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Deconstructing a Pump-and-Dump Spam Botnet

Behind the Front writes "eWeek has teamed up with Joe Stewart, a senior security researcher at SecureWorks in Atlanta, to show the inner working of a massive botnet that is responsible for the recent surge of 'pump and dump' spam. It's a detailed picture of how these sleazy operations work and why they're so hard to shut down. Sobering numbers: 70,000 infected machines capable of pumping out a billion messages a day, virtually all of them for penis enlargement and stock scams. Excellent graphics, too, including one chart that shows that Windows XP Service Pack 2 is hosting nearly half the attacked machines."

2 of 382 comments (clear)

  1. I'm glad I run my own mail server by zitch · · Score: 3, Informative

    And implemented greylisting on it. Cut out almost %100 of the spam I have been receiving (Was up to 50 emails a day, now I think only one has gone through since I installed postgrey on my mail server in 1.5 months!). Unfortunately, this is easy to get around, so it should only be a matter of time till that is worked around and becomes useless in the spam fight. By that time, hopefully another anti-spam method comes up...

  2. Shorting won't work... by camusflage · · Score: 3, Informative

    No broker will allow you to short a pink sheet stock, which the overwhelming majority of pump and dump spam deals with.

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    The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake