Savvis Grudgingly Get Savvy About Spam
ElvenMonkey writes "The BBC is reporting that Savvis has finally promised to ditch those accounts that are using its network to send spam, in an effort to reduce the damage already done against its reputation; the CEO promises that all such accounts will be closed within 10 days (working days?) Amongst these accounts are believed to be the majority of the top 150 worst spammers worldwide."
Why do they still have any link to the network? Other ISPs should cut them off if they refuse to cut off spammers.
They're just upset to get rid of those tasty, money making, high-bandwidth using spam accounts.
In related news the CEO said, "To make up for the lost revenue, we'll host pr0n. We'll be actively competing with GoatSex Guy."
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Right on the day my emails for spam-blocking software were going out. Foiled again...
Disconnect and self-destruct, one bullet at a time.
You can go to Savvis.net for the official spiel or try http://www.savvis.info/ for the truth.
I was just starting to enjoy my corrspondence to that poor cancer ridden Zimbabwean, who happens to be trapped in space!
......a 75% decrease in network traffic.
-Randy
... the spam will keep flowing. I guess the spammers themselves aren't the only ones raking in the green. I would imagine that the prospect of losing so much face to their largest clients is probably the only thing that got them to consider fixing the problem. If I happened to operate a large company, I wouldn't want to be associated with a company that's a spam factory.
There is a difference between "insightful" and "inciteful" other than spelling.
They obviously know who the 148 people are so why will it take them 10 days to remove their accounts?
Are they going to send them a greeting card or something that says, "oh, even though you are great customers we are being told we can no longer host your illegal activities so you have 10 days to vacate?"
Who's gonna remind me that I might have been shortchanged by nature?
But it makes me wonder if this was more of a move of desperation for Savvis. On the surface, sure - they were threatened with what amounts to a permanent blacklist. But even then.
This sig no verb.
With how slow their site is responding, I wonder if they're responsible for sending out that much spam in reality -- or maybe their connections are just flooded with the stuff.
He who laughs last is stuck in a time dilation bubble.
This only happened after Savvis was told that their entire network was about to be e-mail blocked.
This only happened after Savvis was told that their entire network was about to be e-mail blocked.
Which confuses me greatly. There are ISPs in the world that haven't already blocked all of Savvis at the router level?
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
Savvis may be finally ready to drop these spammers, but how long before another ISP is willing to pick-up the $2 million dollar cash flow?
How long will it take for others to unblock their IP ranges so they can recieve legit e-mails from them?
[Rob McCormick] disputed the figure of $2 million a month revenue from the spammers, and said the actual figure is only a tenth of that amount.
Which is to say, they bill $2 million, but spammers, being spammers, only pay 1/10th.
Can't help but how much that has to do with botting the lying thieves, and how much is the threat to block their entire network.
I worked at a major competitor (big company) of these guys for a while. Almost 50% of hosting revenue came from Porn. They were great customers. Seldom complained. More often than not, paid full price for bandwidth, and always paid their bills on time.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
Oh come on, of course they weren't going to do anything if no real threat emerged. They were making somewhere between 200,000 and 2,000,000 a month from the spammers. As a business in today's market would you give up that kind of cash flow w/o any repercussions coming your way?
If you say anything other than "no" you're lying.
The alliteration gave it away ;-)
Thank god! I run a webhosting buisiness and I frequently get huge amount of spam from Savvis ip ranges. The spammers 'poked the eye of the sleeping dragon' so to speak and now that it is 'awake' the dragon is finally taking out the spammers who plauge our inboxes day in and day out. I run spam assassin and its still not killing all the spam I receive so this is a step in the right direction. Though I fear spammers may just move to other companys or another account on Savvis. Hopefully it does not come to that but it just may in the looming months.
Well, given that Savvis's customers (both their own and the ones they got from c&w) include people like Lycos and a few Federal agencies, that might not be such a good idea.
All's true that is mistrusted
At first I saw the name `Savvis', and I'm thinking, never heard of them before, who's that? Then I saw the mention of C&W in the article and the light went on -- "Oh, Clueless and Witless! It all makes sense now!"
