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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."

45 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. Perhaps I can help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've got some great spam here on cheap legal services.

  2. The important question here is.. by Sein · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When will Gator and WhenU be similarily restrained?

    1. Re:The important question here is.. by Sein · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Argh, yeah - I'm so used to typing Gator/Claria to make sure that Claria don't shed the image problem associated with their Gator spyware, and this time my brain slipped.

      Gator/Claria has deep pockets and corporate backing for their attempts to monopolize your desktop though, and have successfully sued people into submission for stating that their behaviour mimics that of other malicious intrusion software.

      In other words, they're rich slime who try to pound people into submission with SLAPP suits. And they still want to pretend that them using your computer for their own profit strategy is perfectly all right because of an EULA longer than the river Nile....

  3. Spam is a social problem by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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."
    1. Re:Spam is a social problem by AndreyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I cannot agree more. Prosecuting offenders one-by-one will never solve the problem as long as there is a supply of fools that spammers make money off of.

    2. Re:Spam is a social problem by raistphrk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When statistics show that the great majority of spam comes from a select few spammers, legislation CAN help fix the problem. When you put the big dogs in jail and out of business, some smaller ones may take their spot, but there will be a big dent in spam distribution.

    3. Re:Spam is a social problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There will always be so-called "fools" who buy products spammed, for the simple reason that, while unsolicited, spam is still advertising, and sometimes advertising hits the mark. That is to say, if I'm in the market for a product, and a spammer is advertising a good deal on said product, I'm going to buy it regardless of the method by which the advertising reaches me.

      Trying to get people to -not- buy products advertised in spam would be as effective as trying to abolish all advertising altogether.

    4. Re:Spam is a social problem by stewby18 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly. Same with things like muggings, too; so long as the social problem of poverty exists, there will be muggings, armed robbery, etc. Clearly they shouldn't be illegal either.

    5. Re:Spam is a social problem by kesler · · Score: 2, Funny

      You can fix social problems with laws; just enforce the law of natural selection.

    6. Re:Spam is a social problem by RealProgrammer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As soon as there is a method in the infrastructure to know who is spamming, we will be able to make spam go away.

      Blacklists, etc, don't work now because of address forgery. Take away the forgery and you can implement blacklists, address blocking, punitive mail bombs based on blacklist history, or whatever method is decided.

      --
      sigs, as if you care.
    7. Re:Spam is a social problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, you can. The best example of this is the pure food and drug act of 190x, which was passed in response to patent medicines which didn't disclose their ingredients, usually narcotic.

      This seems to be in the same genre, in that the software doesn't do what it claims to do, and in fact does something bad.

      Food and medicine products to this day, have ingredients listed.

    8. Re:Spam is a social problem by pipingguy · · Score: 4, Interesting


      If spam is such a problem for networks and humans (and definitely it is, and getting worse), then why aren't we seeing TV/Radio PSAs explaining why it is inherently a bad thing? Since everyone universally hates spam, this lack of public service information seems to be an implicit blind eye to the problem. Intel, AMD, Apple, etc. could bump up the corporate goodwill by publicly denouncing that which 99.9% of all email users consider to be a scourge of the internet. What would it cost, a few dozen millions in order to saturate the popular media for a few weeks? That's peanuts to these guys.

      I have a feeling that spammers make a huge amount of money selling lists to other would-be spammers.

    9. Re:Spam is a social problem by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Spam will never end as long as there will be fools who buy products advertised by unsolicited commercial e-mail.
      There are some of objections I'd make to your argument:
      1. Junk paper mail will never end as long as there are fools who buy products advertised by paper mail. But that's not a problem, because postage costs limit the amount of junk paper mail I'll get.
      2. A lot of spam is criminal: it's sent by zombie machines, or the spam itself is a trojan. No, you cannot fix social problems with legislation, but yes, you can discourage crimes against property with legislation.
      3. I don't think most spammers actually have a product to sell. The Nigerian scammers don't have a product to sell. The people sending me trojans pretending to be from PayPal don't have a product to sell. The spammers who crapflood anti-spam activists' mailboxes don't have a product to sell.
    10. Re:Spam is a social problem by keraneuology · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You cannot fix social problems with legislation.

      In other words, since robbery is a social problem we shouldn't have legislation against it?

      Spam will never end as long as there will be fools who buy

      By the same measure burglary will never end as long as there are fools who buy stolen merchandise.

      Hogwash.

      Spam is a criminal activity that involves theft, harassment, intrusion, invasion of privacy and, usually, fraud. What is needed is a combination of legislation (written by somebody who understands spam and is not paid by the DMA) and technology. The CANSPAM act was written after people knew that unsubscribe links could be coded in such a way to introduce hacks onto one's system, yet the idiots in Washington made these dangerous links mandatory. Legislation promising effective fines against companies that knowingly host images used in spamvertising or otherwise collect responses to repeated spam is only a start.

