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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."

6 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. Potential for misuse? by bhmit1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    share information and work together to detect, investigate and track spammers

    So is this just forming some back channels to track anyone, or are their limits to ensure that only spammers are tracked. And if there are limits, how do they define a spammer?

  2. Absent from the list by Chatmag · · Score: 4, Insightful

    China, Korea, and Brazil are absent from the list. It just figures the countries sending the most spam are not onboard.

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    Pete Carr Owner Chatmag.com
  3. Re:Hopefully... by Chatmag · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can see it now.

    (Announcer) The Queen approaches the SAS Officer, and pins a medal on him, a small riband and medallion, depicting an envelope with an arrow through it.

    --
    Pete Carr Owner Chatmag.com
  4. 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. :-(

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    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.

  5. One small step... But only a small step.. by eamacnaghten · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I welcome this statement of co-operation, but it is only a very small step in the right direction, and it will do little good and have hardly any effect.

    Spammers will always find a way to spam so long as there is money in it. If that money is denied them they will stop. "CAN-SPAM" acts need to be changed to "CANT-SPAM" - and internationally at that - and spammers need to be hit where it counts - in their bank balance.

    However - I do not see the above happening. All countries need to participate and co-operate, not just the ones involved in the press release, do you really see THAT happening? Also legislation NEEDS to be passed that the US have already shown they cannot - and most other countries will not dare to try - not good for the future there.

    I suppose we will have to get used to the usefulness of Email becoming more and more diluted, of the endless race between anti-spam software and spammers getting round it and so on. I think we will still have the internet and inboxes getting clogged up with that rubbish for some time yet - if not from now on in.

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    Web Sig: Eddy Currents