UK To Hold Public Enquiry On Spam 168
feepcreature writes "Is something going to be done about email spam at last? In the UK, the All Party Parliamentary Internet Group is to hold a public enquiry into spam. These politicians seem to understand the scale of the spam problem, and they are considering a new global level organization to deal with the Internet, as well as new laws, inter-government action and technical solutions.
But will more international bodies help? Would laws work?"
laws? (Score:5, Insightful)
You can make something illegal, but you can't make it unpopular.
Kind of like.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, not really... (Score:3)
Re:laws? (Score:3, Insightful)
The tobacco industry woud disagree...
Re:laws? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:laws? (Score:5, Informative)
Come again? Since when was a house of Lords debate an indication of anything other than the fact the members still have a pulse?
The statement from the minister is actually pretty specific, they will be legislating to implement the privacy directive, that has a direct application to the spam issue. They are also open to other legislation being proposed - if it makes sense.
Parliament is nothing like Congress. The legislation is almost entirely driven by the government, they choose the schedule for the bills, everything so if legislation is introduced the chances are that it will be passed unless there are major problems. None of the gridlock you get in the US.
The other difference is that legislation is frequently amended en-route in response to individual members concerns and in committee. Unlike in the US the ammendments cannot be completely unrelated bills, but any member can propose an ammendment, you don't have to be a committee chair to have a chance of getting it heard. The privacy directive is very likely to be ammended to include an anti-spam provision if one is proposed that makes sense.
The result is that the system works very differently. It is not unusual for a bill to be followed by another shortly after with corrections.
The point is that it should not be easy to get legislation through.
Re:laws? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:laws? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:laws? (Score:2)
One of my cousin's is a member.
You might disagree with my views but attacking someone as uninformed simply for disagreeing with you makes you sound a little arrogant.
The Lords has been a joke for at least a century. Far from being more representative than the commons it has failed to put a stop to any of the Tory party's reactionary measures such a
Re:laws? (Score:2, Interesting)
Unfortunately (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:4, Funny)
This old SatireWire article [satirewire.com] has a similar joke. If you want a mild laugh, Google for "initial pubic offering [google.com]" and marvel at the number of hits.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2, Funny)
Talk about divesting.
I guess there's some truth to that old statement people make when the stock market tanks: "I lost my shirt." And their pants. And their teddies. And their knickers.
The Anglophile in me loves it when people talk about knickers... ;)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
My kingdom for a spell checker.
FINALLY!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Rejoice and run to the streets, freedom from spam is near!!!
Re:FINALLY!!! (Score:1, Funny)
Like Texas right ?
Re:FINALLY!!! (Score:3, Funny)
host-loc 24.196.258.3 | xargs missile-launch
A place to start... (Score:2)
After that, something of a lower yeild for Boca Raton, Florida is in order. Then again, perhaps we should take that out first, since that's where quite a few of the spammers actually live.
Re:A place to start... (Score:2)
interesting idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:interesting idea (Score:1)
Email is free because it should be. That's what's made it so popular be
Re:interesting idea (Score:1, Offtopic)
Now allowing me, the receiver of spam, to charge the spammer $0.01 for every piece I receive could work.
For example I get spam from that idiot in Africa who wants me to transfer $1 million dollars to some bank account. I hit reply, and say "you owe me a penny. Feel free to transfer it to my paypal account
Re:interesting idea (Score:3, Insightful)
IMHO, email needs a re-vanp. When recieving an emil, authentication of the originating address should be required - would stop a lot.
But, just as ass regulation, it would need global acceptance, meaning it would probably have to be accepted as a UN resolution.
Hmmmm, famine debate about dying babies or removing some spam... let me think...
I agree it should be done, but some of us need more
Re:interesting idea - UN resolutions (Score:2)
But, just as ass regulation, it would need global acceptance, meaning it would probably have to be accepted as a UN resolution.
Yes, and we all know that everyone obeys the UN and its resolutions. Nice notion but I don't think a UN resolution will be of much practical help.
By the way, "ass regulation"???
Re:interesting idea (Score:2)
Re:interesting idea (Score:2)
Re:interesting idea (Score:2)
Re:interesting idea (Score:2)
Lets face it, there is a spam problem because there is a hole in the SMTP protocal. Fixing the hole is the best bet for solving spam.
