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Ask Slashdot: Why Can't Google Block Spam In Gmail?

An anonymous reader writes Every day my gmail account receives 30-50 spam emails. Some of it is UCE, partially due to a couple dingbats with similar names who apparently think my gmail account belongs to them. The remainder looks to be spambot or Nigerian 419 email. I also run my own MX for my own domain, where I also receive a lot of spam. But with a combination of a couple DNSBL in my sendmail config, SpamAssassin, and procmail, almost none of it gets through to my inbox. In both cases there are rare false positives where a legit email ends up in my spam folder, or in the case of my MX, a spam email gets through to my Inbox, but these are rare occurrences. I'd think with all the Oompa Loompas at the Chocolate Factory that they could do a better job rejecting the obvious spam emails. If they did it would make checking for the occasional false positives in my spam folder a teeny bit easier. For anyone who's responsible for shunting Web-scale spam toward the fate it deserves, what factors go into the decision tree that might lead to so much spam getting through?

1 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. Because they don't want to. by Bomarc · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I had a meeting with the M$ person ... in charge of blocking spam. I presented to him an method that would block all forged spam (and would make most spam as we know it not viable). His (non) response was that they are working on their own techniques, mathematical models etc. Simple techniques (such as comparing the origin of the email with the domain) was beyond him. (There was a LOT more to my presentation that just this; this single part presented here to convey the concept).