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Inappropriate Spam Reaching Children? 624

peeweejd writes "Wired has an article stating that four out of five children receive inappropriate spam e-mail touting get-rich-quick schemes, and almost half receive spam linking to pornographic materials. Should spammers be held responsible for the spams they send out? Can someone sue a spammer for offering to sell 'adult only' items/services to children?" There are more details from survey originator Symantec's press release - and yes, Symantec does sell mail filtering software.
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Inappropriate Spam Reaching Children?

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:33PM (#6155821)
    Are you one of those go getters?!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:33PM (#6155827)
    Should spammers be held responsible for the spams they send out?

    Yes.
    • by lseltzer ( 311306 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:44PM (#6155952)
      And obviously so. We've got to start coming down hard on these people, setting some prominant examples.
    • I agree.

      I mean really, if the corner gas station attendent was selling cigarettes, beer, or pornagraphy to underaged children, would he be held responsible? The obvious answer is yes, he would. So, why would we treat spammers any differently?

      • by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:07PM (#6156235) Homepage
        The problem being there is no way to tell how old the person who checks the email address is. An email address is just an alias, the person who checks that box could be 8 or 80, there is no way to tell. Unless there is some way to tell how old the person who checks the mailbox is, there is no way to hold people responsible for sending emails inappropriate for children to that mailbox. You can send porn to a physical mailbox, and the person who gets the mail may be a minor, but you can't be held responsible for that minor seeing "inappropriate" material.

        They should e charged for sending spam (where applicable) but trying to prosecute them because they are sending mail to an emailbox where a child has access is very slippery, because there is no way to know who the box belongs to.
        • by martyros ( 588782 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:17PM (#6156343)
          The problem being there is no way to tell how old the person who checks the email address is.
          Well, sometimes it's hard to tell if the person across the counter is 17 (too young for cigarettes) or 18 (old enough for cigs but too young for pr0n & b33r), or 25 (old enough for all of them). That's why the law requires checking IDs before selling it.

          I don't have any kids (yet), but if/when my kid gets explicit e-mail, you can bet I'm going to hunt down the dirtbag down. If a lawsuit doesn't work, maybe a baseball bat will...

          • by Matrix272 ( 581458 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:38PM (#6157044)
            Well, let me ask you this... in the long run, what's more harmful for the child, out of the following choices:

            1. The child sees a sexual act in a spam message, and you, being the responsible, intelligent and loving parent you are, explain to them what they're seeing, and how it's morally right or wrong.

            Or...

            2. The government steps in and makes spam e-mail illegal because there's no viable solution for checking the age of an e-mail recipient before sending the message. Given how government generally operates, it should only be 3-5 years before snail-mail junk is outlawed also, leading to several hundreds (if not thousands) of lawsuits within a year. After that, probably another 2-3 years until someone comes up with the idea that since they don't approve of some e-mail or snail-mail they're getting, it's offensive and unwanted, therefore, must be spam... leading to more legislation defining the term "spam" and "unwanted commercial e-mail", eventually leading to the breakdown of even more of individual's basic human rights, especially Freedom of Speech, Press, and (although not specifically mentioned in the Constitution), Privacy. (My sig has particular relevance here.)

            Granted, I'm not going to run aroun showing dirty pictures to kids, but in the grand scheme of things, there are only 2 groups of people that can do anything about it -- government, and IT. We're the IT, so let's try to come up with a solution before the government starts.
            • by Geek of Tech ( 678002 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @08:06PM (#6157231) Homepage Journal
              Everyone here familiar with the federal 'Do Not Call' list for telemarketers? Wouldn't it be possible to create a similar product for the web? A 'Do Not Spam' list? Anyone sending say... 100 emails a day would have to cross-reference the recipients addresses with those on the list. And just maybe to support the thing... pay a dollar per account to get your name added... maybe... If you care enough about your kids to keep them from seeing pr0n, pay the buck, if not, don't pay the dollar. Kinda like a mixture of the preposed Public Domain Enhancement Act [eldred.cc] and the federal 'Do Not Call' list.
            • 2. The government steps in and makes spam e-mail illegal because there's no viable solution for checking the age of an e-mail recipient before sending the message. Given how government generally operates, it should only be 3-5 years before snail-mail junk is outlawed also...