Maybe (Score:5, Insightful)
Self-regulation has largely failed, so I really don't see why not. Because of the actions of a few (in Internet scale), the rest of us must pay.
But the question is not really "would the law work". It's "would it be enforceable?", and "at what cost?". And "cost" is not only monetary...
IANAL (Score:2)
Make it so that companies are responsible for their advertising, and that UCE (even by a third party on your behalf) is illegal. Make it (bty international treaty) so that anyone receiving the spam can sue, across any juristiction that the advertising firm trades in. If they claim that th
Re:IANAL (Score:3, Interesting)
If they claim that they didn't know their advertisers were going to USE (illegally), tell them they can sue the spammers to recover their money.
Yeah, that's a great idea. Guilty until proven innocent. I'll be sure to send out millions of spams claiming to be from whatever politician signs that crap into law.
Re:IANAL (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:IANAL (Score:2)
We need a more wholesome solution, with lots of fibre.
Re:Maybe (Score:2)
If people who used the internet were more educated and took the whole thing as a learning experience, and didn't use AOL, then p
Serious Problems with Laws (Score:2)
Any time governments regulate speech, it's risking censorship. Any time governments regulate technology they don't un
Re:Maybe (Score:2)
Well, the current email system has failed to self-regulate, but that could be considered a technical failing.
For example, because email is sent cleartext, if intercepted emails were endemic we would, correctly, say that we didn't protect ourselves from spies. In that case, and in the case of spam, the solution seems to be to fix the email system.
A modern email system could incorporate signatures and keys quite transparently. Your email cl
I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you ask me, spam is a good reason to get broadband. I'm tired of trying to download 25+ bloated, HMTL laden, emails every day over my sub-56K connection.
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Broadband (when BT finally get their arses into gear and install it) will lessen the effect of the issue, but it's still there. It may be trivial to download the spam, but you still have to wade through the stuff trying to find real mails.
I don't think laws can really help either? I doubt most of these spammers (at least the ones that seem to spam me) really care about the law!
Perhaps the best way to kill off spammers for good would be for Microsoft to build bay
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Spam still takes out a lot of the internet's bandwidth -- and not EVERYBODY will use Outlook or Entourage. As long as they can send spam to the 5% (Non-Windows) who don't use those programs, they'll do it. Linux, BSD, Microsoft, and Apple will all have to do this, but there will still be people who get it nevertheless. They also might research into what kind of stuff goes through and send that. Eventually the
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:1)
Yea, yea, and it should be HTML, not HMTL.
As for Microsoft incorporating Bayesian filtering in OE (or any other client): POPFile [sourceforge.net] and others are free (as in beer and speech,) and filtering after downloading doesn't speed up the crawl email takes across my slow connection.
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact that I quoted the "HMTL" only comes from me being a lazy git using copy+paste.
On filtering, perhaps you missed my point... I actually use POPFile myself. What I'm suggesting here is exploiting Microsoft's dominance. After all, almost everyone except hobbyists (meaning the usual Average "how do i get the internet" Joe) use Outlook/O.Express. Many I talk to don't even know that other email clients exist
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:2)
true, however, the best you can do if your server doesn't support any spam filtering is use something like mailwasher - which doenloads the headers for you to preview in a dialog. you can they tell it to delete on the server, messages you don't want to see - and therefore don't download.
I use it, I like it, I'd prefer no spam at all, but the world isn't perfect.
cheers.
Re:I was going to get ADSL, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
In my humble experience, spam is not sent with attachments, but rather sends HTML emails which upload an image when opened (thus allowing checking of readers as well as saving bandwidth costs for them).
Why not use an email prog like Eudora, Netscape or Mozilla which, IMHO, far surpass IE or Outlook and will allow default blocking of uploading remote images in emails, blocking popups (have seen the odd couple in emails) etc?
Give them a try.
Piece by piece (Score:5, Insightful)
This stance at least sends a message to companies who so far have had a broad tolerance to spam (cable ISPs who don't care about security, companies running open relays, etc.) - I honestly believe they often have this "it's not important" attitude out of pure ignorance.
Governements saying "this matters" may encourage a few of them to pick up their act. Piece by piece we will make a move towards a more securable mail infrastructure - it won't happen overnight, it won't happen by bigh bang, it'll come small step by small step, and as such moves like this should be neither ridiculed nor raved about, but gently welcomed and encouraged.
