand what I'm saying.

    Of course you have the right to do whatever you want with your server. I have some of the legitimate blackhole lists (i.e. ORDB, SBL) on my own mailserver. It is the prerogative of postmaster to discard or bounce any mail he sees fit and I have no problem with that.

    What I do have a problem with is naive sysadmins who enable systems that deliberately punish innocent bystanders and then run around saying "look at me! I'm a 1337 spam fighter!1!! W00t!". They don't stop to look at the implications of their actions before looking at their bounced mail logs and smiling at the number of "spammers" that they're rejecting.

    I say this for the final time: I have not sent spam. My ISP has not hosted a spammer. Their upstream, however, has. There is nothing that I or my ISP can do about that - nothing. We're just small fish in the pond and don't have any influence to change things.

    Put yourself in my shoes for a moment. Imagine how you'd feel if you saw your emails bouncing with "F-off and die, spammer!" 550's, and you know that you and the people you associate with have nothing to do with the source of the problem. Would that sway you to using SPEWS yourself and recommending it for your clients? Or would it make you decide that their policies, however well-intentioned, are causing a lot of harm to people with no recourse or ability to right the situation?

    So, go ahead and SPEWS-cripple your server (yes, I said it again - if you use SPEWS, then your mailserver is crippled in that it can't process legitimate, well-formed incoming mail) if you must. But lose the smug attitude about it. Sure, you're hurting a few spammers. You're also doing a lot of damage to people who've never done a single thing to you other than having the audacity to get an account with their local ISP.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  133. Those spam blacklists are BS. by DroopyStonx · · Score: 1

    I've had a few of my domains blacklisted for NO REASON and contacting those sites did absolutely NOTHING.

    "Why did I get blacklisted? I'm not a spammer."

    Them: "Oh yeah? Prove it."

    WTF? Me prove it?! How about they show me one SINGLE shred of evidence that I spammed in my life!

    For the most part, all of my email goes through, but sometimes that ONE client won't get my email and it almost always happens to be on something very important. If you're gonna do it, do it right. Don't just point fingers and say, "You're blacklisted. You spam." without giving any basis for argument.

    Who the hell died an made these guys in charge of a damn thing?

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
  134. Re:Fuck SPEWS by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    Of, course if your ISP moves you won't remain in the public blacklists, which is, of course, why public blacklists like SPEWS and the SBL are a good thing.

    Screaming about having no leverage...tough. Some of us don't even have a single broadband ISP. You don't have some mythological right to have broadband, and, thus, make pisspoor choices of said broadband provider. My (only) cable and phone company are the same people, and they're in no hurry to do anything...they have no competition. I can't get their DSL or their cable modem when I live.

    But, anyway, you have three choices: Have your mail blocked, demand a better choice of upstream, or get someone to relay outgoing mail for you, which probably costs about five dollars a month. Demand your ISP pays it...you won't get far, but they will realize that their customers, and only their customers, are having to spend money elsewhere, which is a real good way to lose customers to places that don't have that extra cost.

    And, yes, they could lose you...you could drop the business static-IP server connection, and just get a cheap virtual server elsewhere, and a cheap, consumer-level broadband connection from them.

    As for what blacklist you're in...well, you're on CW, so, basically, you're randomly in quite a few private ones that you'll probably never get out of, some even with a move. (It's not vindictive, it's laziness.) As for public ones...SPEWS does, in fact, still exist, and people do block using it. The fact that it's hard to find is just that...it's just hard to find.

    And blacklists are expanded seemingly at random, to continue to place more pressure on ISPs. And are reduced for only one reason: Dropping spammers, which CW will not do.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  135. Re:Heck - I'm still getting bogus infection report by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... which shows more "cluefullness": sending someone a message because you (inaccurately) believe they have a virus, or sending someone a message even though you realise they probably don't?

    In my opinion, the first shows forgivable ignorance, the second unforgivable stupidity.


    Not really. SOME of the viruses fake the return addres, but many don't.

    What he needs is a flag in the database to indicate whether each signature is for a return-address faker. But he's probably getting the database from an external source that doesn't include that information. If so, he's doing the best he can by warning the purported source while noting that his machine MAY be infected or MAY be being spoofed by somebody else.

    Interestingly, in the presence of a bunch of OTHER bounces that just accuse you of being infected, the "maybe you're not really infected" reply is handy for newbies.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  136. Vanity Domain Used For Spoofing Sender by tgrigsby · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This topic is timely in my case. Today I got a message from AOL that my domain, tgrigsby.com, was banned from sending emails to anyone inside AOL. Apparently, www.comusnetorg.us was using my domain in the "Sender" of the spams they were sending. They would generate random user names and prepend them to the that domain. The domain in the emails was fiveaalive.biz, which was a junk domain registered by comusnetorg.us and which redirected to the comusnetorg.us website.

    All to sell fools illegal, fake, or nonexistent prescription drugs.

    I've contacted my ISP in the hopes that they can smooth the ruffled feathers at AOL. And now I'm pondering the wisdom of suing a company that, according to the whois record, is based in the UK.