              Fucking awesome. Option 2. Definitely. If it means even 12 months of spam-free bliss before the world comes crumbling down around us, then I'm all for it.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by jedidiah ( 1196 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:19PM (#6156365) Homepage
          Bullshit. If you can't be sure that you aren't sending obscene materials to minors, then you have no business doing so. The crudeness of the internet is no excuse to ignore corporeal sensibilities.

          If some other adult gave you some indication that it was acceptable to send such materials to a particular destination, that's another issue entirely. You would not be acting with reckless disregard of the foreseeable consequences of your actions.

          This isn't just about legally obscene materials. Business proprietors should have a legal incentive to not act like total morons.
        • by JediTrainer ( 314273 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:22PM (#6156387)
          Unless there is some way to tell how old the person who checks the mailbox is, there is no way to hold people responsible for sending emails inappropriate for children to that mailbox. You can send porn to a physical mailbox, and the person who gets the mail may be a minor, but you can't be held responsible for that minor seeing "inappropriate" material.

          Unless there is some way to tell how old the person who walks by is, there is no way to hold people responsible for posting pornographic billboards inappropriate for children on that street.

          I'm sorry, but I just don't see your argument. 'Broadcasting' is no excuse for exposing children to this stuff. It's not acceptable out in public, nor on TV (unless you subscribe to something, in which case the control is on your side), so it sure as hell shouldn't be allowed on the Internet.
        • The problem being there is no way to tell how old the person who checks the email address is.
          Since when has government concerned itself with the limitations inherent in the real world ?
        • Actually no, you are wrong on this case. The method is opt-in, by doing an opt-in they can ask for the age of the person using the computer. If the persons says they are over X age, then you have to beleive them and then if they are not over age X then you are not responsible because you asked the question with no reasonable method of verification.

          But the way spammers work is they send it to anyone that they can reasonably find has a legitimate e-mail address, not how old the person is that recieves the
    • by WickedClean ( 230550 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:03PM (#6156187) Homepage
      Blocking the dirty spam is along the same lines as why video stores put the porn in a back room and why gas stations keep the porno mags behind the counter. Its inappropriate material that has laws concerning the age of the person who views it, and therefore MUST be treated differently.

      Since the stores don't know the age of their potential customers, they have to keep those adult things seperated. Same goes for spam.

      If I went to the post office and got 10,000 post card stamps and then printed a picture of some boobs on there, and mailed the cards out to 10k random people, I bet I would get my ass sued by at least 100 of them. Why can't the same thing happen to spammers?
    • And then they should be shot and killed.

      Or fed to aligators.

      Whichever is more convenient.

  • by dtolton ( 162216 ) * on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:34PM (#6155831) Homepage
    From the underlying study:
    The survey, conducted online for Symantec by Applied Research, a
    full service market research firm, interviewed 1,000 youths
    between the ages of seven and 18.


    I wish they disclosed the breakdown of ages. There is a vast
    difference in seventeen year old reading e-mail without their
    parents and seven year olds.

    I would like to know how many of the children in this study were
    12 or under.

    When asked how often they check emails, 72 percent of the
    respondents said a few times a week to a few times a day. When
    asked how important it is to always have mom or dad check emails
    with them, nearly one in three said it is not important, 21
    percent said they don't care and 16 percent said they don't want
    their parents to check their emails with them. Furthermore, when
    asked whether they get parents' permission before giving out
    their personal email addresses to friends or even people and Web
    sites with which they are not familiar, 46 percent of the youths
    responded that they do not.
    .

    Again, this is highly dependant on the ages of the children.
    Younger children would be more likely to ask their parents to
    help them get their e-mail, while teenagers would be far more
    likely to want their parents to just leave them alone.

    It's difficult to infer anything meaningful from these numbers.
    • Indeed. (Score:5, Funny)

      by Faust7 ( 314817 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:43PM (#6155934) Homepage
      half of the kids surveyed reported feeling uncomfortable and offended when seeing improper email content...

