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Gates on Spam

pvt_medic writes "Microsoft is proposing a new system that would require people to pay to send e-mails. Postage would be in the form of allowing others to use your computer to make calculations, similar to the SETi@home project. There are other systems being suggested that would include monetary stamps and people could decide on accepting an e-mail based off the value of the stamp. (story has great picture of Bill Gates as well)" Gates' proposed system will be Microsoft patent-encumbered, unsurprisingly.

24 of 608 comments (clear)

  1. Gates/Chong/Pope? by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    story has great picture of Bill Gates as well

    Is he praising Mel Gibson for Passion of Christ? Is he smoking one incredibly fat doober that would make even Tommy Chong jealous? Is he trying to convince the Pope that Longhorn isn't named after a pornstar? Or is he really just THAT great?

    You decide.

    Seriously:

    Instead of paying a penny, the sender would "buy" postage by devoting maybe 10 seconds of computing time to solving a math puzzle. The exercise would merely serve as proof of the sender's good faith.

    And how the fuck would this make a difference? So what? The computer that is supposed to do the work is going to be like Johnny Badass in 2nd grade math class... They are not going to do their homework and just try to bluff it through class. If they do end up having to hand it in to be graded they are just going to get around it some other way. We will end up blocking just as many hosts as before.

    Gates' proposed system will be Microsoft patent-encumbered, unsurprisingly.

    No kidding. Gates came up w/it why would you be surprised he wouldn't want to protect his idea? No conspiracy here... Was the comment necessary?

    Just my worthless .02,

  2. GPL? by Qeygh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    According to the Info World article about Microsoft's Caller ID patents, Microsoft's license "... will encourage all parties involved to allow the Caller ID technology to develop and improve without being hindered by license restrictions or royalty schemes"; and "Microsoft wants to do more than merely give (Caller ID) away, they also want to make sure nobody else can profit from it."

    Seems like a perfect application for the GPL to me. :-)

  3. Solves the wrong problem. by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Charging for email doesn't discourage spam. It discourages mass email. But there are many legitimate uses of mass email, like discussion lists, automated order confirmation emails, etc. - and increasing the costs of sending this type of mail will hurt open-source developers and small businesses the most.

    It's not surprising that Microsoft doesn't see the problem with this. They can afford to buy a few more mail servers to handle all of microsoft.com's outgoing mail, and they'd love it if people had to buy more servers (each running a copy of Windows, of course) just to handle all of the added computational costs of sending mail.

    In the article, "Goodmail chief executive Richard Gingras said individuals might get to send a limited number for free, while mailing lists and nonprofit organizations might get price breaks." But how do you know who's a nonprofit? Someone with a .org? Yeah, right!

    I believe that SPF currently has the potential to put the biggest dent in spam, since it directly addresses forged email addresses without needing to replace SMTP. It's not a complete solution, but it's a lot more realistic than Microsoft's idea.

  4. where to begin? by tverbeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Requiring people to let the sender or some third party execute instructions on the sending machine is so fraught with problems, it's hard to know where to start. Unless this software is Free, you simply can't expect everyone to install on their systems; of course MS wants them to, but hey let's be realistic here: they won't. If it's only available in binary, it would lock out anyone using an unsupported OS (or version thereof). It'd be a new security hole in the sender's machine just begging (with a big neon sign) to be exploited, and would complicate the use of firewalls, especially those using NAT. It'd have a regressive fee structure, because those with expensive, high-powered machines could afford to "spend" more CPU cycles (heck, build a beowulf cluster of discarded 486's to buy more spamming rights), while some poor sod using a Pentium/150 can hardly afford to give up any.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  5. Fine for the rich but... by kneecarrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The most explosive growth for Internet usage (including the almighty email, of course) is coming from third world nations. A penny here or there may not affect someone from the first world, but it sure would make a difference in poorer parts of the globe.

    --

    I always save my last mod point to mod up a good troll. You people are too serious.

