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Spam from Taiwan

TristanGrimaux writes "According to a recent study done by CipherTrust, two thirds of the world's spam is sent by Taiwan servers. The US follows with 24% and in a distant third is China with only 3% of the servers who actually sends the spam." The article cites easy access to broadband and lack of crackdown on offenders as the main contributing factors.

5 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Whats specific about Taiwan? by Heir+Of+The+Mess · · Score: 5, Informative
    Having been to Taiwan a fair bit I can think of some possibilities:-

    Most people I know there earn about US$15k/yr, and upgrading the RAM in your Pentium3 machine and then the Hard Drive, and then the video card is sort of common practice. Forking out big $$ for Windows XP isn't real easy so a lot of people are running some SP1 version of Windows XP they bought for $1 off the street, and this version gets owned pretty fast, and can't be patched from windows update. So there are lots of bots.

    Now 24Mbit internet access is like $5-$10 per month, so you can see there is quite a big engine there for generating spam.

    The culture there is such that they love the latest thing, so I could imagine that there would also be a tendency for people to install software off the net that has malware in it as well.

    Another thing I noticed is that your average grandmother there seems quite good at using a computer. So I could imagine that there might be more pensioner types sitting there doing some amount of spamming for a little bit of money.

    --
    Australian running a company that does C# / C++ / Java / SQL / Python / Mathematica
  2. Re:Survey Says? by Technician · · Score: 5, Informative

    More like follow the offshore bank accounts, Grand Cayman Islands, etc.

    I lived there. Internet access is expensive as it was a government protected monopoly. Check the rates. Cable and Wireless is the company. To visit, see www.candw.ky.

    When they first put in internet, they got 2 satelite T1 links for the whole island. Little Cayman and Cayman Brac still did not have internet. They charged $0.25/minute for access on dial up.

    Needless to say I didn't get internet until I returned to the states.

    They have since gotten a Fiber Optic cable to Jamaca and they now offer DSL. They are running a promotion for $25/month for the first year. That is CI $ not USD. The price is close to US $30/month. Restrictions such as can't compete with the phone company by using VOIP is the norm.
    The plan appears to be capped at 256K unless you upgrade to a faster plan. For example the 1024 plan is CI $74. The 512 plan is $59.

    Cayman Islands is a nice place to go for diving and sun, but not for internet based business.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  3. Re:Taiwan China ... by kclittle · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, we have shades of red and red here. :)

    Does the People's Republic of China collect taxes in Taiwan? No, the Republic of China does.

    Does the PRC actually try to enforce its criminal laws in Taiwan? No, but the ROC enforces its laws.

    Does the PRC define the commerce regulations, health regulations, education standards, voting laws, aviation regulations, etc. within the borders of Taiwan? No -- but the ROC does.

    Does the PRC have military bases on Taiwan? No ... but the ROC does!

    What the U.N., U.S. and Europe say in polite diplo-speak is one thing. The working reality (and the *money* reality) is that Taiwan is a separate country, perhaps not in name, but in operational fact.

    --
    Generally, bash is superior to python in those environments where python is not installed.
  4. misinformation by lxt518052 · · Score: 4, Informative
    There isn't a country in this world called Democratic Peoples Republic of China. The 1.3 billion population live in a country called PRC(People's Republic of China).

    ROC used to rule the whole China, mainland and Taiwan combined. They lost the civil war in 1949 and retreated to Taiwan. Neither PRC nor ROC see each other as a ligitimate government of China. At least both constitutions claim largely overlapping territories. It's a stalemale over half a century.

    How people are so casual about the facts is beyond me.

    --
    People who dislike China tend to mention Tiananmen Square a lot, but they always forget the Tank Man is also a Chinese.
  5. Re:SPAM origins by Haeleth · · Score: 5, Informative

    It got so bad, I just started block entire class A's from countries I know
    I am not going to email to or from.
    [...]
    81


    I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding of the IP allocation system. Class A networks are not associated with single countries, but with registries. 81, for example, is one of the networks administered by the RIPE NCC; an IP address beginning with 81 could be located anywhere within Europe or the Middle East.

    In fact, my very own IP address begins with 81. I live in Britain, which - as you may be aware - is not in "Asia,
    Latin America, or Eastern Europe". It's a good thing I don't want to email you, isn't it?