      ...interviewed 1,000 youths between the ages of seven and 18.

      Any teenagers in that half were so, so lying.

      • ah, humor (Score:5, Insightful)

        by poptones ( 653660 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:49PM (#6156647) Journal
        But in all seriousness, it was my experience while volunteering in a MS tech support chatroom (back when comic chat was sorta popular) there ARE teenage boys who don't want to see that shit. I've even had people drop in the room to ask where they could contact a trustworthy adult to report someone who had sent them something either via file xfer or url.

        Something does need to be done, but I don't see how any of it can be fixed without changing the basic infrastructure of email communications.

    • by pHDNgell ( 410691 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:17PM (#6156882)
      I wish they disclosed the breakdown of ages. There is a vast difference in seventeen year old reading e-mail without their parents and seven year olds.

      My seven year old reads email on her own. Any email she receives that is not coming from someone on a whitelist that I maintain goes into a mailbox under her mother's account (this is after spam filtering, of course).

      Her mom will drop it into her inbox or whatever when it's appropriate, and let her know that she got this mail, and usually ask me to add it to her whitelist.

      (sorry for the confusing pronouns, this would be easier to explain if I had a boy).
  • Simple. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mrklin ( 608689 ) <.ken.lin. .at. .gmail.com.> on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:34PM (#6155832)
    What is their to think about? Yes. If you are offering porn to my (or anyone's) children, you should held liable by either your or my state law.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:34PM (#6155833)
    Just imagine if you had started enlarging your penis at age 6.
  • whats worse (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:34PM (#6155835)
    What's worse is those HTML emails that have porn already in them, with misleading subjects. So the even the kids that know to delete them but use the preview pane in Outlook will see it.

    Should be illegal.
    • Re:whats worse (Score:4, Informative)

      by aoteoroa ( 596031 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:51PM (#6156034)
      You might be tied into outlook at work but give your children mozilla mail.
      • The spam filter will delete *most* porns as soon as they come in
      • To neutralize any html spam that slips past their filter you can choose to not: "load remote images in mail and newsgroup messages" (It has the added side benefit of protecting your kids from cgi scripts that track when they read their email messages)
  • quit complaining (Score:2, Insightful)

    by gfody ( 514448 ) *
    this is a matter of parents not understanding the dangers of letting their kids online with no restrictions. does your 8yr old daughter have a cell phone? no? why does she have email?

    at least with email you can specify who she can receive email from and block everybody else. if you gave her a cell phone whats to stop some creep from calling her and talking nasty and/or lurring her out someplace.

    if your kids are walking by themselve's down the strip in vegas chances are they might catch a glimpse at one of t

    • by Computer! ( 412422 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:39PM (#6155903) Homepage Journal
      you gave her a cell phone whats to stop some creep from calling her and talking nasty and/or lurring her out someplace.

      The law, jackass.

      the internet is a similar place.. 18 and over seriously!

      Yeah, what use could children possibly have for the most powerful educational tool in the history of Man? More thinky, less typey.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        the most powerful educational tool in the history of Man does not absolve parents and legal gardians of THEIR responsibility!
  • by Madsci ( 616781 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:35PM (#6155853)
    I wondered why my 6-year-old was refinancing his mortgage.
  • "Inappropriate"? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gspr ( 602968 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:36PM (#6155864)
    "Inappropriate spam"? Ehm... is there any other kind of spam?
  • by John Jorsett ( 171560 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:39PM (#6155905)
    I receive some really raw spam, and not just words but pictures. If I were a parent, I'd be in favor of flaying alive anyone sending this kind of stuff to my kid. I can't imagine how parents cope these days.
  • by rossz ( 67331 ) <ogre@@@geekbiker...net> on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:39PM (#6155906) Journal
    This is why I run my own mail server. With SpamAssassin, nearly all spam is nuked. There's still a very small amount of stuff slipping through, but none have reached my daughter's mailbox (yet). When one does, I will definately go after the company responsible if they are US based (not much I can do about the foreign based companies).
  • by Sindri ( 207695 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:43PM (#6155936) Homepage
    I someone was caught trying to sell children a dildo in the street that person would probably serve jail time for that. Cant see how offering dildos to kids through the internet is different.
    • by Telastyn ( 206146 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:21PM (#6156384)
      What about cucumber-shaped massage tools? Make that kid has terrible muscle tension!