  6. What about large spam networks? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How does this help in the case of spammers creating massive networks of compromised hosts which are then used to send spam in a distributed manner? Such a "pay-with-cycles" technique is useless in this case, since you can still send a *massive* amount of spam with a few million compromised computers, even if each one can only send, say, one email per hour.

  7. Pay with cycles? by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Aren't most spams sent using hijacked PCs anyway?
    Why wouldn't the spammer be willing to sell cycles on the zombie PCs?

  8. Re:That proposed "stamp" by MCZapf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd rather get spam than pay Microsoft for email (indirectly, it seems, through patent licensing).

  9. Of course you know... by cmowire · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That charging for email means that *nobody* will be able to run a free mailing list service anymore. Or, alternatively, be just as easy to get around as the current system. Or, even better, have a new set of quirks and possibilities for abuse that would further ruin our email systems.

    The problem is, the main reason why the Internet has worked and CIS, GEnie, ISDN, Teletex, etc. have all fallen by the wayside is because you pay for bandwidth, not services.

    No, the problem is, there's no good way to kick somebody off of the Internet.

  10. I already pay by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I pay for my internet service, I pay for my pc, my taxes ( way too much ), my electrical bill... and my time isn't free.. ( though my software is )

    Why should I have to pay more just because the government refuses to enforce laws that already exist.. Remember the no fax spam laws that pre-date this 'internet thing'? They prohibited sending faxes due to the fact the receiver had to foot the bill for the 'privilege' of getting the spam, due to expenses of paper and ink.

    This doesn't even touch the fact that a large percentage of spam is pornographic, and being sent to minors.. also a crime in this country....

    So fact Bill is in it to profit ( go figure ) has nothing to do with my statement...I f-ing pay enough now.. And im sick of it.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  11. Dear lord.... by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Could you imagine the security problems we'd have if Microsoft developed software that forced us to leave machines open to remote connections in order to "pay" for mail.

    I have enough security problems with downloading email and web content onto Windows machines. God only knows what would happen if people could upload shit onto my machine without my approval.

    It's a novel idea. But I wouldn't trust MS to implement it.

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  12. Email postage will get abused by spammers by DocSnyder · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As soon as email costs money, the spammers will be the last ones to pay for their crap. Even worse, the whole system begs to get abused.

    • Phishing for credit cards, email accounts and passwords is very common.
    • Most spam is being relayed through trojaned Wind0ze boxes, whose owners would have to pay the postage.
    • Email would become a "premium rate service" similar to expensive SMS or phone numbers, with the recipient getting a small (or maybe bigger) amount of money for each received email. It won't take too long for spammers to make wormed Wind0ze boxes send them zillions of emails and lining up their pockets.
  13. Re:Arg. by silas_moeckel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are a few worms running around that make windows boxes into open relays and such making it easy for spammers to avoid IP based blacklists. It would be easy enough to have those same worms do the math for the postage as they are effectivly free to the spammer.

    I think the funny part would be when a spammer gets an EE on the job and comes out with a custom proc to solve said math quickly. Install as a daughter card and your golden. This would be the same aproach they took to cracking DES via brute force years ago and I beleive in under 2 days.

    Either way paying for things computationaly is a loosing battle.
    Paying with real money is a centraly administrated nightmare.

    Now granted spamassassin seems to work just fine. There are a few spams that slip though but not that bad, granted thats a constant battle.

    I would vote for fight forged from addresses first if we can have near certinty that the sender is the sender then spam laws can work.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  14. Email Postage also creates new problems by dsci · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I own a business and we get something like a fair amount of sales leads via email.

    I wonder how many people would not bother contacting us to inquire about services if they had to pay for the priviledge?

    Also, I exchange A LOT of emails with existing clients...working off-site makes email the prefered mechanism of communication. I already pay for Internet Access (which currently includes access to routes between mail servers); I'd sure hate to have to pay for using a particular service on the Internet that is now free.

