

Beating the Spam Merchants 202
Crowbraid writes: "Well-written column by Margie Boule from the Portland Oregonian about an individual who got tired of getting spam,
sued the company for $25 an email, and won." See also Bennett Haselton's anti-spam page, where he has details on "pursuing the anti-spam lawsuits on four separate fronts." (Those lawsuits were mentioned a few months back.)
Is it me? (Score:1)
Spam sucks, we all know. All this spam news is making me sleepy.
Re:Is it me? (Score:1, Funny)
If this spam was real spam, that fatigue would be replaced by diahrehha.
Re:Is it me? (Score:1)
Re:Is it me? (Score:2)
Soon, they'll be promoting the Spam Club! [pythonline.com]
Re:Is it me? (Score:1, Funny)
but since i have access to a time machine i can give you tomorrows stories today....
SPAM.
SPAM.
SPAM.
LINUX RULES
SPAM.
SPAM.
Microsoft is bad.
SPAM.
SPAM.
Re:Is it me? (Score:2)
Thank you. Have a good day, and don't forget to try our other canned meatstuffs.
$25 an e-mail?!? I'm rich! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:$25 an e-mail?!? I'm rich! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:$25 an e-mail?!? I'm rich! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:$25 an e-mail?!? I'm rich! (Score:1)
monolinux [monolinux.com]
Spam Stories (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, mayby pigs will fly someday.
Traditional Media is our ally in this case... (Score:2)
why does spam get by (Score:1)
Re:why does spam get by (Score:1)
It probably has something to do with a little technicality called the First Amendment, but I'm not really sure. If you don't get it, I have a High School Diploma I'll sell you. Maybe some Herbal Viagra? Or would you just like to see me naked?
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
Harold says the fee was not just a threat; it was a reasonable charge for time and equipment. "I have to download the message, to find out it's junk and delete it. If you're using my download time, you are in effect using my services. During that time I can't use my computer, which is essential in my business."
OK, so apparently this dude thinks he's worth:
($25.00 / 2 seconds to download and identify a message) * (60 seconds / 1 minute) * (60 minutes / 1 hour) = $45,000.00 / hour.
Hell, I'll even subtract $1.00 (I'm rounding up mind you) for bandwidth and computing costs to handle the huge 2KB spams.
So, he thinks he's valued at $44,999.00 / hour. Much better.
Must be a really smart guy
m o n o l i n u x
Concentration ? (Score:1)
And i say 25$ isnt that much.
But yes i could get a seperate mailbox for this stuff, but then why should i ? why do people send me spam, why cant i just use one mailbox for all my stuff, why o why. damn it =D
Quazion.
I consider bullshit mail spam also =P
Re:Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
Aside from that, its not about the money. It's about stopping the act of spamming. Unfortunately, the legal system tends to prioritize fiscal damages over inidivudual non-quantifiable damages, so it's probably wiser and faster to go the 'I'll sue to for time waster' route than the 'Spamming is unethical and against the law, and so I'll see if I can convince the police to lay charges' route.
This is a more effective and faster route to go, and hits spammers where it hurts; their wallets. If they can't make any money from spamming, because the damages people file outweigh the commissions on the referrals and subscriptions they make, whats the point?
Re:Wow (Score:2)
When the spammers decide that $44,999.00 is too much for his services, perhaps they will seek cheaper alternatives. I would value my time similarly. I don't expect anyone to cheerfully pay me -- I expect them to avoid paying my price by sending their garbage elsewhere!
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Well he is a lawyer, and they are known for high fees.
though I know of very few professionals who do not have a minimum charge. If I call a plumber I have to pay him $80/hour, with a half hour minimum. It doesn't pay for a professional to bill for any less than that, and they have to make money.
Re:Wow (Score:2)
$25 seems perfectly reasonable to me. After all, faxes are set at $500 by law.
It's not totally new. (Score:2, Informative)
On a few occasions, they say they've even managed to successfully claim their fee.