      In all seriousness though: the difference is distance. The dildo-salesman might be in a different country, and can certainly not be sure that the 'person' they're selling the dildo to is a child. They certainly cannot target the child, and they certainly aren't near enough to the child to kidnap/harm/intimidate/rape them.
  • Pornography (Score:5, Insightful)

    by man_ls ( 248470 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:43PM (#6155940)
    Most pornographic e-mails that I get contain hardcore graphic images inline, that load just by clicking on the message.

    With titles like "re: what's up?" and stuff, I *have* to open them because it might be someone I sent a message to a while back...

    In the U.S. it is illegal to show pornography to minors...so you'd definately have a case.
  • by in7ane ( 678796 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:44PM (#6155948)
    This may well be the only issue where 'just think about the children' will result in something good.

    And now anti-spam legislation will be SO much easier to sell to congress/general(dumb) public (if it CAN be any easier to sell...)
  • So what?? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Alpha_Nerd ( 565637 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:45PM (#6155961)
    When I was a kid I wanted porn spam...


    I've been a proud surfer of internet pr0n since the 5th grade.(college freshman now)
  • Wow... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Faust7 ( 314817 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:49PM (#6156006) Homepage
    "win a Playstation,"
    "meet singles online,"
    "lose 15 pounds in two days,"
    "buy herbal Viagra online,"


    Damn, they're that coherent? Mine don't make nearly make that much sense. Why, here's a sampling of subject lines straight from my Hotmail inbox:

    "hard vertilde suvereniteetti"
    "Att: a gargantuan thing ffx"
    "Ssrt life skillss rrewaarrdded - whhy waiit"
    "embrafeable stronlhold"
    "Kimberly said you"
    "bending moment"
    "pebble ruimnaalden orrella nnthayer"
    "How is it applied?"
    "varnish-treated"

    I don't know what an embrafeable stronlhold is, but I know I've always wanted one. Varnish-treated.
    • ...what with their embrafeable stronlholds and their vertilde suvereniteettis and their ruimnaalden orrella nnthayers. The Welsh are the single greatest threat to human language and they MUST be stopped before it's too late! Heed my warning or the human race will be doomed to saying LLANFAIR for all eternity!
  • ISP Signups (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ergonal ( 609484 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:49PM (#6156011)
    Don't you have to be over 18, or have permission from a parent/legal guardian to purchase an Internet account? Shouldn't it therefore be the account-holders responsibility what a minor sees using their account?
  • time to fight back (Score:5, Insightful)

    by curtlewis ( 662976 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:51PM (#6156029)
    Spam has long been out of control. Where I work currently, spam consists of about 81% of all incoming email. This is at a company receiving over 1 million emails a day.

    There are laws existing to protect children from exposure to 'adult' materials. These permit their parents to control, to some extent, the exposure of such material to their children.

    Spam is getting away with breaking these laws. I can't see any parent, no matter how open minded, wanting their child to see breast enlargement, penis enlargement and watch this teen fuck barnyard animal emails.

    When they see this stuff, they start to form opinions. Without guidance, these opinions can be off base by a large margin. Seeing the enlargement ads, children could well get the idea that they need to have 44DD breasts or 14" penises (penii?) in order to 'fit in.'

    Exposing kids to the hard core images in these emails surely must be against some laws and if not, they should be expanded to cover it.

    Also, Spam email should be part of the telemarketing crack down. There should be an opt-out email list to keep from getting unsolicited email.

    These adjustments to law would go a long way to reducing wasted bandwidth on the net, as well as improving the moral growth of our nation's children. Sheesh, I sound like Jerry Falwell, but I'm far from it.
  • "Daddy, what's a penis enlargement?" when he's 6...

    What about this one, "Daddy, why do girls suck on guys dicks?"

    Spammers are just the scum of the earth, along with the RIAA, MPAA, Congress, Senate, MS, etc.
  • by egburr ( 141740 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:56PM (#6156108) Homepage
    When my son was born, I setup an email address and web page for him. The web page to announce his birth, and the email address so people could send him notes to read later in life.

