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USA, UK, Australia Sign Anti-Spam Memorandum

securitas writes "Computerworld's Todd R. Weiss reports that the USA, Britain and Australia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for six agencies to share resources to fight spam. The MoU lets the government agencies 'share information and work together to detect, investigate and track spammers' as well as 'exchange evidence and coordinate enforcement efforts.' The agencies involved include the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC), its counterparts in the UK and Australia, and several other consumer protection agencies. You can get a full list of participating government bodies from the FTC press release, 'Consumer Protection Cops Join Forces to Fight Illegal Spam'. You can also get the spam MoU full text in PDF format from the FTC. More at The Register, vnunet, The Age/Sydney Morning Herald and InfoWorld."

5 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. China, Russia by nycsubway · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Now if they can just get China, Russia, and the other major spam producing countries to sign on, that would be useful. Also if they could actually track down spammers effectively and actually stop spam, then that would also be something.

  2. Coincidence by BenBenBen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Throw in Canada and New Zealand, you're looking at the founders of UKUSA and Echelon.

    Maybe Fort Meade is renting out CPU cycles to Mr Richter.

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    The Slashdot Paradox: "100% Overrated"
  3. I just got back from holiday... by danormsby · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I just got back from a week long holiday to find 226 e-mails of which 170 were spam. I used to get far less but now my out-of-office (as enforced by company policy) replies automatically to spam stating I'm away thus reenforcing the fact that my e-mail address is a real and active one therefore even more spam gets directed at it. :-(

    --
    Omnis amans amens
    1. Re:I just got back from holiday... by carndearg · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The vast majority of spam I receive has random from and reply-to addresses. Thus an autoreply just bounces harmlessly off into the ether, or if it's really unlucky, into the catchall of whichever hapless geek owns the random address the spamers mailing software picked.

      So dont worry too much about your company policy signing you up for more spam, if your spam is like mine all they are doing is generating more internet background noise.

      In fact, count yourself lucky that you have such a high useful mail to spam ratio, I wish I had that little spam.

  4. Shared resources? by stripyd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Given the UK government has failed to allocate resources to tackle spam using existing legislation and information they already have as noted here, I won't get my hopes up that this is anything more than a publicity exercise for the "somthing must be done" department.