Re:It's not totally new. (Score:1)
Re:It's not totally new. (Score:3, Funny)
;-)
DennyK
Re:It's not totally new. (Score:2)
Don't forget that many states have laws [spamlaws.com] that entitle spam recipients to this same amount. You still have to take them to small claims court though and possibly even go through a collection agency. (Heck, I live in a $500-a-pop state...with the amount of spam I get, I could easily afford to hire a full time staff to handle everything from going to court to contacting the collection agencies).
I love small claims court (Score:3, Informative)
Used it twice, one time my bank was cashing my car payment checks, but not crediting my loan... Needless to say when they threatened to take my car away, I filled suit. Long story short, they paid up rather than spend the money on lawyers (which they would have lost anyway)
The other time it was my wifes employer not doing the right things with her termination... Got the district manager and ourselves infront of a mediator and a deal was struck...
You won't get rich with small claims court (I think it only covers up to 1,500 maybe 2,500) but it is very simple to file and win a reasonable case
Re:I love small claims court (Score:3, Informative)
This often works in your favor because many people would much rather pay their lawyers to show up in court for them.
Re:I love small claims court (Score:2)
I would definitely check into the rules if you want to file small claims. Additionally (at least in my district) you are limited to a certain number of claims per year, and your filing fees also increase after you file a certain number of claims.
Can you do discovery on ISPs in small claims? (Score:2)
Alter the economics ... (Score:3, Informative)
The book EarthWeb (see http://www.baen.com/blurbs/067157809X.htm, http://www.the-earthweb.com/) had a good idea in that people could set a threshold
Marketing is a necessary evil but the economic costs should be bourne by the originators (whoch have control over quantity) rather than the public at large. How much do you value your attention (and thus time)?
LL
Is this really a good idea? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this really a good idea? (Score:1)
but they did read the messages he held them responsible for. they didn't read the whole message, but they did respond to it. that is communication, and if it wasn't intelligent communication on their part, well that's their problem.
Re:Is this really a good idea? (Score:2)
It won't be applicable, for sure, but when precendence is created, it can get hairy.
Re:Is this really a good idea? (Score:2)
Re:Is this really a good idea? (Score:1)
That's an oversimplification... like saying "Yes, I receieved that piece of paper, but I didn't read it, so I'm not responsible" when the "piece of paper" in question was a subpoena..
(yes, I know there is a difference between a legal document and an email, but I'm trying to make a point - "goliath" was notified, he can prove they were notified, and they ignored it.)
Hardest part about cracking down on spammers (Score:2, Insightful)
What might be more effective is to go after the people hiring them. Spam usually gives you a phone number (that's the only piece of reliable information) to call so you can get scammed. Don't buy anything from someone who won't tell you who they are. Call them up, find out as much information as possible, then rip them a new hole. Post the information on the internet, let the trolls troll the spammers.
I like the headline (Score:3, Funny)
Good, you find the Spam Merchants and I'll find my bat!!
I don't know about you... (Score:3, Funny)
Spam Nachos [hormel.com] anyone??
Tennessee Spam Laws (Score:3, Interesting)
Incidentally, I have a spamcop IMAP e-mail account that filters out potential spam. There was one guy from Canada that kept spamming me over and over. I noticed that the unsubscribe link (which I had tried twice) pointed to a top level domain. Using Internic's WHOIS, I got the jerk's home address, phone number, and e-mail address. Luckily in this case it wasn't forged. After personally contacting him (and threatening legal action), I have gotten no spam from his "company" in 1 week. (Funny thing is, Canada has no anti-spam laws... it was all BSing)
Re:Tennessee Spam Laws (Score:2)
I wonder how the courts in Knoxville are about this? BTW, from my layman, very breaf reading, of the TN statutes it looks irrelivant as to where the spammer is located. The relevant location seems to be where the recipient is.
Since I live (domicile) in Knoxville, TN but work mostly in Northern VA, I looked up the VA law. Appears to be a max of $25,000/day in VA.