    The only place his email address is posted is on his web page. His birthdate is on the same page, so it is obvious he not even two years old yet.

    He already receives spam for credit cards, porn, penis enlargers, etc.

    I would love to sue these spammers, if only for the time I spend keeping my son's mailbox clean of this junk.

  • by Dolemite_the_Wiz ( 618862 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:57PM (#6156123) Journal
    Since nine times out of ten the spam is sent across state lines, should the penalties be a Felony?

    Dolemite
    __________________
  • by BenjyD ( 316700 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @05:58PM (#6156140)

    Should spammers be held responsible for the spams they send out?

    s/'be held responsible for'/'be made to print out and eat'
  • don't get me wrong, sexual hypocrisy is a problem in the world, especially in the us.

    but everyone can support a legal measure that insists on a hands-off attitude towards children and sexual overtures from adults... from sexual conservatives like john ashcroft, who has to cover up naked breasts [usatoday.com] on statues behind him on stage (snicker), to righteous liberal sex-advice columnists, like dan savage [villagevoice.com]. nobody likes pedophilia, period. no slippery slope here folks.

    now, since spammers spew indiscriminantly, they have no way of knowing if the account they are sending to is owned by a child. meanwhile, responsible email mass-mailers have means of knowing who their audience is and can easily avoid this pitfall.

    result? a legal weapon against spam everyone can get behind. it can be mercilessly enforced, with moral and righteous indignation. no grey areas, no controversy. pedophilia is evil, period. jail time anyone?

    this is an excellent development. bravo symantec.
  • by rice_burners_suck ( 243660 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:03PM (#6156188)
    I don't have that big of a problem with spam. You know why? Because:
    1. I give out my address only to thoughtfully selected individuals. I check mail here several times a day.
    2. I have a second address, which I call my "public" address, which I give away freely (and check about once or twice a week).
    3. For both addresses, I set up a whitelist which includes all the people that I have given the address to. All other messages get filtered to the trash. I empty the trash occasionally, quickly perusing the "From:" lines in the list of unread messages before doing so.

      Very few "wanted" messages end up in the trash. My "wanted" message traffic is pretty high, too.

    I have an idea to extend the whitelist policy: Each person would set up a "deposit" sum on their email address. This deposit could be any amount you want, from a few cents to billions of dollars. Each person's email address would be tied to some sort of payment system. If you want to send a message to someone whose whitelist you're not on, the system will charge that person's deposit fee to you. If that person accepts your message, your deposit is refunded. If that person rejects your message, they get to keep your deposit. Get paid to reject SPAM mail! What do people do who don't have credit cards, bank accounts, etc.? They'll deposit some sum of money (like a hundred bucks) with their mail service provider, and deposits will be deducted from that amount. People in the spam business will be out of business, really damn quick. Yes, this would require changes to the mail protocol. People who continue to use the old protocol will continue to receive spam and will be unable to send mail to people with the new protocol unless they're on their whitelists.

    Guinness. Because friends don't let friends drink Bud Light.

  • seriously (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jafac ( 1449 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:15PM (#6156318) Homepage
    if there were ever an angle that would justify the legal wrangling that would be required to pass a law that would ban spam, (and the Internet anonymity that spam relies on), this would be it.

    "won't somebody please think of the children" pulls any American's hearstrings a lot louder than "right to privacy" or "right to free speech" or "right to make lots of money". (but not necessarily "right to bribe congressmen").

    The spam problem, at it's root, is born from Internet anonymity. Internet anonymity is a powerful rights issue. As long as Internet anonymity exists, spam will exist, whether it's banned or not.

    This is a very sticky issue - and it became a sticky issue when the Internet was changed from a network of academic and scientific interests to a commercial enterprise. It was not a well-thought-out plan. This was unforseen fallout.

    Clearly, there have been huge benefits to humanity at large from this transition. But these are some very thorny issues to work out. In the end, it just doesn't make sense to combine the Information Superhighway that will educate and enlighten with the freewheeling Las Vegas style business environment it's become. How do we reconcile it?