    I feel they owe me money for using my domain name. I've now been personally affected by their actions, and I'm PISSED. I'd like to sue for possession of every testicle in the company, delivered to me floating in a jar of pickle juice, but that seems a bit unrealistic, so I guess I'll have to go for money.

    Are there any lawyers here that can comment on my chances?

    --
    *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
  137. QUAD DAMAGE!!! by Vexler · · Score: 1

    It's time for Spammer Hammer to pull out his Rail Gun and fire up the QD to see how many dirt bag spammers he can frag...

  138. And at this moment... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    spews.org is up again. It seems to go up and down throughout the day, but there does seem to be more uptime (that I've observed) than downtime.

  139. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Thuktun · · Score: 1

    It depends on who uses your servers. If you run an ISP and have a service contract to provide email to people, then you don't have the right to arbitrarily censor people's email, in my opinion.

    An ISP is not a common carrier, it is a business. If they're breaking a contract, the wronged party should hold them to the agreement, possibly escalating to a lawsuit. Blame the one breaking the contract, do not blame a blocklist the ISP uses. If they're not breaking a contract, and not breaking any laws or regulations, one can only vote with those methods available, like one's feet.

    Boycott whatever you like, but it's immoral to boycott on other people's behalf just because you can.

    Can you rephrase this? This doesn't make sense. SPEWS cannot block inbound email anywhere, except on their own servers. Only the administrators of a mail server can cause mail inbound to their server to be blocked using SPEWS' list. You're misplacing blame.

    Would you blame a *nix OS vendor for providing /dev/null if a postmaster redirects his incoming email there?

  140. Re:Fuck SPEWS by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
    OK, this is my last post on the subject, because apparently there are a lot of people too locked into their little mindset to try to understand what I'm saying.

    You started off with fuck SPEWS, so I think we understand you just fine.

    You say you use ORDB and SBL to block mail - but you seem to feel that every admin has to make the same choice that you make. They don't. They run their systems, just as you run yours, and they make their own choices - you don't get to make their choices.

    If an admin wants to do so, he can set up a mailserver and send 550-FuckTheWorldIHateEveryone every time someone tries to connect. His system, his rules. You hate that.

    I *have* received bounces from being blacklisted, just as you have. I'm on a dialup, dynamic IP, and sometimes it happens. The spammer is usually long gone by then, but there it is. I cope with it. You seem to feel that people who have decided to use SPEWS on their system shouldn't have the right to bounce *your* mail. But they obviously don't want to talk to you, or they would whitelist your IP. Since you claim to be an admin, you should know that they can do that.

    Yes, some legitimate mail will bounce with SPEWS. Some will with ORDB and SBL, too. As I mentioned before, some people are willing to deal with that, and some are not. SPEWS doesn't make them, and they don't pretend that there are no IP's listed which don't send spam. They are very upfront about that.

    I don't use SPEWS myself - it's not my choice. But I wouldn't take away someone elses choice just because I don't like it. You would, which is why you and your friends are running around screaming "Fuck SPEWS" and running DDOS attacks.

  141. Funny, not redundant ?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    an article about spam ... submitted by a user named JoeJob

    Oooh you're a sharp one. I'd never have got that one if you hadn't pointed it out.

  142. Re:Fuck SPEWS by andrewski · · Score: 0

    You could switch ISPs and quit being such a little bitch. SPEWS isn't unreliable. They are like the fiery sword of Gabriel. Fuck the unbelievers, and the people who enable them. That's what you are doing by buying service from spam-friendly ISPs - supporting the unbelievers.

  143. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
    You started off with fuck SPEWS, so I think we understand you just fine.

    Nope. That would've been autopr0n. I just happened to agree with what he has to say.

    Anyway, it's been nice chatting with everyone, but the subject is dead. Just like Osirusoft.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  144. Re:Fuck SPEWS by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    An ISP is not a common carrier, it is a business. If they're breaking a contract, the wronged party should hold them to the agreement, possibly escalating to a lawsuit. Blame the one breaking the contract, do not blame a blocklist the ISP uses. If they're not breaking a contract, and not breaking any laws or regulations, one can only vote with those methods available, like one's feet.

    That's fantastic. Perhaps one day you will learn the diffrence between 'illegal' and 'immoral'

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  145. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Thuktun · · Score: 1

    That's fantastic. Perhaps one day you will learn the diffrence between 'illegal' and 'immoral'

    You snipped the part where I actually addressed your comment, which was

    Boycott whatever you like, but it's immoral to boycott on other people's behalf just because you can.

    Please explain how one boycotts something "on other people's behalf".

  146. Re:Fuck SPEWS by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1

    Spammers, porn pushers, and you all hate SPEWS. That's nice company your keeping. Your mom will be proud.

  147. Re:Fuck SPEWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I heard that the Taliban hates child porn.

    So, do you like child porn, or are you allied with the Taliban?

    In other words, trust me, bunky, you don't want to get that ball a-rollin'.

  148. 250Kb of bandwith taken by spam, mebbe by jamehec · · Score: 1

    That does seem fair - one swat against the bare butt Singapore style for every 250Kb of bandwith taken by spam.

    --
    This post made with the Dvorak layout.
    "Friends don't let friends use QWERTY"