1997-02-13 - Re: Excerpt on SPAM from Edupage, 11 February 1997

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From: Sean Roach <roach_s@alph.swosu.edu>
To: cypherpunks@algebra.com
Message Hash: 5f719598093f2a77fa942d4bce05cc11bcda105a447a584030a0754247977970
Message ID: <199702132011.MAA10172@toad.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-02-13 20:11:56 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 13 Feb 1997 12:11:56 -0800 (PST)

Raw message

From: Sean Roach <roach_s@alph.swosu.edu>
Date: Thu, 13 Feb 1997 12:11:56 -0800 (PST)
To: cypherpunks@algebra.com
Subject: Re: Excerpt on SPAM from Edupage, 11 February 1997
Message-ID: <199702132011.MAA10172@toad.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


At 09:23 PM 2/12/97 -0800, jim bell wrote:
...
>I decided long ago (okay, well, many months ago) that the "solution" is to 
>invent a mechanism to allow spammers/advertisers to include a small amount 
>of ecash as a gift with every spam.  I figure that if USnail junk-mailers 
>are willing to pay $0.32 for postage and probably $0.50 for production, 
>printing, and labelling costs, all for no guarantees of results, they should 
>even more happy to pay, say, 10 cents to each recipient.  At that rate, an
average 
>person would probably receive enough "spam" to  pay for his Internet 
>account, quite analogous to the way advertiser-supported TV is presented to 
>the public for no explicit charge.

First of all, they don't spend 32 cents per post.  They get one of those
bulk-mail permits which allows them to send those at a significant savings.
The whole package complete with the cheap "Yes, I'll try your service, and
send me the free gizmo"/"No, I don't need any more services, but I could use
the free gizmo" stickers probably costs well within 50 cents.
TV is not a gift per say, though your origional posts, involving a cookie,
suggested something closer to TV.  Currently, advertiser subsidized
services, like hotmail, Yahoo, and similair, are closer in that you get the
gift with only the minor distraction of the advertisement.

A more functional system might be to include a cryptographic "key" of only a
few bytes in the e-mail post that opens some online service of relative
value.  Along the lines of a hidden, no URL FTP site with all the best
downloads.
This would not be dependant upon e-cash being in place.  Would require that
the customer read at least part of the message in order to get the
instructions on how to use the key.  Prevent the user from just handing out
the key to whoever asked as it would probably have a limited lifespan.  And
give the sender some location from which to conduct polling, headcounts, etc.







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