    It's not as simple as quoting Zappa; "Protecting the children is a good way to raise a generation of kids that can't stick up for themselves."

    I have young kids, and I do not let them surf the internet or read email unsupervised for this very reason. And probably won't until they're 16. It becomes a VERY time-consuming task for a well-meaning parent. I'm certainly not afraid of explaining homosexuality to my kids. I'm not afraid of my 9 year old son seeing a breast. I'd be worried about him watching a film of a guy getting it on with a donkey. I'd be especially worried about my daughter watching a "BDSM scene" castration mpeg. Most adults can't handle watching that stuff.
  • by The Winter Queen ( 39099 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:28PM (#6156445) Homepage

    The spammers like to claim that all the email they send out is opted in for. Where this true children wouldn't be getting this stuff.

    The problem is that spammers lie. I know I never asked to recieve ads for child porn, yet I get it. And I can't make it stop.

    Spammers must be forced to post real contact info, which I don't think is going to happen.

    My 14 year old neighbor is always coming over here to use the computer, work on her website and use our high speed connection. She is very upset by porn spam. She isn't requesting this stuff either.

    I think the only thing to to is make legit businesses see how much spam hurts them. I get email from 4 or 5 companys that I actually requested and want. Most of the time I don't get these mails becuse of the strict spam filtering I have had to use to stop the 300+ messages a day I was getting. If big business gets pissed then perhaps we will see some action.

    I'd rather be allowed to hunt and kill spammers, but that's me.

  • by Chilles ( 79797 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:31PM (#6156476)
    I for one don't think inappropriate e-mail will hurt kids one bit as long as there's a parent around to explain stuff. I for one cycled through a part of the red light district of the city I lived in to get to school from the age of 12 and as far as I can determine I'm as sane as the next guy.

    But if there are influential people who see the fact that inappropriate spam reaches children as a reason to seriously start fighting spam I'm all for it.
  • POPFile (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hng_rval ( 631871 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @06:34PM (#6156506)
    I can't recommend this open source program enough for stopping spam. Anyone can set it up, and while no heuristic based spam stopping program can be 100% foolproof, this will certainly stop a large amount of inappropriate spam from reaching your children. It works by matching unique words in mail, and you can constantly train it. After just going through a few pages of mail and training it I get absolutely NO mortgage, porn, penis enlargement, or viagra spams at all.

    Download it here [sourceforge.net]
  • by MongooseCN ( 139203 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:06PM (#6156796) Homepage
    It's like going to a playground and pushing viagra, drugs, porno and taking their lunch money while saying you'll be right back with a 100$ loan for them. Or if an old man came on the playground and started talking to your 10 year old kid about enlarging his penis, would you really have a problem with that?

    Joking aside, I dont see spamming kids with this info as being much different than asking them verbally.
  • by WEFUNK ( 471506 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:26PM (#6156952) Homepage
    From the article:

    "Four out of five children receive inappropriate spam e-mail touting get-rich-quick schemes, and almost half receive spam linking to pornographic materials."

    This only tells me that one out of five children do not have an e-mail account, and that nearly half of all children are able to use spamassassin much better than I can.
  • by sllim ( 95682 ) <`achance' `at' `earthlink.net'> on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:45PM (#6157079)
    A very smart women once told me that you must choose your battles. Some battles are not worth the cost of winning.

    I think this is as true for spam as anything else in life.

    I think we need to look at the battle to kill spam and reduce it in scope a bit. This idea of simply 'spam bad, kill it' is actually too broad.

    It leaves open too many issues, like companies that allow opt-in lists and the like.

    I can't wait for the first time that some kid decides to send an email to every kid in his school and the kid or the school gets sued under some spam law. That would prove the validity of my point.

    However Porn (yummy) is a fight worth winning.
    It is so clear and concise. How can you argue against it?
    Playboy and Penthouse have some fascinating articles in them sometimes (or at least they used to, I haven't read one in years). Would you have a problem with me giving your 12 year old a copy of Penthouse just because I thought some article in it would interest him?

