Spam's U.S. Roots
ahab_2001 writes "Notwithstanding how tired my finger is getting from deleting all of those unsolicited messages from China and Korea, Information Week reports that a study of filtered messages by the spam-blocking firm CipherTrust revealed that some 86% of spam originates in the U.S. Apparently, a very limited set of IPs with high-bandwidth connections is dishing out the bulk of the spam, according to this study."
Oh wait, that's not a good thing in this case.
a very limited set of IPs with high-bandwidth connections is dishing out the bulk of the spam
Crush those sites. Turn them off. Then repeat the study.
We should treat spam like a disease... and perform meaningful research on it.
Davak
Great, give me a list and I'll block them on my mail server.
Posted by a Debian GNU/Linux user
What do I do find morally distrubing is that there are geeks out there making assloads of cash providing a conduit for this spam with high powered servers and keeping the senders essentially nameless.
Why doesn't spam come under the same scrutiny and attempts to shut it down as P2P?
If it is mostly as centralized as this study indicates, it should be easy.
OK, I know the answer (nobody's precious "IP" is threatened by spam), but if there are going to be attempts to regulate the Internet, it seems like this is a far more productive place to start.
A house divided against itself cannot stand.
I skimmed the article, but couldn't find the answer to the question that, I'm sure, is on most /.ers minds: what are those IPS???
Funny. My finger's not tired, I use SpamBayes. Sure, I miss out on great messages touting... "A great opportunity... New and spreading via the Internet in a very big way-It's FREE to join, and it promises a lot. Too good to be true?" ...but it makes it easier.
Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.
We should start sending out "fake" spam with encoded music/movies in it. RIAA and MPAA would buy some new laws to stop spam.
What CipherTrust REALLY means is 86% of their potential clients reside in the US.
According to this, notorious spammer Scott Richter has his own netblock (69.6.0.0-69.6.79.255), which until recently was connected to the internet through Taiwan based ISP Chunghwa Telecom. After they gave up on him, Germany based T-Systems took over. If you have any problems with spam from this netblock, their security team would like to hear about it. They have announced that they will terminate the contract if Richter violates it.
I'm looking for suggestions on what to do next. In the meantime, whatever you do, do not run this command:
That's a 4MB sample of the lists the gentleman has for sale, and surely the Slashdot effect runs the risk of using up all his bandwidth. Don't do it, I beg you!Carousel is a lie!
According to the article, Asia has a significantly higher number of spamming machines. It's just that the US, with readily available high bandwidth connections (and nutbars like Alan Ralsky) spews out a disproportionate percentage of all actual spam messages.
Give us the CIDR blocks of the whole ISP that the spammer is using. Block all packets from those ISPs. Once ISPs learn that they get blocked for tolerating spam, they will try harder to prevent them.
Get your own free personal location tracker
Just yesterday I received spam from this guy at cybersmtp.com, advertising they can send bulk emails out. Check this out, I was surprised at the number of emails they have in their database, and the relative cheapness to send out nearly 300 million emails:
No Software to Buy - Nothing to download
Lowest cost for broadcast
E-Mail is a key component in maintaining contact with your customers
Email Broadcasting
Please choose from the following:
[ ] 1,000,000 e~mail sent $400
[ ] 5,000,000 e~mail sent $1,500
[ ] 10,000,000 e~mail sent $2,000.00
[ ] 56-70,000,000 e~mail sent $2,500.00
[ ] 224-280,000,000 e~mail sent $10,000.00
We use our own directory, so you do not need to pay one dime extra.
A study by the National Weather Service just found out sky is blue, most of the time.
In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
Spamcop reports on SENDING IP addresses.
The study was reporting on who actually sent the spam.
It is widely known US based spammers use open proxies, zombies, open relays and paid foreign spammers abroad to hide their tracks.
So both studies are correct. It's just that they're reporting different things.
In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
That's why my answer is not to go after the spammers who are slime but often out of US jurisdiction, or even the ISPs because while some of them are evil & look the other way, a lot of them are trying, but it's hard work. No don't bother with them, I think they should go after the companies selling the crap. There's a contact in most of the spam for people to actually buy the crap. And that's a hell of a lot easier than tracking the spammers, nail the businesses paying for the spam. I guess it's kinda like going after the Johns instead of the prositutes.
Vote Quimby.
http://spam.weblogsinc.com/entry/4463682046968893/
Link goes to quote, plus more links backing up this data....
"A study released this week by Commtouch reveals that about 55% of all spam originates in the United States, and that more than 73% of spam refers to websites which are hosted in China.
Ninety-nine percent of all websites mentioned in spam sample analyzed by Commtouch were hosted in China, South Korea, the United States, Russia, or Brazil"
Here is another link, with a more detailed article.
http://www.securitypipeline.com/showArticle.jhtml? articleId=22103058
TruePunk | Games