Spam And Alston - From Luddite To Pin-Up? 175
templeton069 writes "Alston (the Australian Communications Minister) has been lambasted as the 'world's greatest Luddite' for a long time but the spam bill introduced to the Australian Parliament last week seems to have struck an almost magical balance with everyone from the Internet Industry Association, the Coalition Against Bulk Unsolicited Email and the Direct Marketing Association, suggesting that it is about as good as it gets. So what's the story -- can you go from Luddite to pin-up in one step? And more importantly, does the legislation provide a template for other jurisdictions to implement low-pain anti-spam legislation?"
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:major problem.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:major problem.. (Score:1)
Re:major problem.. (Score:2, Insightful)
95% of the spam I've had over the last week has been from http://superrxsalesman.info (prescription drugs) domain registered in Seattle. I can't see our Australian government having any teeth to use against these guys.
this already happens in the telemarketing industy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:major problem.. (Score:1)
Why do you need the placebos when you could have a pin-up of a government official? Dressed as a Luddite, nonetheless. I don't know about you, but I have a Luddite fetish.
Oh, shit! I... uh...
[Narrator: Things are not looking up for Bersl...]
Re:major problem.. (Score:1)
Re:major problem.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Non-profit groups are exempt.
Sorry, but I don't like spammers that are trying to save my soul any more than spammers who want to sell me placebos to increase my sexual prowess.
That may be true, but what percentage of the spam you receive is trying to save your soul? If your inbox looks anything like mine, it's full of low-interest loan offers, porn offers, and penile enlargement stuff. If that stuff can be eradicated with this bill, then I'd be all for it. I, for one, don't get much non-profit spam at
Religious spam? (Score:2)
Highten S/p/i/r/t/u/a/l satisfaction, 1 0 0% Safe hgyu5767hgh
IMMEDIATE ACTION REQ'D: download new soul patch
bertsimpson,Where you go when you die
Amazing small digital bible!
bertsimpson,It doesn't^H^H^H get better than this
Re:major problem.. (Score:2)
Re:major problem.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:major problem.. (Score:2)
This sort of conduct is (already) covered by the Privacy Act rather than this proposed legislation. The reason is that it's thought the nature of the problems have enough differences that there should be different approaches to dealing with them.
Re:major problem.. (Score:2)
No, charities, religious organisiations and political parties are exempt. It's extraordinarily difficult to become a charity in law, and basically impossible to become a charity in such a way as to work around the provisions in this Bill. Becoming a registered political party is difficult too (although I would be surprised if some of the restrictions on becoming a political party weren't ruled unconstitutional if somebody were to challenge them). Becoming a religious organisat
Why's everyone so excited? (Score:3, Funny)
The Secret (Score:5, Funny)
As per RFC1149... (Score:2)
Re:The Secret (Score:2)
Besides, well, ethernet is a switched network, it's functionally identical to the telephone network, and the telephone network is going away. Remember the story about AT&T and Spring moving toward entirely IP-based service? The moment you start using pigeons to carry data to your computer, it becomes just another phone line. Or, so you could argue.
If you built a difference engine to
Re:The Secret (Score:1)
Worst link ever (Score:5, Informative)
Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't mind banning those sleezy low-life spammers, but don't wish to restrict the targeted e-marketting of ethical businesses...
I suppose I should read the article, but I bet it takes less than a minute to find the escape hatch in this law. I'll be back...
Re:Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:1)
Re:Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:3, Insightful)
Kind of true. Straight telephone use is explicitly excluded (section 5.5). Section 6.7 also allows other messages to be administratively excluded -- which is perfectly sensible, as it allows oddities to be fixed up without resort to a new law.
However, this is a bill that outlaws spam, not all kinds of direct marketing. Why wouldn't th
telemarketing easily avoidable here... (Score:2)
Re:telemarketing easily avoidable here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Spam I get by the bucketload, even with spamassasin running.