    I just don't see how any reasonable person can find any circumstance where putting porn in the hands of kids is acceptable.

    If the companies say that they don't know how to tell the difference between a 12 year olds email address and an adults I think we should just agree with them that that is a real headscracther.

    It just might not be possible to spam porn.

    The hardship in this fight needs to be squarely placed on the shoulders of the porn industry. There is no reason to force kids to register special email addresses, that is what they porn industry would ask for and they need to be denied it.

    Tell the porn industry this. If someone pays you money to access your sight then you can spam the email address that is tied with that account.
    That way you got the industry in a trap. If some kid stole daddies card and daddy finds the porn in the kids mailbox later on then the porn industry is still at fault for distributing porn to a minor.
  • by night_flyer ( 453866 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @07:57PM (#6157166) Homepage
    As a male, Ive been recieveing "enlarge your breasts now" spam for quite some time...

    and damnit, Ive been on a diet to reduce them!
  • Suing (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mabu ( 178417 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @08:22PM (#6157321)
    Someone can sue a spammer any time they want IF they can find out who the spammer is. That's the problem.

    If spam is getting to inappropriate people (i.e. children) that's just yet another potential illegality among many that have been continually perpetrated, among many that the authorities on virtually every level seem uninterested in enforcing.

    I keep saying over and over, the spam problem is not one that needs new legislation. It's one that needs state, local, national and international authorities to enforce the laws already on the books that are currently being broken. People need to start asking questions of each new elected official as to whether or not they're going to prosecute spammers or continue to ignore the laws they break.

    Maybe this particular crime's political incorrectess might finally motivate the authorities to actually pursue the spammers? One can only hope, but since almost every spammer already breaks numerous federal laws, it's a crap shoot to determine if anything will be done.

  • Is this surprising? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Control-Z ( 321144 ) on Monday June 09, 2003 @10:23PM (#6158041)
    It should be obvious that a kid with an unrestricted e-mail account is going to get load of the same damn twisted porn spam everybody else gets. We don't need Symantec to tell us that. Anyone who lets their underage child get unrestricted e-mail is setting them up to see some seriously twisted shit. The only way my kid is getting e-mail is if it's whitelist-only. Even a whitelist would be risky with header spoofing, which I predict will become more of a problem once challenge-response systems start gaining popularity.
  • by MrJerryNormandinSir ( 197432 ) on Tuesday June 10, 2003 @07:51AM (#6159831)
    Well, we are talking kids. And I have kids. My youngest is twelve. What I do is create an inclusive email filter. It's just the opposite of
    Sendmail's SPAM filter. My kids need to submit the email address of tose they want to recieve email.
    Everthing else gets rejected or directed to me so I can go after the Spammers.

  • Too Easy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Derkec ( 463377 ) on Tuesday June 10, 2003 @09:03AM (#6160408)
    If ever there was an easy question asked on Slashdot... Yes. They should be held responsible. When you are peddling in porn you have a responsibility to not advertise it to kids or give it to them.


    Spamming using dictionary methods is beyond inappropriate for porn vendors. If Abercrombie and Fitch can get sued for sending their questionable catalogs through the mail to under-age people, porn vendors are in no better position.


    Some of you have said, "But there's no way to know the age of the kid." No, but you make a reasonable effort. If you or one of your trusted partners has thier credit card number, either the email address is legit or you have been the victim of fraud. Heck, if someone has simply clicked, "Sure, I'm 18" on your website, you have at least done some filtering. There are ways of at least trying to determine the age of the people attached to the email address. People who deal in porn are responsible for taking those simple steps.

    The problem is with dictionary spammers and those who buy the generic large lists. They are advertising porn to children and many are sending them samples. I have to believe this is illegal and if it isn't it damn well should be.


    Finally I have to say that I hope this is in the YRO catagory because the rights of kids are being violated. If there is serious concern about the rights of pornographers to spam us, we have real problems and need to look inward.

  • turn off inline HTML (Score:3, Informative)

    by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Tuesday June 10, 2003 @09:23AM (#6160582) Journal
    You will keep your kid from 95% of this crap by turning off inline html in mail messages. Most of the porn spam now is just an image and no text.

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