There is a spellbook here; eat it? [ynq]
If 99.99% of their business comes from other sources (as TFA says), then giving up that piddly amount of revenue in order not to be associated with 148 of the most worthless humans on earth should be a slam dunk. Well, at least if they're looking past their next quarter's projections, which admittedly may be a stretch.
Now I can finally start getting some of our servers out of blacklists after DC's put in Savvis and route across them
Rus
Cheap UK and US VPS
When they cancel a spammer, make the information on the spammer public so that the spammer can be tracked and sued.
Fight Spammers!
Step 1: Become well-known on the Internet
Step 2: IPO
Step 3: ???
They should be driven out of business and their assets seized for compensation for the damage they've caused. I've got a call out to my lawyer, Savvis is the Enron/Worldcom of the Internet! Please post their network ranges. What they are doing isn't good enough, they need to be destroyed before they kill again.
AIUI, the "99.99%" is of the number of customers, not revenue or profits, BICBW.
James F.
That they find another unethical ISP that doesn't mind taking money from thieves(I doubt that they "earned" most of their money legally, they use viruses in order to spread their crap, they use open proxies on compromised machines to hide themselves, etc), will turn a blind eye to illegal activities(i.e. ThePlanet.com ignores reports of fake bank and phishing sites), and the ISP is ok with having their IP range blacklisted to hell.
If they are doing legal spam, and not violating the AUP, then I'm sure they have to be given notice or they could counter sue for breach of contract..
Considering how scummy spammers are, id not put it past them to do something like that.
Disclaimer: I've *not* seen the contract/aup nor do i know the legal status of the spam they are sending.. I'm just guessing here..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Every time a story gets raised on Slashdot about spam, hundreds of Slashdot posters blame it on those commies in China, Korea, Russia etc and then call for blocks of all emails from these countries...
Now we have some proof that 148 of the world's worst spammers are hosted by a US company will these same people call for a complete block on US emails or is that now a crazy approach?
The actual saying is: if you steal one penny you are a thief. If you steal one billion you are in big trouble unless someone burns the building down.
Until there is a universal anti-spam framework in place across the internet, this move won't help anyone. It will help Savvis's reputation (at least, it will help them eventually; people will still block them for a while). But it won't help spam recipients, because the spammers will simply go elsewhere. Spammers, being the leeches that they are, adapt pretty damn fast.
He disputed the figure of $2 million a month revenue from the spammers, and said the actual figure is only a tenth of that amount.
It's not worth $2m/month for the bad publicity, how much less then $200K/month. That doesn't make sense. If you're only making $200K/month, little over $1000/spammer/month, then dump them. Why is this even being discussed?
Do you have ESP?
With all the spam-blocking programs out there, and with most of the major web-based email providers offering their own spam protection, I wonder why there's still a tremendous uproar about spam. Myself, I haven't needed to delete a single spam message in probably six months, and I have three web-based accounts.
Is spam still truly the problem people say it is?
If this is ignorant, then I embrace it as an opportunity to learn.
.... Too late...
Too late. The fact that the PHBs at Savvis actually considered keeping the scumbags as customers takes them off my acceptable vendors list.
May they burn in hell.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
There are ISPs in the world that haven't already blocked all of Savvis at the router level?
Wow man!! According to the article, they provide conectivity for several banks and Wall Street. ISPs blocking Savvis would be commiting corporate suicide.
Well, given that Savvis's customers (both their own and the ones they got from c&w) include people like Lycos and a few Federal agencies, that might not be such a good idea.
Why not? If I run an ISP, I am perfectly within my rights to block all traffic from Savvis's networks regardless of who is renting bandwidth from them.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
I personally have complete confidence in Savvis
Spammer likes spam-friendly ISP. Hardly earth-shattering news.
There are two problems with this: 1) AG's office can get the information is they ask, as most ISPs will help law enforcement; 2) An AG's (or most government agencies) office usually will negotiate some slap on the wrist. But, if you have 50 different people filing lawsuits against a spammer, it will hurt much more.
Fight Spammers!
Eh?!? Surely you mean "our insurance will buy something" ? Why would spammers be expected to pay for this?