      As for the technology, I've been waiting for a spam-alert icon to be submitted for MSIE/Opera/Firefox - when visiting a website hosted by a spam-friendly network that appears on RBLs a little icon should glow red, thus quickly allowing me to determine if I want to patronize that website - if there was an easy way for my browser to alert me to spam-friendly networks then I would definitely do my web shopping elsewhere.

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    11. Re:Spam is a social problem by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >>Blacklists, etc, don't work now because of address forgery

      I assume you're talking about address/domain-based blacklists? Those would be the only one affected by "address forgery." I've not seen an address-based or domain-based blacklist in a very long time.

      Most current blacklists are IP-based. Those can't be forged if you realize how the email system works. Yes, false IP addresses can be injected into the Received: headers, but this is not news. Every correctly configured mailserver puts the IP address of the previous server in the "hop list", INCLUDING the receiving server. The admin of that server can look at the headers, and since he (hopefully) can trust his own server, the previous server in the list, the one whose IP was added by the destination, is the source of the spam.

      Blacklists DO work. 3rd parties don't like them because they may inconvienience them (sharing a mailserver with a spammer? Then you're going to be blocked). However, the opinions of 3rd parties (non-customers) are irrelevant.

  4. Spam is not covered under free speech by nurb432 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "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 ----
    1. Re:Spam is not covered under free speech by bleckywelcky · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly. Here's how I see it:

      This is my computer, you can not bother me on it unless I allow you to. If I visit your website, spam all the pop-ups you want. If I give you my email for the purposes of marketing, spam me all you want. But if I am just sitting here and you spam me with pop-ups through some spyware program or send me unsolicited emails, then you should be punished (assuming laws are in place to make such acts illegal).

      You can compare the situation to your property. People are not allowed to just walk on your property and put a lawn-sign in your yard. Nor can they can come up and talk to you if you've told them to stop trespassing (or through a restraining order, etc).

      Why should the two venues be considered any differently? They're both my property and I decide who can come, who can go, and what happens on my property. Simple as that.

  5. WTF? by enginuitor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "...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.

    1. Re:WTF? by dameron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What if somebody argued that graffiti was free speech?


      I agree with your point regarding spam, however graffiti is a bad example. Graffiti has often been used as an anonymous way to question the established authority or show defiance. While it's not protected (and rightly shouldn't be, as there is a very low signal to noise ration in graffiti), it has shown some social and political value in the past.

      Spam hasn't.

      Until there is a spam equivalent of the "V" for victory from WWII I'll give graffiti a little more play than spam.

      But yes, in general you are right.

      -dameron

    2. Re:WTF? by divot2001 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      quote: "and rightly shouldn't be, as there is a very low signal to noise ration in graffiti." An intrinsic part of the free speech is that you cannot infringe a person's right to free speech because it was inarticulate or unintelligible due to the ignorance or lack of education in the communicator. To do so allows groups to silence the minority when they try to voice an unpopular opinion. Graffiti is illegal because it is destroying either public or private property, not because of any message inside.

  6. How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by turnstyle · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Really, how does somebody decide to become a bad guy? Do you wake up some day, and say, I'm going to be a spammer, a scammer, a credit card thief?

    Do they even know that they're bad guys, or do they have themselves fooled?

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    1. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by gandalphthegreen · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do they even know that they're bad guys, or do they have themselves fooled?

      I'll just need your email address, and I'm sure that these poor, confused gentlemen can explain themselves to you.

    2. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by dhoonlee · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nobody believes they are the bad-guy.

      Even the most heinous criminal has a way of justifying their actions to themselves.

    3. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I hesitate to post with my name on this, but here's some insight. I hate these people just as much as you do.

      I'm not working for a corp anymore, trying to get a contracting business going, because you get screwed or outsourced working for anyone who gets investors via stock. The faceless nature of a corporation does not care who you are, your aspirations unrelated to the workplace and your current situation. They merely want your skills and labor. This is a concept that trickles down the management chain, unfortunately less by force but by those who want to "succeed". Personally, I'll take a heaping helping of poverty over that kind of success. I left when the disgust was far beyond what I could stand. Let's just say I'm not persuing the traditional avenues for work anymore. I would like to think I have an impressive skill set and resume, and I think a good portion of hiring companies would agree. So my talent is not really in question here.

      Anyways, to augment my stifled income I turned to various online freelance places. The pay isn't great but it's a buck to be made which equates to food being placed in my fridge, a roof over my head and some modern amenities such as electricity, plumbing, and internet access, 2 of which I require to make money at my trade. (No, I am not a plumber :)

      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.