A lot of the spam comes (apparently) from the US, which is sourly amusing when it's for something where the transpo
Re:telemarketing easily avoidable here... (Score:2)
When I answered my landline I would receive about 2-3 telemarketing calls per day.
The AU does sound awfully nice. Now if they could get rid of that pesky Internet censorship and monopoly problem...
Re:Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:3, Informative)
This would favour main-sleaze emailers who have other ways to get your email than "millions" CDs. The DMA sometimes accepts restrictions, but only to preserve your PC as their
Re:Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:2)
Re:Count your change, daughters and pets (Score:2)
This is the Australian Direct Marketing Association, not their evil American cousins. The DMAs outside the US have basically come to the conclusion that Bob Wietzen (head of the DMA in the USA) is a world class moron without the first shadow of a clue on what should be done about spam.
Heeeelp!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Heeeelp!!! (Score:1)
Re:Heeeelp!!! (Score:2)
Re:Heeeelp!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, the anti-spam bill is a good step, but he's still a Luddite.
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2)
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2)
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2, Interesting)
Firstly I believe this legislation is an EXCELLENT idea, HOWEVER, the attrocities including expensive websites [whirlpool.net.au] and his blatant disregard for broadband in Australia are unforgivable.
I appreciate what he is doing here, but he's basically clueless with regards to technology.
One of his advisors (or his nephew etc. for all I know) need a pat on the back. He, on the otherhand, should be ousted before he does more damage.
My AU$0.02
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2)
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:1)
As he's probably the most ignorant [theage.com.au] and facist [theage.com.au] communications minster I can remember us ever having anyway.
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2)
Re:Spam bill good, but overall still a Luddite (Score:2, Insightful)
The government has no role making taxpayers fork out so other people can get broadband, particularly when a large percentage of the population doesn't have a computer and fewer still have need of broadband.
The ALP would never have implemented that poli
Porn profits? Alston said "No thanks." (Score:3, Interesting)
This doesn't actually change anything for the public except to ensure that absolutely all of the revenue generated by these sites is directed offshore... nice one...
Q.
Ayup, fire enough shots... (Score:2)
The man is still an idiot (Score:3, Informative)
Senator Alston said other firms would have social obligations and legal concerns prompting them to take similar action.
Article [news.com.au]
He thinks MS did this for the public good.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:The man is still an idiot (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The man is still an idiot (Score:2)
http://theregister.co.uk/content/6/33032.html [theregister.co.uk]
"MSN was always a blatant example of Microsoft anti-competitive actions. It was launched because Bill Gates came to realise that AOL was a bigger force on the Net than Microsoft, and he "invested" heavily in the Microsoft Network.
Say what they like, it was an attempt to crush AOL. It was a successful attempt, insofar as it crushed other major online service providers - who remembers Prodigy, or The Source? - but AOL survived
TO Police chlng providers to shut down free chat.. (Score:2)
Toronto Police issued a challenge yesterday to other internet providers to follow Microsoft's lead and shut down free, anonymous chat rooms [canoe.ca]
But then again, I haven't been lurking at the easy to find chat rooms that morons like Microsoft and the like have been making available. Maybe there are chat rooms out there that are all dressed up and easy to find for children (like at disney or the cartoon network) that have no controls and that are simply just too easy for predators to in
It won't make a lot of difference (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think we'll see anything slow down until the first procecution.
Maybe we'll all have to put NO JUNK MAIL on our web pages to show we've put some effort into informing the miscreants.
It goes to show however, that once an IT issue directly annoys a minister it gets results. The more IT issues become mainstream the better.
Re:It won't make a lot of difference (Score:3, Interesting)
If you meant proxying, not any more. This was fixed in the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act, aka the "Australian DMCA". In the US, this was also fixed in the DMCA. No, the DMCA isn't all bad...
what about open relays? (Score:2, Insightful)
So.. does this mean that people running and/or responsible for open-relays aren't responsible for the traffic that goes through them?