Will definately be researching this more to see just what to do to sue the same spammer from 2 different States!
Re:Tennessee Spam Laws (Score:2)
Does this modify what you quoted, i.e., if an ISP has equipment in TN that delivers the e-mail to you does that bring the spammer into violation?
JunkBusters (Score:1)
Slippery as a snake (Score:3, Informative)
In the State of Washington you can sue for up to $250.00 per spam. Spam is defined as unrequested commercial bulk email that has either a misleading subject line and/or invalid return address.
The real problem with trying to collect is that most spammers make it VERY difficult to trace the email back. They may bounce it off of an open relay or use stolen accounts and they almost always use a false return address.
You can usually find the domain that the email came from by looking at the header information but if they bounced it off of an open relay in China it may not do you any good.
Really, the only ones that you should try to go after should be the ones that are stupid enough to provide you with real information in the body of the letter that will allow you to track them down.
Most of the time the spammer wants one thing: Your money. So he may give an 800 number or a web page URL. If you can convince him that you need his real address to send him money the may provided it and you can send him a subpoena instead.
Some spammers will try to get your credit card number. Once they have it you may find yourself the unwilling donator of a brand new laptop or some other piece of property that the spammer can sell on the black market.
Never, never, never, give a spammer your credit card number.
Very cool (Score:4, Funny)
Shouldn't take long.
suing spammer (Score:2, Interesting)
I sent them back a letter [pheed.org] demanding $110 for my time wasted. $100 for 'legal fees' and $10 under colorado law [spamlaws.com] for each unsolicited commercial email.
Hopefully if enough people do this, spammers will be more careful to who they send emails. Either that or spammers might start something like the RBL except it would be a list of spam-unfriendly recipients. That'll be the day...
Re:suing spammer (Score:2)
If they copy a image from your homepage, then they are in violation of your copyright on that image, and you can sue them for far more than that.
Re:suing spammer (Score:2)
trafficmagnet.net does this all the time; I'm receiving the same piece of spam about once a month for virtually all domains I own as well as a couple of other domains I've never heard of, apparently because someone linked to my email address.
I've tried contacting them and demanding $1000 according to my terms of service [bero.org], but they don't react, and neither does their uplink -- and since their whois information is fake, there's noone to sue.
Re:suing spammer (Score:2)
Unfortunately, they've managed to find an ignorant uplink for both aliases.
Re:suing spammer (Score:2, Interesting)
Make Money Fa$t - the West Coast way! (Score:1)
First, this offer is only available to citizens of forward-thinking states like Washington, Oregon, and California that permit you to sue spammers an amount per email in small claims court.
In Washington, it's $250 per spam. In Oregon, it's $25 per spam. I'm not sure of the amount in California.
Now, set up a whole bunch of email accounts on some service - yahoo.com or some other free service. Make sure you enter your address and state in the registration - and for good luck, put it in the email address (e.g. WeLiveInOregon@yahoo.com would be an excellent email address).
Now go and surf the net and post as you will. Make sure you let them read the email address you've created.
Soon you'll be getting tons and tons of checks as the spams roll in!
[patent pending]
-
Bill Them! (Score:2)
Sadly, this does nothing about all the lame pyramid-scheme and enlarge-your-body-parts spam we all get. This originates from rather stupid individuals who've ben conned into joining high-tech versions of the old stuff-envelopes scam, and thus pop up faster than you can smack them down.
How effective is all the blocking, blacklisting..? (Score:2)
I'm not trying to troll here, but this whole discussion got me thinking, how effective are the current means of blocking spam, such as RBL, blocking out certain countries, etc., if so much spam is getting to people's inboxes? Whenever I read the mail-abuse.org website, they talk about how effective they are, but if so many people are using their product and other products like theirs, why is spam still a problem? Or is this just a case of the people who are not using these products complaining about the spam?
