Yahoo Revives Pay-Per-Email, With Charitable Twist
holy_calamity writes "Yahoo research have started a private beta of a scheme that resurrects the idea of charging people to send email to cut spam. Centmail users pay $0.01 for each message they send, with the money going to a charity of their choice. The hope is that the feel good effect of donating to charity will reduce the perceived cost of paying for mail and encourage mass adoption, making it possible for mail filters to build in recognition of Centmail stamps."
Do Good. Fight Spam.
So it sounds like an 'opt-in' program for doing otherwise would be suicide by a mail provider. And since it's opt-in, I highly doubt the spammers will be doing the opting. So unless your penny is going to an anti-spam organization, how are you fighting Spam?
Also, I'm not too clear on how this would work. Wouldn't it require a certificate-like central authentication server? And wouldn't this increase in traffic just exacerbate the situation of too much traffic? Especially if all Spam starts to come with fake 'stamps.'
My work here is dung.
Now here's something both the spammers and the ISP's will love. I presume somewhere in their long-term plan is a means of getting rid of all those pesky renegades who run their own email server and don't opt into this scam
I'm glad that goodwill and fuzzy feelings are able to cut transaction costs; because they'll be the real killer at $0.01 a pop.
I assume, because of this problem, that they'll either be billing you when your tab reaches some worthwhile value, and trusting you in the meantime, or forcing you to buy in large blocks ahead of time(which would be super annoying, goodwill or no).
Either the authentication traffic kills us, or the spammers clone any sort of component embedded in email to lend credibility. If you can fake an email as spam, you can fake a stamp.
If Centmail stamps are auto-verified, then either an API must authenticate the key and authorize the action - which is a lot of traffic - at a single server/authority, or we disperse it. With dispersal, possibly for abuse goes up, and then we have new keys arriving which means more traffic. We of course can't use keys per mail, but perhaps per-sender. This is still a huge number of keys to be managed.
Filters work as a form of decentralized authentication, where the proper "key" is passing the filter, which is slowly morphing from user feedback. This seems to me to degrade over time, as the filters cannot change quick enough, still weighing-in prior exclusions while accepting new ones. There's a fair amount of noise to ignore while people mark email they don't like as SPAM and similarities are extracted.
Blacklists and Whitelists are just filters with a central authority, but open to more abuse and too coarse-grained to remove much, as spammers hop or spoof origins quickly.
Overall, I don't feel like bolt-on public systems can categorize the messages other than how we're doing it today. If we had a re-do on email, it might involve some encryption for senders, certificate stamps, and a trust level of pathways and a distributed authorization system with feedback to violators. But we're a long ways off from that.
This has all been discussed for years.
I'll set myself up as a charity, and have the system pull money out of my account, and put into the my other - er, the charity's - account. Now all my spam is blessed.
Ibid.
Instead of sending the 1c to a charity, why not send it to the receiver? I receive some x number of mail's per day and send y , but the number is small and the x-y is even smaller. However for the spammer x is probably similar, where y is 8+ orders of magnitude higher resulting in a financial disincentive to spam. Commercial email is incentivized to reduce its mailing lists and target more accurately, yet is not significantly punished for its high output to input ratio.
Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
I initially wrote and posted it here in 2003. Note the lack of a bitchslap against challenge-response schemes that hadn't yet become popular:
( ) Spammers pass all your Turing Tests
or something like that.