      Second, because you are not put in the position where one job will pay the rent, you are put in a position where you bid on tons of jobs at a time - my average "bid day" is about 100 bids. These are all communicated and fullfilled. A good "bid day" will equate to around 20-30 projects varying in price from $50-$300. Only the cabals of 20 programmers get the big projects, and this isn't exactly something I want to make a sustainable income on. I average one bid day a month, $300 is a very well-paying project.

      Anyways, with the combination of these two, you can see where I'm going here. They give me a project, I don't ask what they're doing and I really don't care. Food on the table. I could care less if you get a silly piece of email that sells you viagra, I've got bigger things to worry about. Thankfully, my "real" contracting is starting to take off so I've stopped bidding until I have to worry about it again.

      I have gotten my "revenge" through a couple of well-placed timebombs in my scripts, and occasionally I'll create new accounts to bid and accept projects that are extremely vile (yes, there are lines) just to let them fall by the wayside. :) One time I configured a DNSBL for a spammer. Hope he doesn't plan to get mail from those hosts. :)

      If you want to blame me, fine. Sadly, I have bigger concerns than the morality of unsolicited email, giving someone a tool to spider popular websites and search engines (complete with auto-correcting open proxy support), amongst other things. As stated before it's not something I like at all, but it is, unfortunately, somewhat of a necessary evil. If you're about to say, "get a job at a gas station" or something sillier, I have a job coming up that requires 100% of my time at a pay which is 4 times what I was making at my corp job. The pay from that alone can keep me off those bids for ... oh, 6 or 7 months.

      Anyways, I'm done justifying myself. Consider this informative of the landscape that you are encountering. The "evil" people aren't writing these applications, the hungry are. :)

      Crime always comes to those who are lazy and want a good paycheck for being lazy. OTOH, I worked 80 hours last week for $40. If you want to call me a slimeball, think about the guy I used to work for who told me one thing about a raise I needed to get my head above water

    4. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by dubl-u · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to blame me, fine. Sadly, I have bigger concerns than the morality of unsolicited email, giving someone a tool to spider popular websites and search engines (complete with auto-correcting open proxy support), amongst other things.

      Yes, I do blame you. To get a few hundred bucks in your pocket, you're helping create tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in costs to other people. Heck, if you're working for a big spammer, the trouble you help make could cost others millions.

      I have a lot more respect for the crackheads who steal stuff out of cars in my neighborhood. Why? Well A, they're in the grips of a drug addiction; you're doing this with a clear head. And B, they're selling the stuff they steal for maybe 20 cents on the dollar, whereas your waste/profit ratio is 1-3 orders of magnitude worse.

      The only reason you and your employers aren't in jail is that the laws haven't caught up with you yet. But they will. A fine example of this comes from Con Man: A Master Swindler's Own Story. Many of the things he pulled happened to be legal at the time he started in the 1890s. But they're all illegal today precisely because people like him took advantage of the gap between "wrong" and "illegal". And I look forward to the day you and your kind end up, like him, in prison.

      If you really have "bigger concerns" than the waste of millions of dollars and the annoyance of millions of people, you'd better be the leader of a medium-sized country. Otherwise, you're just a sad loser who can't even be honest with himself about the harm he's causing.

    5. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The faceless nature of a corporation does not care who you are, your aspirations unrelated to the workplace and your current situation. They merely want your skills and labor. This is a concept that trickles down the management chain, unfortunately less by force but by those who want to "succeed". Personally, I'll take a heaping helping of poverty over that kind of success.

      Hmm...good for you. Standing up to those evil corporations. I'm glad to see your sense of morality is intact...

      I have gotten my "revenge" through a couple of well-placed timebombs in my scripts, and occasionally I'll create new accounts to bid and accept projects that are extremely vile (yes, there are lines) just to let them fall by the wayside. :) One time I configured a DNSBL for a spammer. Hope he doesn't plan to get mail from those hosts. :)

      And you feel morally justified because of the corporate jerks that apparently screw everyone over? If not, then why did you include the bit about why you choose to work freelance? Why not just say "I work freelance, and sometimes I need to do work for spammers to pay the bills." This is a bit like a model posing naked to pay rent, but I can accept it.

      It's just a bit annoying that you open up putting yourself on the moral high ground. You refuse to find work at a corporation, that could pay your bills, and yet because of moral qualms with corporations, you choose to do freelance work, which ends up involving spam jobs.

      OTOH, I worked 80 hours last week for $40.

      I'm genuinely sorry to hear that, but I just can't sympathize with you as long as you're convinced that morality only applies to people in charge.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    6. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by Sein · · Score: 2, Informative

      eLance, probably - they've limited the shit bidding where you would be competing against Eastern Europeans willing to bid $5 or what have you. It's a bit expensive to get in though - and more so if you want to move up in the higher tier. But they've cleaned up the act some, setting minimum bids and so on.