We're missing the bigger picture here... (Score:3, Interesting)
This man doesn't qualify for hero status. He basically threatened the company with a lawsuit and accepted a little money to go away and not tell anyone about the company's practices (or at least without the company's name).
When people settle cases, they may get some money and self-satisfaction, but it does very little good for anyone else. When a case is tried in court and a verdict is rendered, a legal precedent is set by which future actions are governed. This is the only truly effective way of fighting the onslaught of spam email in the long run.
Even if you manage to get a huge settlement and put a company out of business, the way is still paved for 5 more companies to pop up and take its place. And in this case, it sounds like the company is absolutely free to continue its practices as it has in the past. Where's the good angle to this story?
Why hide their identity? (Score:2)
I do know this is a standard clause in boilerplate agreements lawyers typically put together. But these things can be changed, and often do get changed during the course of negotiations. What is the dollar amount you would put on agreeing to hide the identity of someone who wronged you and is now finally agreeing to pay up for it, but won't pay as much (if any at all) if you don't agree to include that clause? And likewise, what is the dollar amount for agreeing not to submit it to slashdot/kuro5hin/etc?
Here's an identity already! (Score:2)
A reply [slashdot.org] to one of my comments in the slashdot article about ORBZ Shuts Down [slashdot.org] has pointed to a new article [wired.com] which reveals the identity of the party who threatened ORBZ operator Ian Gulliver with jail.
In that new article it is mentioned that Ian's lawyer advised him against releasing a copy of the search warrant. Why? Is it copyrighted?
Why not getting help from the mail-client? (Score:2, Interesting)
How to tell the complaining enduser to forward you the spam-email with all email headers intact? "What are email-headers?" is the number one question you hear. After two minutes explanation the next question will probably be "Where do I have to click to do that?". And another five minutes explanation later you know that you will never get that spam-email intact because you hear a phone ringing or the boss asking "Is that report ready?" in the background.
Why not adding one button to each mail-client labelled "This is SPAM"? So the user simply has to click this button, is asked a confirmation question like "Do you really want to send the messaged titled blah..blah to your anti-spam department and erase it?" and then whoosh the mail is send with all headers (as an attachment) and with the propper legal text in in "user thisandthat declared the attached email a being UCE blah..blah". And the configurable antispam-address defaults to - say - spam@users_main_email_domain where you or your script is ready to handle it.
Then depending on your policy you can check it and report it to the spammers ISP, or have an automatic script behind it, which updates your block-lists (e.g. after a number of complaints about the same sender or depending on the trustworthyness of the enduser). You could even implement scripts, which automatically delete this email (or all emails from the same source) from the POP accounts of your server and send them back to where they came from - with the propper RFC-compliant messages. Or send them to spamcop or whatever your agreed-on anti-spam policy says.
Perhaps you know a friend who is writing Email-Clients or Plugins for these beasts (or you yourself can you that).
If it's time to fight back, let's use automatic weapons!
With the rate bandwidth is increasing.... (Score:2)
It'd be interesting to see what spam cost the world in lost time, and lost network resources.
Why pursue spammers when you can ignore them? (Score:2, Interesting)
It's easy to stop spammers, but you need to have the ability to create an arbitrary number of email addresses. If you manage your own domain, or at least have the ability to create and destroy email addresses in your domain, you can virtually eliminate spam.
Here's my recipe. I have no worries explaining this in public, because there's nothing the spammers can do to get around it. For every Internet service you use, every mailing list you subscribe to, every online retailer you buy from, you create a unique email address (for example, my PayPal email address is "paypal@mydomain.com"). In essence, you have a different "email channel" for every source which might potentially be used to send you email. As soon as you receive a single spam on any email address, you delete it. You'll never get spam for that address again, and if you really want you can create a new one for whatever site it was used for (e.g. if you get spammed on "paypal@mydomain.com" you can create a "paypal2@mydomain.com" and change your email address with PayPal; or you can just stop using PayPal). Simple so far.