    IMO, Spam is best fought at the source. Filters like SA are great for the user end, but the demand on the wires is still there (the recipient server has to GET the spam for it to be dropped). Go after the spammers themselves. Hard. With both barrels.

    (1) Make it financially unattractive to spam. This can be either by fines or by MORE user education to NOT RESPOND to the dang things.

    (2) Go after them criminally. They put an arguably unethical demand on everyone's Internet; who knows how many hardware failures are accelerated by the traffic due to spam (disks, NIC's etc). I liken spammers to someone who blows up, or at least physically blocks, a bridge on a public highway.

    --
    Computational Chemistry products and services.
  15. leave it be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Articles like these really make me sad.

    When the Internet exploded and the joe masses came flooding in there were many rapid changes witnessed. Many of these changes were tremendously wonderful, and many weren't.

    Over the years we saw the tug of war between those who think that the net is evil and must be controlled, and those who are intelligent enough to govern themselves and contribute to the common good.

    There were many different attacks on our freedom, and usually we prevailed because it was obvious that proposed restrictions would damage our precious medium. But lately the anti-spam efforts begin to scare me.

    I'm scared because most people hate spam. So even people who are normally freedom-fighters give a moment of pause to think, "Well, I really do hate spam, maybe I should consider this."

    The answer to problems that arise within the net are never ones that limit and merely mimic our failing systems elsewhere.

    I too was pulling out my hair over the explosion of advertising. I realized that it was collecting in my memories, permanently, like toxic waste being spewed at my senses.

    For the most part however I have returned to serenity. I use Mozilla Firefox with the Adblock plugin, this takes care of all banners/popups. I also finally just installed spamassasin on my mail server and the hundreds of junk mailings that normally made my veins bulge are now routed behind closed doors to a junk folder.

    To top it off I threw away my television. I can still enjoy the simpsons, but now it is commercial free. Caller I.D. protects me from unwanted calls. Simply lift the phone for a split second and slam it back down. And I do most of my business through the net so I can safely ignore snail mail.

    The solution is already here. It is education, technology, and intellect.

    [Paul Anka]
    To stop those monsters 1-2-3
    Here's a fresh new way that's trouble free
    It's got Paul Anka's guarantee...
    [Lisa]
    Guarantee void in Tennessee!
    [All]
    Just don't look!
    Just don't look!
    Just don't look!
    Just don't look!

  16. Re:Cha ching, reloaded. by Sapwatso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And how is it going to know the answer in advance?

    Just a guess, but maybe the mail server would know the answer in advance because it used the answer to calculate the question? Couldn't the calculation to generate the question from the answer be orders of magnitude easier than the reverse?

  17. Beyond that... by jaysones · · Score: 4, Insightful

    98% of people will read this as: "So the richest man in the world wants me to pay for something I have always done for free?"

    I predict his personal backing can only hurt this effort.

    1. Re:Beyond that... by dslbrian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      98% of people will read this as: "So the richest man in the world wants me to pay for something I have always done for free?"

      I agree, this thing is dead before it ever gets out the conceptual door. Narrow-minded people look at it and think its rational, after all they think "it won't cost me much" ... but the whole concept of paying anything for email just destroys legitimate things such as mailing lists (think about kernel mailing lists, hobbiest lists, etc). It will never work across international boundaries, and if ever implemented people will simply revert to using the older free techniques. People are always looking for free or less costly methods of communication (such as VOIP), attaching a charge onto something that is free now is just stupid.

      And I shudder to think of what might happen if politicians get a hold of a concept like this - "whoa, people paying money, and we are not getting our fair share of tax?!?"

      I wish people would simply drop the paying for email concept. Bulk mail (bulk advertising) is not free, yet I still get way more of it stuffed into my physical mailbox than legitimate letters. Making it cost WILL NOT make it go away.

  18. Not acceptable. by brain1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No I am not going to pay to send e-mail. Sorry, but Bill's proposal is not acceptable.

