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Spam Volume Jumps 35% In November

gregleimbeck writes "Spam volume soared another 35% in November, an e-mail security vendor said Thursday, and the month saw spam tactics that reduced the efficiency of traditional anti-spam filters. 'There's been a huge increase in spam volume,' says David Mayer, a product manager at IronPort Systems, 'from 31 billion spams a day on average in October 2005 to 63 billion in October 2006. But in November, we saw two surges that averaged 85 billion messages a day, one from Nov. 13 to 22, the other from Nov. 26 to 28.'"

9 of 371 comments (clear)

  1. I'd say more than 35% by twiggy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it's just me, but my spam volume seems to have jumped at least 200% in recent months.

    Are we finally going to reach a point where only trusted addresses can email us? Seems the arms race is being severely lost. I've got a pretty good spamassassin config and I can't keep up anymore, I find myself having to manually delete literally hundreds of messages a day now.

    --
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    1. Re:I'd say more than 35% by sam_paris · · Score: 5, Informative

      i'd say try a different webmail provider. I get a LOT of spam per day, (about 100+) and 99.9% is categorised at spam by gmail. In the last month i would estimate i've had 2 spam messages hit my actual inbox. The rest were filtered out by gmail.

    2. Re:I'd say more than 35% by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's because you've been trained by Hollywood and Slashdot and all the other happy lefty bullshitters to believe anyone in business must be a liar and a thief. It's a generalization that isn't even close to true, but that doesn't stop it from being propagated in the name of populism. Unfortunately, the idea of the noble poor is just as much a myth.

      Everyone has equal potential to be scum. It's just easier to make people hate successful scum.

      --
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  2. Re:Pump & dump for PHYA by gvc · · Score: 5, Informative

    P.S. Feel free to Google PHYA and click the ad. It costs them money.

  3. Why do we fight this at the end? by cliffski · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I use (amongst other thing) spamhilator. It's free, and its pretty reliable. The trouble I have is that I *have* to allow everyone to mail me. When you run a business, you *do* occasionally get people guessing your email address from your domain and sending you a potentially vital email. I just can't afford to block emails by default. And anything (like captchas or auto-response systems) that makes it hard for my customers to contact me is just BAD.

    I don't see why we are always fighting this problem at the reception end, rather than the source. Spam filters can work quite well, but why are they mostly applied right at the very endpoint of the chain?
    I'd be very happy for some basic filtering to take place on my outgoing mail at the ISP level. If it meant the odd automatic email with a captcha saying "are you sure you intended to send this mail?" before a spammy-looking email went out, thats fine with me, and wouldn't that approach cut down on all those twits whose PC's are part of a botnet without them realising it?

    Bah, why is firefox suddenly getting me to spell check in American?

    --
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  4. The NEW 640k quote... by illuminatedwax · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Two years from now, spam will be solved" - Bill Gates

    --
    Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
  5. Re:Pump & dump for PHYA by cashman73 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Stock ticker PHYA belongs to Physicians Adult Daycare, Inc. They recently put out this announcement saying that they have nothing to do with the email spammers, and are trying to catch them.

    Basically, the way this scam works is that the scammers buy a bunch of worthless stock (as in a few cents/share), then email fake stockbroker advice websites and fake advice emails to people, trying to get them to buy the stock. When the stock is worth a decent amount of money, the scammers sell and leave everyone else that bought into their so-called, "advice," with worthless stock.

  6. Who reads it? by Kelson · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Is there anyone out there who seriously READs this garbage and actually considers sending money to these people?

    The great irony of the spam arms race is that the better we get at filtering the spam, the more garbage the spammers send out just to get the same return. You can't stop filtering it, because the mail you want would be buried in a torrent of spam. But filtering more just raises the bar for the next round of spam.

    Eventually it may get to the point where (a) email is unusable or (b) spammers have to send such a massive volume of cr@p that it no longer becomes a cheap business, and it ceases to be worth spamming. Until then, things will keep escalating.

  7. Bandwidth by tef · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If for example each spam message was around 1k of info, that's on average 63 tera bytes of info! Using the new Seimans 107gb speed record connection, that would take almost 10 minutes to transfer all that spam! I just wonder how much faster the internet would be without spam.