Where it gets trickier is your more "permanent" email addresses, but the problem is solvable. I have a main email address I've used for 10 years, and of course spammers have gotten a hold of that address many times over. I don't want to destroy that address, since all my friends and colleagues know it and expect it to exist. Notifying them all each time I cancelled it would become quite burdensome for all of us. To deal with this, I have created a tool which is executed by procmail that checks each incoming message to my permanent address to ensure that the sender is valid. I have a fairly small list of known valid senders which are allowed to send me email, and those go right through to my mailbox. Not only does the tool check the sender, but it optionally checks the "Received" header in the mail to ensure it's coming from the expected mail server (in case a spammer tries to pose as someone on my OK list - paranoid, true, but I like paranoia).
This solves all problems except one - how do people I don't expect to send mail to me actually reach me? My tool also has a "disallow" list of mail servers, and any mail originating from one of those servers will be tossed in the trash. Mail from an unexpected sender whose server is not in the disallow list will get a response from my procmail tool with a special subject line in it. They are instructed to reply, and my mail tool will then accept their message on a one-time basis after scanning the subject line for the secret magic key. If I like the person, I'll add them to my "allowed" list so they never have to go through the two-step process again.
What if a spammer figures out my scheme and makes a spam tool that auto-replies, you ask? For that to work, he would have had to use a real return address, which they never do. But if he did, I would then know who he was and be able to block further mail and pursue him, if desired. So far that's never happened. Even if it started to happen frequently, I have plans for an upgrade to my tool which would randomly vary the required method of reply in a way that was impossible to perform programmatically. No need for this so far.
I realize that most of this can be done with procmail alone, but there are some aspects of it that are ugly or impossible to do with just procmail. It's integrated with sendmail to a small extent, as well, which requires a separate tool as well (future extensions for other mailers should be fairly easy).
Maybe when this is all finished I'll make it publically available. Would anyone out there find it useful? (Or has it already been done, and am I wasting my time?)
What would really solve this problem? (Score:2)
I've come up with ideas ad nauseum about how to fight spam, but so far the solutions either require really limiting your capabilities, or threaten to force spam to come through other ways such as Instant Messaging. Maybe we're fighting the wrong battle. What are some other approaches to fighting spam?
One approach to fighting spam would be to devalue it. Anybody know how we could do this? One idea I had was to generate a bunch of fake lists and actually sell those to would be mass-solicitors. Tainted addresses would increase suspicion of whether or not it'd be worth buying a list.
Another one would be to generate so much spam that everybody is forced to take steps against it. I realize this would initially do more harm than good, but if our mailbox did get 1400 mail mesasges a day like mentioned in a previous article, then it would make unsolicited mail far less interesting. I'm willing to switch to IM (or a private email network) for a month or two to blow it out heh.
Anybody else have ideas about how to devalue spam? If we brainstormed a few ideas, something really interesting might pop up.
Re:What would really solve this problem? (Score:2)
I did something similar. Unfortunately, if you ever want to sell or transfer your domain to someone else, you're going to have to have a legal officer of NanoGator Animation sign something on official NanoGator Animation letterhead. (At least that is the rules for NetSol...)
Not impossible to get around, but still a PITA. :(
Re:What would really solve this problem? (Score:2)
Glad I don't intend to sell it. THanks for educating me!
Think if I just changed the billing info I'd be ok?
Sue on my behalf (Score:2, Interesting)
My new strategy (Score:5, Insightful)
I've decided to adopt a new spam strategy. I'm going to try to buy the damn stuff.
I've noticed a lot more spam with 1-800 numbers where you're supposed to listen to a recording about getting rich quick and then leave your address so they can send you stuff.
And, I've started phoning. I don't know exactly how much receiving a toll free call costs, but it's already more than I paid to receive the spam, so good. Listen to the recording: more time that they're paying for. Leave your address: slur and garble as much as possible--with any luck, a real person will spend several minutes trying to decipher it. If they do, they can pay for the postage to send something to a non-existant address.
