From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com
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UTC Datetime: 1997-08-05 02:33:18 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 5 Aug 1997 10:33:18 +0800
From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Aug 1997 10:33:18 +0800
To: cypherpunks@ssz.com
Subject: http:--www.cnn.com-TECH-9708-04-internet.spam.reut-
Message-ID: <199708050220.VAA01661@einstein.ssz.com>
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SPAMMING LEADS TO UUNET 'DEATH PENALTY'
Spam graphic August 4, 1997
Web posted at: 9:34 p.m. EDT (0134 GMT)
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuter) -- A loose coalition of system administrators
Friday began issuing a "Usenet Death Penalty" against UUNET, a major
Internet service provider, for its alleged failure to curb "spam"
emanating from its dialup accounts.
The penalty took effect 5 p.m. (PDT) Friday, and according to a
release from the coalition, "all traffic coming from these sources
is to be canceled until further notice."
The penalty entails the use of a program called a cancelbot that
travels from site to site, looking for newsgroup messages that
originate from a particular person or ISP. When it finds one of the
messages, it issues a cancel order, which effectively erases the
message.
Spamming is the bulk delivery of unwanted electronic messages via
e-mail or newsgroups.
The action marks the first time a large-scale ISP has been the
target of a cancelbot. The penalty's purpose, said Dennis
McClain-Furmansky, is to "mobilize the user base and get them to
insist on their ISP to give them a clean feed. Right now they are
paying $20 a month for trash."
McClain-Furmansky, speaking on behalf of the Usenet death penalty
issuers, explains that, unlike other ISPs such as EarthLink and Bell
Atlantic, UUNET has done little or nothing to curb spammers using
its service. "The few responses they've made to our complaints have
been excuses," he said.
After Bell Atlantic was informed by site administrators several
weeks ago that it had been targeted for the Usenet death penalty,
the service took immediate action to halt spam, McClain-Furmansky
said. "We told them what was being planned, and they are making a
clear effort."
McClain-Furmansky said that the action was drastic, but it was a
last resort to close off a flood of spam that was "knocking servers
offline." On Friday, one of the administrators involved said his
system processed 1 million messages for the first time ever. Forty
percent of that was spam, 40 percent cancel messages, 20 percent
legitimate traffic." About half the cancel messages issued are for
spam originating from UUNET dialups, said McClain-Furmansky.
"In my opinion, this is by far the worst censorship action the Net
has seen to date," said Dave Hayes, who represents a group called
the Freedom Knights, dedicated to "true free speech" on Usenet.
Hayes said those pushing the death decree should be "summarily
condemned by all those who are in support of free speech, which
unfortunately includes unsolicited advertising."
Brian Moore, a system administrator in Britain who oversees the
Usenet feed for his site, said he is not surprised that the action
was taken against UUNET. "Amongst the 50-some complaints I have sent
them in the past week, I have received nothing but form letters
back. The spamming customers continue spamming and there is no
indication UUNET has acted in any way at all."
Moore said he has canceled hundreds of porn spams appearing in
alt.sexual.abuse.recovery. "Quite frankly, UUNET is irresponsible in
their inability to control their own customers," he said.
UUNET declined comment Friday.
Copyright 1997 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
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Related sites:
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* UUNET Global Homepage
* The Anti-Spam Project
* Internet Spam Haiku Contest
* Internet Spam Control Center
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1997-08-05 (Tue, 5 Aug 1997 10:33:18 +0800) - http:–www.cnn.com-TECH-9708-04-internet.spam.reut- - Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>