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The New Yorker On Spam

aqk notes an article in the Aug. 6th New Yorker surveying the spam problem up-to-date. The New Yorker may not be exactly the MSM, but it is pretty influential. The author got only one fact wrong that I noticed: Canter and Siegel's seminal spam was propagated through Usenet and not email. Still, it's a good look at the history of spam and the scale of the problem today. The amount of spam that "spam king" Robert Alan Soloway, indicted under the CAN-SPAM Act, is accused of sending over a period of four years is now pumped out about every 30 seconds, around the clock, around the world.

3 of 132 comments (clear)

  1. Re:It'll be hard to change minds. by gsslay · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I'm in the middle of starting up a small business and was talking to someone about marketing. This individual (Not an in-duh-vidual - a Ph.D.) suggested that I send out mass emails. Please tell us you weren't paying this individual for this advice. Please tell us you haven't paid him anything since.
  2. Re:It'll be hard to change minds. by KlomDark · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Dude, you need SalesGenie!

  3. Re:It'll be hard to change minds. by iknownuttin · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Please tell us you weren't paying this individual for this advice. Please tell us you haven't paid him anything since.

    Don't worry, he's a friend of mine and we were shooting the breeze. I did bring spam into his awareness, though.

    --
    I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.