Nobody should use a service provider that showed such noral!
Over the past 48hrs, I noticed a tenfold decrease in the amount of spam I have been receiving, and I have no idea what caused it. Could this maybe have something to do with it?
Maybe, but when our customers can't access legitimate sites, they head to another ISP. We can't even use spamhaus because it blocks too many networks with real users on them.
All's true that is mistrusted
(From the "this is news?" department):
Found on their website
The following general actions are considered "abuse" and are strictly prohibited:
Using SAVVIS networks to transmit material that SAVVIS believes to be illegal, obscene, or inappropriate.
Forging of message headers or identity information, or taking any action with the intent of bypassing restrictions or limits on access to a specific service or site. This prohibition does not restrict the legitimate non-commercial use of pseudonymous or anonymous services.
Falsifying identity or contact information (whether given to SAVVIS, to the InterNIC, or other parties).
And found elsewhere on the same page, specifics against "spam e-mailing." That pretty much covers the actions of those who are using the system to send out unsolicited commercial e-mail.
I believe that Savvis ought to be made to completely reveal to the authorities and the Internet Community the identities, home and work addresses and telephones of those persons identified with the sending of UCEs. That might take 10 days, though it should not.
Of course that means I'll get less pr0n in my in-box....
Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
A lot of people here are well aware that spam is coming from those countries, and that spammers operating in the US use those countries to send their stuff.
I really doubt that people here are going to call for the complete blocking of US emails because unlike China, Korea, Russia, etc, there is a good chance that you will get legit email from a US source. The point is blocking of those countries is that it is unlikely one will get any legit email from them.
If one doesn't know anyone in those countries, or does business with those countries, why should they waste their time and bandwidth accepting mail from them?
My software addresses this issue by:
1) Making it 'almost impossible' to spam.
2) Any spam that 'gets into the system' is clearly marked as such on the email message subject line.
3) Emails sent to recipient accounts serviced by my software containing user-unwanted content are automatically 'deleted' and never appear in their inboxes.
4) Any emails containing any 'hostile' content whatsoever is rendered inert and safe to handle and scan for malware.
Full details here.
Wide usage of my software will put into place the 'universal anti-spam framework' that you seek.
If your ISP cut off connections to them, you'd probably complain when you couldn't access a LEGITIMATE site.
Which is the problem. They're so big that they have lots of legitimate customers and a few spammers.
The only way to go after them is through their reputation and their customers. Which is what happened. They don't want to be known as a spammer's network so they have to change.
Don't buy their services! I will not be satisfied until their entire company goes down the tube.
Are you going on the assumption that most American's don't know about and couldn't give a shit about the rest of the world?
Shameful if true, harmful if false.
Just for the record, most of the illegitimate email I get is from the States - sometimes I get something that's literate and interesting from over there, though, so I choose not to block the ENTIRE CONTINENT.
Maybe the answer is to prosecute the many prolific spammers based in the US given free reign at the moment?
...don't ya know?
I wonder if it's occured to anyone that a decent percentage of those "spammers"' machines are actually those of unaware home users with worms or back-door type software installed on them...
...as in forever. Let it serve as an abject lesson to other hosters that if they take up the soon to be alleged spam gap, they too will get permanently blocked.
Wow, that's astoundingly original. I don't like the name though, I think you ought to call it something a bit more deadly like "Spam Assassin". Then it'll be outstanding! ...
Oh, wait
good work.
Savvis, isn't that the new pronunciation of "Agis"?
(Agis hosted Sanford Wallace for about a year while loudly proclaiming they weren't doing anything wrong. LOTS of people found out how to block IP ranges. Agis later repented, booted Wallace et al, but it was too late. Nobody who cared about their online reputation would choose them as a host, and Agis went belly-up not too long thereafter.)
...why had I never heard of them before? (Maybe they don't do anything that *is* worth mentioning?)