Wow. Bad mental image. (Score:3, Funny)
Am I the only one picturing an older man in an undershirt, suspenders and short pants as a centerfold? (Not to mention a dozen broken monitors behind him.)
Re:Wow. Bad mental image. (Score:1)
Pinup? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Pinup? (Score:2, Funny)
Address Harvesting (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Address Harvesting? Address Looting perhaps? (Score:2)
In reality, the spammers are stealing the addresses. So why not use a term that is closer to the mark, such as "address looting", "address pillaging" or "address plundering".
Dictionary.com says:
Loot:
1. Valuables pillaged in time of war; spoils.
2. Stolen goods.
3. Informal. Goods illicitly obtained, as by bribery.
4. Informal. Things of value, such as gif
Re:Address Harvesting? Address Looting perhaps? (Score:2)
All in favour...
Could make google.com.au Illegal! (Score:4, Interesting)
While 20.2 says the following, I don't think it helps:
The mere fact my search request contained a DNS name and an '@' character could be construed as grounds to suspect that I might use the results for spamming.
Re:Could make google.com.au Illegal! (Score:2)
You may be correct. Certainly the act does not say what an "electronic addresses" is, and that is a bad thing, IMO.
If your software only harvests addresses that are not email addresses, this would probably fall under the section 20.2 exclusion on the basis that the purpose of harvesting is not related to sending unsolicitted commercial email. However, I don't know if this "common sense" reasoning would stand in a court of law!
Alston still is, and always will be, a fuckwit. (Score:3, Informative)
His latest statement is here [abc.net.au], where he claims that after Microsoft's closure of its chatrooms, more scrutiny will be placed on those of other ISPs
Microsoft's chat service closure was less to do with protecting children than it was a chance to start strangling their IM competition. The child protection thing was just pulling the wool over the public's eyes.
Alston would like nothing more than to have every unmoderated chat service shut down.
Re:Alston still is, and always will be, a fuckwit. (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, and apparently EFA are there purely to support the "immoral" [theregister.co.uk] industries... go figure.
Not such a blessing... (Score:5, Informative)
Eg. Schedule 1, Object, Note 2:
Designated commercial electronic messages are exempt from section 16 (unsolicited commercial electronic messages must not be sent) and section 18 (commercial electronic messages must contain a functional unsubscribe facility).
Those 'designated commercial electronic messages' include:
Government bodies, political parties, religious organisations and charities
(a) the sending of the message is authorised by any of the following bodies:
(i) a government body;
(ii) a registered political party;
(iii) a religious organisation;
(iv) a charity or charitable institution; and
(b) the message relates to goods or services; and
(c) the body is the supplier, or prospective supplier, of the goods or services concerned.
Educational institutions
(a) the sending of the message is authorised by an educational institution; and
(b) either or both of the following subparagraphs applies:
(i) the relevant electronic accountholder is, or has been, enrolled as a student in that institution;
(ii) a member or former member of the household of the relevant electronic accountholder is, or has been, enrolled as a student in that institution; and
(c) the message relates to goods or services; and
(d) the institution is the supplier, or prospective supplier, of the goods or services concerned
Factual information
(a) the message consists of no more than factual information (with or without directlyrelated comment) and any or all of the following additional information:
(i) the name, logo and contact details of the individual or organisation who authorised the sending of the message;
(ii) the name and contact details of the author;
(iii) if the author is an employee--the name, logo and contact details of the author's employer;
(iv) if the author is a partner in a partnership--the name, logo and contact details of the partnership;
(v) if the author is a director or officer of an organisation--the name, logo and contact details of the organisation;
(vi) if the message is sponsored--the name, logo and contact details of the sponsor;
(vii) information required to be included by section 17;
(viii) information that would have been required to be included by section 18 if that section had applied to the message; and
(b) assuming that none of that additional information had been included in the message, the message would not have been a commercial electronic message; and
(c) the message complies with such other condition or conditions (if any) as are specified in the regulations.
