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New York Spam Ring Lawsuits

Iphtashu Fitz writes "Microsoft and the Attorney General of New York have announced multiple lawsuits against what they term as a spam ring operating throughout New York and responsible for sending billions of illegal junk e-mail. According to articles at ABCNews.com, CNet News.com and elsewhere the state of New York has filed 6 lawsuits against alleged notoriuous spammer Scotty Richter and accomplices. Richter is well known among the anti-spam community, holding the dubious distinction of being ranked number 3 on the Spamhaus Registry of Known Spam Offenders. Microsoft has seperately filed 5 other lawsuits."

7 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. Re:How about the people who hired the spammers? by belmolis · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the article in the New York Times (p. C1, continued on C3) the suits are against three companies. The actual spammer named is a Paul Boes, who was employed as a marketer by the other two companies, Synergy6 and OptInRealBig. OpInRealBig is owned by Scott Richter, the guy named by Spamhaus as the world's number 3 spammer. So, yes, assuming that this is the way it works, they are going after the people who direct the spammers.

  2. Re:Let the games begin! by gorbachev · · Score: 4, Informative

    This has nothing to do with prohibition, but the dubious background of the players in the game. A very large number of career spammers are career conmen with convictions for some type of fraud. Eddie Marin is a convicted coccaine dealer. Alan Ralsky has a number of shady business dealings in his past. Thomas Cowles defrauded his spamming partners and got jailtime.

    In addition, large parts of the spamming business is ALREADY in the hands of organized crime, especially in countries like Russia where the mafia has moved onto every profitable business to get their cut.

    Proletariat of the world, unite to kill spammers. The more painful and slower, the better.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  3. Excerpts from OptinBig.com by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Check out the website of one of the companies mentioned in the CNETNews article. It REEKS of hypocrisy.

    Some interesting quotes from their website:

    "TRUST: In most industries, especially in the Opt-in E-mail business, trust is the most vital, but surprisingly overlooked aspect of business. OptInBig and its employees not only understand this concept, but embrace and practice it on a daily basis."

    "FYI: There are approximately 100 million unique e-mail addresses in North America-OptinBig has access to nearly half."

    "OptInBig: Possesses over 45 million online consumers in its database;
    Has lists available with a reach from 500,000 to up to 16 million online consumers;
    Produces over 20 million page views per month on our clients' websites; and,
    Delivers an average of 350,000 individual website orders per month.

    For a free consultation and to learn which list is best for your current or future business needs, please call (303) 464-8164 to set up an appointment.

    And most interesting: From their Acceptable Use Policy:
    . SYSTEM AND NETWORK SECURITY AND INTEGRITY
    Falsification of Origin. Forging of any TCP-IP packet header, e-mail header or any part of a message header. This prohibition does not include the use of aliases or anonymous remailers.

    4. E-MAIL You may not distribute, publish, or send any of the following types of e-mail:
    Unsolicited promotions, advertising or solicitations (commonly referred to as "spam"), including, without limitation, commercial advertising and informational announcements, except to those who have explicitly requested such e-mails.

    Commercial promotions, advertising, solicitations, or informational announcements that contain false or misleading information in any form.

    Harassing e-mail, whether through language, frequency, or size of messages.

    E-mails containing forged or falsified information in the header (including sender name and routing information), or any other forged or falsified information.

    In addition, you may not use Optin's mail server or another Web site's mail server to relay mail without the express permission of the account holder or the Web site. Posting the same or similar message to one or more newsgroups (excessive cross-posting or multiple-posting) also is explicitly prohibited.

    INDIRECT OR ATTEMPTED VIOLATIONS OF THE AUP, AND ACTUAL OR ATTEMPTED VIOLATIONS BY A THIRD PARTY ON YOUR BEHALF, WILL BE CONSIDERED VIOLATIONS OF THE AUP BY YOU.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  4. Re:How about the people who hired the spammers? by Liselle · · Score: 4, Informative

    The problem is that the order-taking/filling is just as distributed as the spammers themselves. There isn't a penis-pill warehouse the FBI can raid and shut down the whole operation. Small operators abound, and when you consider they can sell a $2 bottle of pills for $50, and take into account the zero cost of spamming... any idiot can do it.

    It's like trying to smash hundreds of ants with your fingers. You can catch a few, but the rest are scattering all of the place, and none of them individually amount to anything important.

    --
    Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
  5. Re:In need of SPAM by Lizard_King · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tis nice retribution, but you would also be giving a notorious spammer a valid email address. Your own.

    --
    "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." - Jack Nicholson
  6. Re:So... by sniggly · · Score: 4, Informative
    Well the vulnerabilities have not been exploited to set up OPEN relays, theyve been set up to be closed email spam relays and web servers.

    http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,60747,00.ht ml ...his group controls 450,000 "Trojaned" systems, most of them home computers running Windows with high-speed connections. The hacked systems contain special software developed by the Polish group that routes traffic between Internet users and customers' websites through thousands of the hijacked computers. The numerous intermediary systems confound tools such as traceroute, effectively laundering the true location of the website. To utilize the service, customers simply configure their sites to use any of several domain-name system servers controlled by the Polish group, Tubul said.

    450,000 of hijacked windows boxes are being used as spam relays and webservers and this only by one group...

    MS is like the guy who left his carkeys on the bar while taking a leak and now suing whomever stole their car. While exploiting the weakness may be illegal it's also the stupidity of microsoft (not writing secure software even though win95 already necessitated it) that causes the thieves to have such an easy time.

    --
    Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
  7. Re:How about the people who hired the spammers? by jcr · · Score: 3, Informative

    It just goes to show that if companies are responsible corporate citizens (like mine!)

    Umm, NO.

    You're not a "responsible corporate citizen", you're a spammer. The burden of due diligence is *yours*, when you hire anyone to feed you leads. Hopefully, you're an ex-spammer, but time will tell.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."