All IMHO
Not enough (Score:3, Insightful)
If there's even one country with no anti-spam laws, people will just go there to spam. Sure, there're technical ways to deal with that, but given how easy it is to "acquire" new IP address space most of them are doomed to failure.
considerably more than just one country (Score:2)
Re:considerably more than just one country (Score:1)
Re:Not enough (Score:2, Interesting)
If there's even one country with no anti-spam laws, people will just go there to spam. Sure, there're technical ways to deal with that, but given how easy it is to "acquire" new IP address space most of them are doomed to failure.
Huh? How easy is it to acquire new IP address space?
If there's only one country with no anti-spam laws, that country would likely lose its internet access completely.
Re:Not enough (Score:1)
According to this story [slashdot.org], it's not at all difficult to "acquire" (note the inverted commas) new space.
As for closing 'net access down totally, I can't quite see it, eh. At the international level carriers don't put provisions in their contracts about what traffic you can send, provided you don't try and harm their network. The breach of contract suit against any carrier who tried that one on would be short, sharp, and decidedly unpleasant for the c
Nudge, Nudge (Score:3, Funny)
Evening, squire!
Man with hat:
Good evening.
Man:
Is your...is your wife a spammer?
Man with hat:
I-I...I beg your pardon?
Man::
Your...your wife. Does she spam, eh? Does she spam, eh? Eh?
Man with hat:
Huh, sometimes she has to spam, yes.
Man:
I bet she does! I bet she does! Say no more! Say no more! Know what I mean? Nudge, nudge!
Re:Nudge, Nudge (Score:2)
What? A snake prompted a hairstyle? Bizarre!
(Unless by any chance you might possibly have meant a Python-inspired quip, of course...)
Can politicians really retool email? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Can politicians really retool email? (Score:2)
Perhaps ./ should have an article examining the current alternatives to smtp and easy ways ./ readers can make it a part of their companies, and homes.
Considering that you can't sign up for slashdot without an SMTP-based email address, somehow I doubt they're going to do that. After all, slashdot is part of the problem.
There are lots of alternatives to SMTP. Web forms and instant messages are two. Others are built on top of SMTP, like PGP signatures. None of them, however, are useful when you want t
Let's find a Cure, not a Treatment (Score:5, Insightful)
Efforts to regulate the content of spam messages, inconsequential civil penalties, client side filtering, and any system which filters mail based on content caters to this impotent approach to addressing the spam problem. It offers no cure. It does nothing to reduce spam; it does nothing to discourage spammers; it does nothing to address the most serious problem of spam, which involves unfair and often illegal exploitation of resources.
Maybe this is the new way. We don't actually solve any problems. We just put bandaids on them and allow them to consume more wasted resources, and the demand for more resources, hardware and bandwith is what drives the new economy.
Call me idealistic, but I think it sucks. I am appalled that so many people will settle for such shallow and ineffective approaches to these problems. But I guess I shouldn't be surprised. Most of these people profit from the existence of spam so why bite the hand that feeds them on a major artery when you can collect some bucks and merely trim their nails?
Re:Let's find a Cure, not a Treatment (Score:2)
What would you suggest, then?
Cure: Stop Ignoring the Abuse (Score:2)
I'm patiently waiting for someone to check to see if I'm an open relay. Depending on wha
international bounties (Score:2, Interesting)
If someone finds who the spammer is, they take the name to the FTC equiv in that government. The spammer then pays YOU that bounty.
Do that..and the problem has just gotten easier.
Obligatory "Soviet Russia" joke (Score:1)
Re:international bounties (Score:2)
The problem with that system, off course, is identity theft.
Scenario: Spammer steals many identities, frames innoncent man and then reports him and claims a bounty,and YOU pay the spammer a bounty.
Do that...and the problem has just got
I wanna be an outlaw (Score:5, Funny)
Job oportunity? (Score:3, Funny)
Hmmm, I wonder if they'll need a Unix admin. :-)
I live in England (Score:4, Informative)
I doubt this will do much
Re:I live in England (Score:2)
Non-Roman-Character Spam is easy to filter (Score:2)
As far as American-oriented products go, most of the spammers are perfectly happy to sell their porn or blue-pills-purporting-to-be-Viagra to anybody in the world as long as they get a working credit card number. The credi
Did anyone else read: (Score:4, Funny)
For a second there, I was thinking to myself "Man, those Brits take spam SERIOUSLY."
