Gmail Spam Filter Testing
An anonymous reader writes "What can you do with 1000MB of e-mail space on your Gmail account? One guy, by the name of Aaron Pratt ( prattboy@gmail.com ), has decided to test the spam filters of Google's Gmail service by having his Gmail account blasted with every kind of spam imaginable. He is testing to see how well Gmail's spam filters can sort out the spam from legitamate email (yes, he does get personal emails from people). As of May 25th, he was at about 30% of his Gmail account's 1GB capacity. You can track his progress on his website, http://gmail.prattboy.net (Google cache of this site: cache: gmail.prattboy.net). Here is also an article talking about Aaron's efforts from webpronews.com"
Is use the GMail data to operate a checksum blacklist. Obviously, if thousands (or millions) of their users are getting the exact same email, it's probably spam.
Can anyone provide a link or source to the kind of filters google has working on gmail?
Let's keep in mind that patents are in place to keep lawyers employed and keep them litigating. -CatGrep
The guy who got booted off AventureMail (2GB free) for trying to test their spam filters? The story is on Kuro5hin, if anyone wants to see it.
While we cannot block every domain name (i.e. if you get spam from $#(*$#sexphreak@yahoo.com) because it will alienate your legitimate contacts, there are many domain names that we can block (i.e. @spam-your-gmail.com). Yahoo provides email/domain name blocking, but limits this to 100 (unless you are paying). Do we know if gmail will have this limitation? /., not me :)
-A
*just for those who didn't know, the above domain names and email accounts are random, any resemblence to an actual domain or email account is purely coincidental, and if you choose to do so, you should sue
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
I have subjected my e-mail address, afriguru@gmail.com to the same abuse. by redirecting all e-mail addresses that recieve lots of junk mail to this one and posting the address unprotected to lots of websites and newsgroups. At the initial stage, a lot of 419 scam mails got through, but now I hardly get any spam. No false positives for me so far.
_____________________
Seun Osewa, Abeokuta Nigeria
Spam is unsolicited, so google should filter none of his mail.
This guy solicited it.
Did anybody else notice that his site hasn't been updated in almost a month (May 25)? Seems his project is no longer working. I wonder if Google booted him.
KevG
For those of you that don't have Gmail yet, there is a little "Report Spam" button you can use to, well, report spam. When Gmail gets a few million users, and even 1% use this little button, you are going to see the spam detect rate skyrocket.
It's not that bad as you think. I posted an dedicated email address to slashdot two times already, just to see what volume of spam I get. Surprisingly, it's only 2-3 messages every other day or so.
Well, I guess I need a booster shot, so here it is: slashdot@hates.ms. Spam away...
If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?
Right, and my Thunderbird Bayesian filter catches all of those word salad approaches. But they've come up with a new one - what I call the "encyclopedia attack."
What they do is copy an encyclopedia entry and put it at the bottom of their spam. The thing is usually a few paragraphs long, so that textually it dominates the message. The subjects are fairly random, and are occasionally educational ;)
The problem is that the text of this doesn't trip the "too many strange words" flag that's used for word salads. My Thunderbird filter is really having trouble with these. Anyone else having trouble with these spams?