1997-08-08 - Re: non-censorous spam control (was Re: Spam is Information?)

Header Data

From: Mark Grant <mark@unicorn.com>
To: Jeff Barber <jeffb@issl.atl.hp.com>
Message Hash: c1a3511e8419d8aec17e2eb1a99908023b5d6b837f005f0c40b529f1a616a145
Message ID: <Pine.LNX.3.91.970807113421.32528F-100000@cowboy.dev.madge.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-08-08 08:20:13 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 8 Aug 1997 16:20:13 +0800

Raw message

From: Mark Grant <mark@unicorn.com>
Date: Fri, 8 Aug 1997 16:20:13 +0800
To: Jeff Barber <jeffb@issl.atl.hp.com>
Subject: Re: non-censorous spam control (was Re: Spam is Information?)
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.91.970807113421.32528F-100000@cowboy.dev.madge.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain




On Thu, 31 Jul 1997, Jeff Barber wrote:

> Network bandwidth used for the purpose of email transport,
> even with increased spamming factored in, is simply too low to justify
> charging much for it.  It will still be *way* cheaper than surface mail.

Yep; which is why it's a bad idea. We don't need net postage to pay the
ISP, we need net postage to pay *me* to read the spam. Making them pay
$0.0001 to send a message will have little impact, but making them pay me
$1 to read it certainly will (i.e. my filters could block all potential
spam unless it includes a dollar of ecash). I have no problem with
spammers subsidising my Net access, I just object to having to pay for
their crap. 

> So unless the percentage of people who delete it instantly, sight-unseen,
> is higher than I suspect or new tools make it easy to filter out all
> spam, it's going to remain economically advantageous for the spammers
> to target broadly.

I've seen one spam in the last two weeks. The other 100k or so was blocked
by my filters; I'm almost starting to miss it. When you actually sit down
and analyse the spam most of it has so many obvious 'spam-tags' that you
can easily work out a set of rules to catch them. The only disadvantage is
that on a couple of occasions it's caught mail from friends when they sent
it through a site which appends advertising rather than from their normal
address. 

	Mark






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