I all goes well, I figure that costs them up towards 50 cents. If a small fraction of recipients do this, suddenly they're paying an equivalent of what they've cost the world in mail server load and download time. Plus, it's fun.
A different approach? (Score:2)
Re:A different approach? (Score:2)
Advertise anything you want IMMEDIATELY, for PENNIES!
- 10 MILLION USA Email Addresses (.COM/.NET/.ORG)
- 250k "Opportunity Seeker" Bonus Email Addresses
- Extractor Pro! Free working version! THE BEST!
- One (1) Month of "Ad Friendly" mail server usage!
Your Total Cost $99.95
1-800-242-0363 ext. 2012
If spam is outlawed . . . (Score:2)
Serving lawsuits via e-mail (Score:2)
Who's getting all this spam? (Score:2)
Am I just lucky, or are the people getting all this spam leaving their email addresses all over p0rno chatrooms?
Re:Funny (Score:2, Insightful)
What, do you make your living off of Spam? I for one wouldn't mind making a few hundred bucks at the expense of the assholes that keep trying to sell me Herbal Viagra and fake University degrees.
Re:Funny (Score:1)
Re:Funny (Score:2)
No, this isn't a small-town lawyer who wants to make a name for himself. An actual lawyer would not use small claims court and would not use Nolo Press guides to find out what the law is. Wind_Walker needs to work on his reading comprehension skills.
Re:Funny (Score:1)
Re:Funny (Score:2)
He's the one that initiated the litigation, you idiot.
Thus, it isn't time that the offender owes him (or should owe him) for, because he is investing and sp[ending the time at his initiative and discretion to recoup the monetary damages (although we all know that the damages are more of a bonus on top of simply discouraging spammers through the act of instigating litigation when the law permits it.)
By your reasoning, I could prank call you 20 times a day. Then, when you decide to actually spend some time defending yourself, you're suggesting I'd get to make fun of you for taking more time to defend yourself than I'd originally taken by harrassing you.
You're an idiot, because you either dont realize (or are too glib to account for in your reasoning) that it's not about the money or time, it's about the harrassment. It's about getting spam to stop, regardless of the time and money it costs us. Unlike some people, many humans utilize the law to try and limit unscrupulous behaviour because it's unscrupulous, not because we can count pretty numbers that tell us how much money or time we 'lost' as a result of unethical behaviour by companies or individuals.
Re:Funny (Score:1, Informative)
It was the principle of the thing. And with the law on his side, he quite deservingly won. And now that 'Goliath' got hit back, maybe 'Goliath' will start considering having some principles too. It's less expensive than offending folks by breaking the law.
Re:Hmmm.... (Score:3, Insightful)
In many cases, spam coming from a Chinese ISP really originates in the US, and is being bounced off of an open email relay.
Re:Hmmm.... (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:Too Many Spam Articles...reminds me of a skit (Score:1)
Oh well. I used to have a series of spam rules that would file it away, and play the audio from the skit... but then when the skit was ALWAYS playing in my headphones
Almost as much fun as attaching sounds to debugger events in windows. Attached the hindenburg catching fire to one in a debug lab. It was sooooooo much fun listening to the sound of the hindenburg crashing on a minute by minute basis (what a bad first day on the job for that announcer)
vi is great. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Waitress: Morning.
Mr. Bun: Well, what you got?
Waitress: Well, there's katz and CowboyNeal; katz, slashdot and CowboyNeal; katz and spam; katz, CowboyNeal and spam; katz, CowboyNeal, slashdot and spam; spam, CowboyNeal, slashdot and spam; spam, katz, spam, spam, CowboyNeal and spam; spam, slashdot, spam, spam, spam, CowboyNeal, spam, tomato and spam; spam, spam, spam, katz and spam; (Vikings start singing in background) spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, Cmdr Tacos, spam, spam, spam and spam.
Vikings: Spam, spam, spam, spam, lovely spam, lovely spam.