Via spam I've been submitting through www.spamcop.net. They've received soooooo many complaints that they don't wan't to receive any more. Here's the output:
Tracking link: http://www.sheck-buy.com
[report history]
ISP does not wish to receive report regarding http://www.sheck-buy.com
Resolves to 216.39.69.238
Routing details for 216.39.69.238
[refresh/show] Cached whois for 216.39.69.238 : abuse@savvis.net
Using abuse net on abuse@savvis.net
abuse net savvis.net = abuse@savvis.net
Using best contacts abuse@savvis.net
ISP does not wish to receive reports regarding http://www.sheck-buy.com - no date available
http://www.sheck-buy.com has been appealed previously.
This is just ONE step in ratchetting up the cost of spamming.
As you can see in the article, the spammers paid LOTS of money to savvis for the bandwidth.
Now they'll have to find another ISP which will, probably, charge them even MORE money to put up with the crap that savvis is unwilling to deal with any more.
This isn't the war, but it is a victory.
"He drank, beat his wife and abused his children, and he had one virtue which he believed outweighed all his faults. He paid his bills. To be in debt was the one - and only - cardinal sin to men like Lucas Cross."
Actually, you may not be.
Savvis is a Tier1 ISP, meaning that they to not purchase transit from any other providers. Thus, if you are a customer of Savvis, you have every right to disconnect your service. However, if you are a peer of Savvis, you can only disconnect your service if they are in violation of your pre-established peering policy. Any unilateral filtering or blocking on public peering sessions is usually explicitly forbidden by peering policies.
Agis = All You Get Is Spam
Grundgesetz * 23. Mai 1949 - 30. November 2007 - http://www.vorratsdatenspeicherung.de/
I kinda recall using some kind of search on lycos about half a decade ago (and remember kids, web stuff ages in dog years!), but what use is Lycos now? It's yet another portals-shall-make-ye-rich, AOL-aping, ad infested, "where do you want to go today!?", also-ran ghetto.
It's utterly irrelevant.
We need to track down the spammers, take them to court, and take away some of there money.
One lawsuit is not going to put a dent in their business, but when they have to defend 50 lawsuits and pay $10,000 in attorney fees to defend each one and then pay a $5,000 judgment, then it will hurt them.
Fight Spammers!
What SPEWS and similar services do is blacklist people, and users of the blacklists can decide whether to use the blacklist to block incoming messages, or whether to use it as weighting in systems like SpamAssassin. I fairly commonly see SpamAssassin ratings that say "X points because it's in blacklist1, Y points because it's in Blacklist2, Z points because it's matches the Nigerian_3 pattern, N points because it's ALL YELLING", etc.
SPEWS does have a reputation for being overzealous, and blacklists that are way overzealous get ignored by users, or given a low SpamAssassin weighting or whatever, as opposed to more conservative and responsible blacklists. But that's a choice you can make.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I can understand people working with Steve Lindford and Spamhuas since he is a well known anti-spam advocate, but how on earth could anyone work with SPEWS, since SPEWS prides itself on being un-contactable, untraceable, hidden?
SPEWS is becoming increasely irrelevent now anyway, as it seems Spamhaus is doing the same and much better job, and now combined with the XBL and SBL for both automated and manual listings, it is one of the most effective lists, compared with the collateral-ridden false positive SPEWS.
...and the annoying spammers had a machine call me on the phone and say that I might have accidentally mistaken their ad for junk mail. (It might have been different spammers, and no, I correctly identified their ad as junk mail :-)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
You'd think if they knew who the 148 spammers were, just give them the list had have them gone today.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
Some of the difference is that somebody buying from a big hosting company is probably better capitalized, and has a better idea of what their market is, either because they did their research upfront, or more likely because they ran a site for a while and it grew big enough to need a big ISP - while the sites that don't make it big don't move off the small ISPs they started on.
1) Make it illegal for ISPs to allow customers to send SPAM.
2) Make it illegal for particulars to send SPAM (directly or thru a 3rd party) using either local or foreign ISPs. Consider SPAM (even from third party) in favor or particular's webpage as a solid proof of their approval.
3) Endorse this law across different countries.
This way, spammers will be forced to leave the nation, and will have nowhere to hide. After they install themselves on other countries, it's just a matter of blocking their IP's.