      That's kind of a non-issue in some cases though - not all the project submitters go with the lowest bidder. The trick is to appear as the most qualified bidder - you really don't wanna work for the assholes who expect to get a month's worth of full-time work from you for $50 anyway.

      Scriptlance and Rentacoder can also be good.

    7. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by dhoonlee · · Score: 2, Informative

      This guy's experience is obviously not as reflective of the "landscape" as he wishes. Most likely troll or an attempt at sympathy

      My room-mate from highschool has recently become a spammer, and he has described his income from it as "pretty good". He didn't give me an exact figure, but told me his two-man operation had a revenue of $100,000 in one month. And yes: who the hell works for 50 cents an hour? Give me a friggin' break.

    8. Re:How does somebody decide to become a bad guy? by serutan · · Score: 3, Informative

      What your post boils down to:

      I don't like working for companies.
      I decided to work for myself instead.
      To make this personal decision work, I do some jobs for people who suck up bandwidth to annoy everybody with crap.
      To justify myself to myself I commit petty acts of sabotage, and have rationalized it all with a survival argument.
      So don't blame me, I have no choice.

      Bull. Shit. I wouldn't say "get a job at a gas station" or something sillier, but I would say grow the hell up and accept responsibility for your personal decisions. Like somebody said above, nobody thinks they're bad. They always find a way to justify themselves. You're a classic case.

      In my 25 years in IT, about half as a contractor and half as an employee, I've worked for plenty of places that were not run by greedy bastards who screwed me out of raises or made me work 80 hours a week, or any of the other complaints I hear constantly from my peers. I have worked for some crappy places too, and have had dream jobs pulled out from under me because somebody's plans changed. But my personal solution has always been to keep looking, and not to walk the fence of "I know I'm creating shit for other people to step in, but I just can't help it. I have to put food in my fridge. I'm trapped." Like many other talented people who cop out, it's your own version of reality that you've trapped yourself in.

  7. What free speech issue? by ShatteredDream · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.

  8. Potential Civil Suits by The_Mystic_For_Real · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.

  9. Re:New Poll Idea by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 5, Funny

    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.

  10. No..... by creaturespeaker · · Score: 2, Insightful
    In my experience, most people who get spyware don't even know how they got it. Should you really have to read through a huge 20 page EULA everytime you install software (or an ActiveX control) just so you can find one sentence where it mentions "this will install spyware". Thats absurd to expect people to do that. Some of it even installs itself on to your computer by taking advantage of a security hole in the browser, so their is no EULA. Of course legislating spyware won't stop it totally but at least it will reduce it.

    Free Flat Screen HERE!

  11. Ban the EULA by FusionDragon2099 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nobody reads it. In essence, it's an end-run around the legal system.

  12. How exactly do you fix social problems? by schon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.

  13. Define "Bad"... by NoMaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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?
  14. Social Problems by Thu25245 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.

  15. Re:THIS IS NOT FREA SPEACH. by Sein · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They don't understand the bit where it says "Congress shall make no law restraining the freedom of speech".

    Okay, that's a bit disingenious - they do understand it, they just hope you don't. It's why they try to make it sound as if Congress passing laws dealing with a specific mode of theft of services (spam, spyware, trackerware, thiefware and other commercial malware that does not also violate other laws such as phishing and ID theft) is somehow "Restricting commercial free speech".

    No such goddamned thing - it's congress putting the assholes on notice that "You! Yes, you. The laws of theft of service applies to you too."

    However, spyware/thiefware (Gator/Claria, WhenU, and Spamford in this instance) is even worse - they specifically set out to steal the revenue from other affiliate/content providers/merchants and they also steal the computing resources neccesary to do this from you.

    Bayesian filtering and such can to some extent stop spammers. Ad-aware and Spybot can to some extent deal with hijackers. But neither is a solution to corporate interests legally stealing resources from others, is it?

    The next spam mail you get in your email, you can send a "Fuck you very much" to the Direct Marketers Association in the USA who spent more money lobbying for an opt-out regime than the rest of us will see in a lifetime.

    Their Canadian counterparts in the Canadian Direct Marketer's Association on the other hand has adopted a strong support for opt-in and preferably verifiable/double opt-in as the industry Recommended Best Pratice.

    The CDMA understood something the DMA failed to get: in the long run, it's Bad For Business to piss off your potential customers.

  16. The Hurricane Fix by TFGeditor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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.
  17. Re:New Poll Idea by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.

  18. I prefer this article by SidV · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html? article=45988 Because it points out his address.

  19. From the article by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Wallace's lawyer, Ralph Jacobs of Philadelphia, said Wallace wants "to use the Internet for advertising in lawful and proper ways."

    So why doesn't he?

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
  20. Historical Analogy by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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)
  21. Not Scalable by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    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)
  22. Ahh yes by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "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.