Waitress: (cont) or lobster thermador ecrovets with a bournaise sause, served in the purple salm Mr. Bunor with chalots and overshies, garnished with truffle pate, brandy, a fried katz on top and spam.
Mrs. Bun: Have you got anything without spam?
Waitress: Well, there's spam, katz, slashdot and spam. That's not got much spam in it.
Mrs. Bun: I don't want any spam!
Mr. Bun: Why can't she have katz, CowboyNeal, spam and slashdot?
Mrs. Bun: That's got spam in it.
Mr. Bun: It hasn't got as much spam in it as spam, katz, slashdot and spam has it?
Mrs. Bun: (over Vikings starting again) Could you do me katz, CowboyNeal, spam and slashdot without the spam then?
Waitress: Ech!
Mrs. Bun: What do you mean ech! I don't like spam!
Vikings: Lovely spam, wonderful spam....etc
Waitress: Shut up! Shut up! Shut up! Bloody vikings. You can't have katz, CowboyNeal, spam and slashdot without the spam.
Mrs. Bun: I don't like spam!
Mr. Bun: Shh dear, don't cause a fuss. I'll have your spam. I love it. I'm having spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, Cmdr Tacos, spam, spam, spam and spam. (starts Vikings off again)
Vikings: Lovely spam, wonderful spam...etc
Waitress: Shut up! Cmdr Tacos are off.
Mr. Bun: Well, can I have her spam instead of the Cmdr Tacos?
Waitress: You mean spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, and spam?
Vikings: Lovely spam, wonderful spam...etc...spam, spam, spam! (in harmony)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it important that people reading my website can respond back to me. I don't see why me providing an email address so they can respond makes me at fault for getting spammed, any more than leaving a car in a parking lot while I shop makes me at fault for it getting stolen.
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:1)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
(And no, I just work for them. But I do think the service rocks.)
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
yeah, but it's hard to steal a car, and it can net you a long time in prison... I think a better analogy would be leaving your wallet or just your license on the floor in the middle of the street... someone is bound to pick it up and it is your fault for leaving it there.
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Posting my phone number on a billboard in times square should be like posting my email on a billboard in time square, not like posting my email on a few limited-interest mailing lists and web pages.
I don't expect that my email will be limited to those I particularly want to talk to. I do expect that it will be reasonable human beings with an interest in communicating with me. Fradulently titled commercial email that I get 7 copies of (3 email aliases and 4 mailing lists that I'm on) don't count.
I don't have an option to hide my email address, either. Besides my webpage, I'm a Debian maintainer (creating several publicly known aliases) and a contributer to several email lists with public archives.
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
That's like yelling "no fair!" at a playground. You have to get over the fact that they don't play by any rules at all. Grabbing a valid email address is like finding a heads-up penny in the street to them. Even if they just watched a little old lady drop a bunch of change in a supermarket, they'll pick it up and keep it.
The other cost of spam to the Internet (Score:2)
(I've gotten into a few good e-mail discussions via the address I post here. I also get about 20 spam messages a day, between having my address having been here and briefly on one of the Linux mailing lists. Is it worth it? The jury's still out.)
Sometimes trust is violated (Score:1)
I understand your points about taking precautions, but should we be faced with the prospects of either getting assloads of spam, or cowering in fear of even the companies we pay to protect our information? I guess I could get an email address and make is super secret and never give it out, but then what's the point?
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2, Informative)
You don't contribute to OSS either, do you? (Score:4, Informative)
Such as web archives of mailing lists for opensource projects? It must be nice to sit there handing out advice and calling people idiots when you never contribute to the community.
Most of the spam I get is at an address harvested from mailing list archives for GCC, Doxygen, and few other much smaller projects. Does that mean I'm an idiot? If you think so, perhaps you shouldn't be using these programs (after all, an idiot has contributed to them).
Does that mean I'm going to stop sending mail to a public mailing list? No, because as much as I'd like to reduce the amount of spam I get, I'd much rather see improved software.