    It is one thing to donate idle CPU time to something charitable and worthwhile, like SETI, if you wish to do so. But to allow a private corporation to freely enjoy things that cost me considerable money for, like a full time DSL connection, and the electricity to operate a PC with a 450 watt power supply 24/7, makes no sense. To require me to submit to this just so I can send e-mail is nonsense.

    Other questions come to mind. If this proposed system is burdened with Microsoft patents, then exactly how will open-source or third-pary e-mail clients and servers be licensed with the Microsoft IP. Exactly what is that going to cost?

  19. Re:Cha ching, reloaded. by milkman_matt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The mail server knows the answer in advance, and if the client provides the correct answer, the message is relayed... if not, it's denied. That way, spammers HAVE to perform the expensive computation, which significantly slows their mass-mailing efforts.

    Ok, I quickly read over the article, so I may have missed something... However I had to respond to this particular point that you make. If this is going to be 'expensive computation which significantly slows [spammers'] mass-mailing efforts', won't it do the same for legitimate mass-mailing efforts as well? Newsletters? Daily mailings? News updates? I can think of several legitimate mass-mailing systems that I myself subscribe to, and I like getting them, if this makes it expensive for mass-mailing, then I may just lose the stuff that I signed up for as well as the stuff that I didn't (spam). I don't think that's necessarily the best approach..

    -matt

  20. Re:Use an NP-hard problem by Oroborus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is that algorithms to solve NP-complete problems are usually scale fairly linearly with processing power. In fact, if you're suggesting NP-Complete problems (rather than NP-Hard) then they definitely scale with processing power, so a computer which is twice as fast will take half as long to compute the result (more or less).

    So two computers which are 10 years apart in age will be impossible to challenge equally. And even more disturbingly, specialized computers (think Deep Blue, or even a re-purposed graphics card) could be fairly easily constructed to demolish any NP-Complete problem.

    The interesting thing about Microsoft's implementation here is that I believe they're using a challenge which is gated on something processor speed doesn't help with much. I'd trust MSR to have done this well. (Say what you will about the corporation, but MSR is top-notch).

    I heard it had something to do with bus speeds, but I'd ask someone whose job security doesn't rely on not being tainted by reading others' patent applications. ;)

  21. Re:Cha ching, reloaded. by macdaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And what the hell are we providers supposed to do? We're already having to upgrade our mail system to deal with the unbelievable increase in infected email and spam. Now we're supposed to add computations to each and every message that passes through our boxes? Who the hell is going to pay for that? We're having to "absorb" the costs of the 3 new SMP boxes that will make up our new mail system. We can't afford to do this ever couple of months. That is unless YOU as a customer want to foot the bill. How would you like to pay an extra $10/month for your Internet access? I didn't think you'd like it. And who's going to pay for the inevitable Microsoft licensing fees? We're sure as hell not going to.

  22. Re:Cha ching, reloaded. by glenalec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > Why would they want to pay for something (either monetarily, through CPU sharing, etc...) that they've gotten essentially for free

    Well, for 94% of them, they'd 'want' whatever Bill Baby had pre-installed on their system when they bought it! If they will put up with and make excuses for a system that allows virus-of-the-week and crash-of-the-day, why not put up with paying for email (especially if free email involves a scary extra software installation). If this thing went live, five years from now most of that 94% would have happily convinced themselves that 'it was always like that.'

    --
    The man with no surname and a silly hat

    On the universe: It's bunk.
  23. Using computation won't work by AaronW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with requiring computation cycles is that you need to deal with a lot of older computers. I have friends with old Pentium-based computers, some of whom cannot afford a nice new P4 system.

    Also, what happens to all these web-based email accounts like Yahoo or Microsoft's Hotmail? I guess they'll need to spend a lot of money adding processing power for their users to send email.

    What's to stop someone from making hardware to do the processing? It shouldn't be too difficult to implement an FPGA or an ASIC that could do the processing much faster. I imagine it wouldn't take too long for PCI boards to come out to offload the processing for large mail servers, then spammers with money could just buy the board to offload the processing.

    -Aaron

    --
    This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.