What govt people don't realize, is that all this money that spammers got, comes from the AVERAGE USERS. If they cut the spammers, they're not cutting the income. The users ARE STILL THERE. THE MONEY IS STILL THERE.
They don't lose by banning SPAM. They win!
I can't believe that I haven't heard of Savvis' reputation until they're now trying to reform it. I'm a decision maker at a fairly large company and decided to be a customer of Savvis' for several years until we consolidated all of our communications lines with two other companies. Had I known they were a spam haven, I never would've chosen to do business with them. There certainly are enough providers in the world to allow you to stand by your principles when choosing one. Companies that are a haven for spammers (especially seemingly legitimate ones like Savvis) should be labeled as such in every possible avenue.
I'm a big tall mofo.
I use Savvis as our ISP and I have been incredibly impressed with them from Sales to Network admins. They know their stuff.
It sounds like they bought a company, considered keeping the spammers for cash but realized that they were bad for business because they hurt legitimate customers.
Rob McCormack decides to shut them down within 10 days. I think he should be applauded. They made the right decision.
I read the savvis.info site but I think that's more disgruntled ex-employee than factual information.
Every company as large as they are will have problems but they really have their stuff together. When you call them, you talk to real people with real answers.
Disclaimer: Not only am I a satisfied customer, I'm also a stock holder.
Whatever.....
Let's just say that I had a very inside view of how SPAM and Savvis works. About as close as you can imagine...
No matter what Savvis PR is telling people, Savvis will stop hosting SPAMmers when it stops paying immediate commissions to their sales reps for selling SPAM contracts and not before..
More than that I'm not allowed to say.
Stupid question, but is this the same SAVVIS that I remember hearing was co-founded by Timothy Roberts of Infinium Labs? If true, what I think is more interesting than the news regarding spammers on their netork is that a company he once belonged to is actually still alive and kicking.
AUPs mean nothing at all. Actions mean something. And maybe eventually Savvis will start taking action. We'll see.
What would be of value is not an AUP that prohibits spam, but rather, a covenant that commits the provider to each customer that the network will stay spam-free. I'll believe a Savvis turnaround if they do that.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
"Where I can buy software for 1/10 of the normal price" == Suprnova
If you don't change that to "SourceForge.net" or "OSDir.com", I guess I'll have to arrest you for inducing copyright infringement. You have the right to remain silent, so shut the **** up. You have the right to an attorney...
If Savvis were to segregate its UBE-sending customers into a separate block of IP addresses, many users of blacklists would find that a rather desirable outcome, as they could easily block savvis2.net's IPs.
It's been reported the government is acting almost serious about spam as a criminal enterprise lately (although not as serious as it is about other so-called crimes).
The government's misguided priorities aside, I wonder if the government hasn't finally woken up and begun to consider spam for what it really is, a criminal conspiracy, and rightly defining "criminal conspiracy" to include people knowingly and willingly providing services that furthered the conspiracy.
Rather than actually taking the time to file genuine RICO cases, perhaps they are threatening them (or at least laying out a pretty solid criminal conspiracy cases in the more obvious situations) and some of the people playing ball with spammers aren't going to get scared out of doing that.
Not everyone will get scared, but if enough did, it might just cut off enough of the air supply to spamming to tip the balance in the direction of making spam too expensive and not portable enough to work. It wouldn't go away 100%, but it would be back to the levels of the late 90s when it was far less pervasive.
18 csr1-ve243.SantaClarasc8.savvis.net (66.35.194.50) 210.745 ms 211.044 ms 210.92 ms
19 66.35.212.174 (66.35.212.174) 213.524 ms 212.497 ms 212.599 ms
20 slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) 209.927 ms 210.262 ms 209.923 ms
-- Somebody stuck somewhere in a big world wide web that I can't escape from
SPEWS a professional blacklist ....
I suppose you believe that NANAE is a "professional" newsgroup too, with no rabid anti-spammers .
This only happened after Savvis was told that their entire network was about to be e-mail blocked.
Or they were having to spend too much time fighting DDOS attacks against their border routers.
The truth shall set you free!
My hotmail account has not received any spam today for the first time since 27 seconds after the account was created.
Sweet!