Re:Did anyone else read: (Score:3, Funny)
Those crazy brits. They don't even have a senate.
laws and sausages (Score:4, Interesting)
Despite being of a basically liberal bent, I have at times so despaired of spam that even *new laws* sounded attractive. Various anti-spam measures [geocities.com] (I like the *potential*-payment plan of pennyblack [microsoft.com], mentioned on Slashdot at least once before), including of late vastly improved spam-filtering methods, I think are a better solution. (Yes, Declan McCullagh has made this argument better than I am ready to right now
Even though it sounds nice to say that we should "ban spam," unless all email is routed through a big Spam Whittler, any such ban is no better than just enforcing property rights laws re: trespass etc. In Italy, CDs are all stamped with a little pink stamp of government approval / taxation (at least 10 years ago there were
A visit today to a franchise location of the U.S. Postal "Service" (remember, "dot-com, not dot-gov" since [hold the guffaws in the rear] they're not a government agency, according to so high an authority as
timothy
The US is ready to help! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The US is ready to help! (Score:2)
No no no. The administration is against weapons of mass DESTRUCTION, not MAILING.
Wrong (Score:2)
The Horrors of SPAM (Score:5, Funny)
First of all, it's almost impossible to answer all of it! But that's just the beginning of the problem.
At first, I thought it was great. I got tons of credit, a new mortgage at 0%, and a fat check from some guy in Nigeria. But now my 'manhood' and my wife's breasts are so huge that neither of us can move or even feed ourselves.
If we didn't have the army of hot teenage sluts to take care of us, we'd be dead by now.
I hope they will put an end to spam before any more innocent people suffer this horrible fate.
The Real Way to Fight SPAM (Score:1)
Re:The Real Way to Fight SPAM (Score:2)
Reminds me of that quote about the Other White Scammer, Duncan Shiels: that he makes $1,000 a week doing it. Which sounds nice and impressive until you realize that it's only $52,000 a year. Which anyone network admin or sysadmin should be able to make, and not piss off millions of people while doing so.
Anybody notice the acronym? (Score:3, Funny)
Stopping Spam When APIG Flies (Score:2)
legislating spam != good idea (Score:4, Insightful)
How do you define spam, in legal terms? If a random user sends you an unsolicited email for ANY purpose, can you declare his message illegal? Imagine the havoc.
Systems like ORBS were on the right track (though they're hardly the perfect solution) - let us, the users of the 'net, regulate spam. Unfortunately, due to sue-happy spammers, such systems are now being rendered ineffective (why does it seem that wherever the courts get involved, matters just get worse and worse...?).
Legislation is not the answer. If the courts would only throw such frivolous lawsuits out, we *could* take care of the problem ourselves.
law not as irrelevant as you might think (Score:2)
After all, it's legislation that determines what courts decide -- even whether they throw out cases or not.
Compulsory Spam Filtering (Score:4, Interesting)
I think about the only thing that governments can do is mandate that ISPs provide adequate spam filtering, as the Internet is global and government control of internet traffic stops at national borders. The solution that my ISP [core.com] has worked out seems to be effective; the spam is filtered, and a lot less seems to hit my inbox folder. I can report messages that are spam for me, and it gets added to my spam filter.
All They Do is Talk, Talk (Score:4, Insightful)
How many of you still get junk faxes? I still get several a day (business fax of PhantomCow.com) -- and I call every one of them back to get "removed" off thier list!! There is a law in place that will let me sue a junk faxer for $500, but it has to be a second offense, and you have to document everything.
Just because you have a law, and give people the right to sue a company for spam, or whatever, it is still a hassle for the average Joe, and he won't do anything about it -- execept hit the delete key!
Newt-dog
Re:All They Do is Talk, Talk (Score:2)
Will laws work? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes! if... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why does there need to be a law?
Let each ISP decide for itself whether it wants to take the responsibility of allowing anonymous customers. And let them decide how many emails those anonymous customers are allowed to send.
Re:Yes! if... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, why do we need any laws anyway?