Suing spammers is being an idiot? Huh?
Re:You don't contribute to OSS either, do you? (Score:2)
So you would never complain about getting dumped or fired, because you could have chosen not to get involved in the first place? Your methods of prevention are completely unacceptable for anyone who actually wants to communicate via the net, similar to never going on a date for fear of being dumped.
Re:You don't contribute to OSS either, do you? (Score:2)
You can stop the boss's cousin from needing a job?
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
I like being able to post in a public forum and get private email back. I do it all the time on Usenet.
I don't have an unlisted phone number, either. Never had.
Having said that, I don't put my private email on slashdot. Used to, but some of the people here kinda scare me. Anybody who'd devote so much of their lives to trolling, well, they got a screw loose and many of them write automation to crap flood slashdot. I don't want that to happen to my inbox.
In any case, I don't feel that I should make myself difficult to reach just to avoid spam. You know, they solved the problem of junk faxes back in 1996, the problem of spam could be solved with appropriate legislation. I'm starting to suspect that the lawmakers want this problem to fester until they can use it as a justification to shut down all anonymous use of the Internet.
Hmmmm... For somebody as paranoid as I am, you'd think I'd be more careful with my identity...
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
I'm not an idiot. I don't use the address book. I do use PGP. I remove myself from any and all non-spam newletters and announcements I don't want. And I don't put my e-mail in public places where spammers would look to pick it up. As far as I'm concerned if you get spammed, it's your fault.
Pure flamebait!
Certainly someone not an idiot would realize the potential that email has to enable persons previously unaquainted to communicate with one another, even if he personally never intended to participate in public discourse, offer assistance to others, or receive feedback.
But while spamming is still a problem, deal with it and don't be an idiot.
Indeed, slashdot trolling at its finest. Congratulations.
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:3, Funny)
In fact, Apreche is a CS student at Rochester, and has this little website [rit.edu].
The very first link on the home page is News Archive [rit.edu], that leads to a non-existant page. The university's server generates a much-nicer-than-usual 404 error page, which includes among other info Apreche's email address, specifically "slr2777@osfmail.rit.edu" (which wouldn't have been very difficult to guess based on the user-style url for his site).
Also on each interior page is a mailto: link to "apreche@mail.rit.edu", preceeded with the text "Clik here to e-mail me".
Apreche, you really should fix that link... but when someone types http://www.rit.edu/~slr2777/somerandomename, they're gonna see your email address. At least it won't be due to a broken link on your own home page!
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:3, Interesting)
My house is sited behind 48 inches of reinforced concrete. I have machine-gun pillboxes sited on each corner, each manned 24 hrs a dat. My house never gets burglarized. If you don't do the same and you do get burglarized, it's your fault.
Sheesh!
Need I say more?
Cheers!
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
This is my last post today. I take precautions to prevent getting spammed. And it works. Beause I haven't been spammed in years. If you don't take precautions, and you invite spam, it's going to come to your party. If you leave the door open, spam is going to come in. The spammers aren't 100% to blame. Spamming and robbing are both crimes. No amount of law will stop them from happening. We might be able to put spammers in jail and take all their mail, but I would rather have a clean e-mail box and not bother with suing people.
Of course as a money making-scheme I could set up a new e-mail box, invite spam into it, then sue. In which case I would be just as evil as they are. Lock your doors when you aren't at home.
Re:I would sue, but.... (Score:2)
It's easy to have a clean mailbox. Just never bother hooking it up to an email account. But the whole point of email is that people can put something in that mailbox. If you're going to go to extreme measures to not let anyone put anything in the mailbox, why bother having it?
Re:Harold Hickok's settlement (Score:2)
It would. It could be substantial, too. And it may still be possible to find out who, though not find out the settlement terms. Since the case was filed with a small claims court, the records should exist, and should be public, unless a judge orders them sealed (and I don't know it would have been carried that far).
Re:Looks like we can have more fun with... (Score:2)