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2)
Also, the law is supposed to protect my privacy as part of my freedoms.
You are OK with enforcing you to have auto-insurance, right? And nothing wrong with enforcing you to use your seat belts. And only a criminal will be against enforcing to drive having proper ID (driver license
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2)
Why do you want to send anonymous messages? If you are a good guy than you have nothing to hide.
If you want to send an anonymous message to someone (like goverment) than you have to ask the question: "Do they want to recieve anything anonymous?" And
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2)
Last I checked, it doesn't matter what I have to hide. Not everything one might hide is "bad" some are ashamed, some have special needs for being anonymous, refugee's etc. There are plenty of good reasons, but even if I could come up with none... I don't need justifiable reasons why I feel I deserve to keep my right, or why I feel it's neccesary. I am free to be anonymous for whatever reason I choose.
"By t
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2)
As for accessing an airplane without ID... ask how many people liked it BEFORE 9/11, opinions after do NOT count since they are the direct result of fear from terrorism.
After 9/11 many american just woke up. Look at Russia: they have never doubts that airplane access must be with pr
Re:Yes! if... (Score:2)
We should also note, that 9/11 is the first and only successful terrorist attack of any significance in the history of the United States (unless you want to count pearl harbor, and we HAVE fixed issues of perl harbor, we'd know if japanese birds left the backwaters of Russia be
you can not control spam (Score:3, Insightful)
How do you find out where the spam originated?
Who do you sue, the spammer or the company the spammer is trying to make you a customer of?
How do you prevent abuse?
The only way to stop it is to make everyone log on with a unique authentication, and track that authentication. something I'm not interested in. thats for sure.
Now who would be interested in knowing what anybody does on the internet at any given time?
Re:you can not control spam (Score:3, Informative)
Be where the spammers connect first.
This honeypot:
http://www.corpit.ru/cgi-bin/h0n5yp0t
knocked Ralsky off three separate ISPs in one weekend. The story is a bit more complex than just that but what I say is true.
Next question.
Re:you can not control spam (Score:1)
The company! It's win-win. Not only is it easier to find the company than the spammer (just click the link), but if you take away the spammer's revenue..
Same thing happened with fast food chains and the meat industry. The fast food industry (well, at least a couple of the big players) wanted their suppliers to clean up their act WRT e.coli etc, and they did.
Remember the golden rule!
Hit them in the pocket!
It's
Wow, the spammers will be cacking their pants now! (Score:3, Funny)
It's as good as over for Ralsky! Yep, in about 30 years he'll find it tough when the first law is passed!
A global treaty is required (Score:3)
If the Berne Convention can work for copyright issues, why can't a similar vehicle work for spam?
The biggest problem spamfighters have right now is that there is no inter-jurisdictional authority to chase and prosecute spammers. A convention would provide this much-needed ability to enforce anti-spam laws across borders.
The REAL fix for spam... (Score:4, Funny)
"Spam, spam, spam, spam!" (Score:3, Funny)
I dislike spam a lot, but you have to love it spam when spam occurs so spam often everywhere. I spam counted no fewer spam than 15 references to spam in the spam article.
I can just hear it start: "Spam, spam, spam, spam..."
(Anyone who didn't get that needs to watch more Monty Python. They coined the term.)
We need national borders on the 'net (Score:2, Interesting)
What sort of laws do we want? What might we get? (Score:2)
There are a lot of "interesting" questions though...
What exactly is spam? bulk mail? automated mail? commercial mail? any or all of these? something else altogether? Perhaps as useful: what is not SPAM? It would be A Bad Thing to restrict legitimate bulk mailing, like mailing lists and so forth.
Who should be targeted?
Re:AND IT'S "INQUIRY", YOU SQUIRREL RAPING LIMEY (Score:1, Informative)
I hope you realize I am wasting the opportunity to mod you down by replying.
Re:AND IT'S "INQUIRY", YOU SQUIRREL RAPING LIMEY (Score:2, Insightful)
In the UK, an enquiry is a question, and an inquiry is an investigation.
The linked article uses "inquiry" correctly (it is a UK site).
It's acceptable for a US writer to change this to "enquiry" in the link, although I don't see why that's necessary unless US English really prefers it that way. I don't know, I don't speak US English. Well, I dabble.