After all that, I don't really see how it will help one bit. To my interpretation (wrong though it may be) we can still get spam but we have to know who it is coming from, and if it is from a business (for profit) it may not be more than a business card. On the other hand, from a govt body, political party, religious crazies (or otherwise), and charities, you den't even need to be able to unsubscribe. It must relate to goods or services (uh huh... big protection there. The catalogues in my mailbox do that too) and they must be the prospective supplier. That's what they are hoping, anyway.
Also, a uni, or school, may cheerfully spam all their students. What fun.
All seems to be a waste of time to me.
As for Alston... if anyone sees him, punch him in the face for me, or somesuch.
His $4 million website. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:His $4 million website. (Score:1)
If a luddite is someone who is anti-technology, named after people who actually broke machinery, how can someone who spends large amounts of money on technology be a ludite.
Not to defend it, but a $4 million (about USD2.6 million) web site represents a big investment in a form of technology and would seem to infer, therefore, that he is the opposite of a luddite, whatver that is called.
Re:His $4 million website. (Score:1)
antispam (Score:1)
Defending SPAM and Condemning Detractors (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm looking for ways to get hits on my site, and, that $50 for 300,000 targetted opt-in emails is looking better all the time.
All this legislation does is make it more expensive for spammers, not less likely. Right now, because email is so cheap, eventually spammers will succumb under their own weight because they can't make a profit in an industry where price competition exists.
But now, with opt in mailing lists, you've created a thing of value for spammers to own, and to sell or rent.
Way to go spam legisltatures. You've just turned a nuisance into the next mega industry!
My only gripe (Score:4, Interesting)
"Address-harvesting software must not be supplied,
acquired or used."
I have no problem banning the USAGE of harvested lists. But banning the software?? hmmmm it reeks of censorship to me. Personally, I'd rather be free and spammed than to be sliding down slippery slopes that are completely spam-free.
But maybe that's why I hang out here instead of the local pub.
Stewey
Re:My only gripe (Score:2)
"my only gripe with this bill is this:"
Re:My only gripe (Score:1)
Not to mention Using internet for offensive and menacing purposes to be outlawed [dcita.gov.au] (and EFA's response [efa.org.au]).
It will take a lot more than this (and even this I am not convinced is a + rather than a -) to make me have any respect for Alston and his cronies.
Big F*cking Loophole (Score:4, Insightful)
the message relates to goods or services; and
(c) the body is the supplier, or prospective
supplier, of the goods or services concerned.
Holy Shit. That means that I have the right to send you email if I have something that I want to sell you, or think I might want to sell you. I think I might want to sell a penis enlarger. I will now email these 2 million people to see if they would be interested. Hey, the law lets me do it as long as I let you unsubscribe and say who I am.
Big mistake (Score:3, Informative)
In simple English
If the message comes from one of the listed orgs (party, etc) AND concerns goods or services FROM the listed org, then its okay.
Still, if your church is producing penile extenders, then its exempt.
I'm Australian... (Score:5, Informative)
A man that thinks broadband is just for games, introduced unworkable Internet censorship and thinks Telstra is doing a good enough job to become 100 percent public is still a Luddite.
Reservations regarding this bill (Score:3, Interesting)
Lots of organisations are still digesting this bill, and are yet to issue a response. But groups may well come out swinging against:
It's a step in the right direction, but this bill is far from perfect.
Re:Reservations regarding this bill (Score:1)
The banning of "email harvesting software." There's a risk of trouble for people legitimately scanning websites for email addresses, for purposes such as research, and maintenance of their own sites.
Uh. What kind of 'research' exactly do you have in mind? The only research I can think of that would require people to have lots of email addresses would be one of 'how do I improve my spamm^H^H^H^H^Hdirect marketing practices'. I don't think I want those.Re:Reservations regarding this bill (Score:3, Interesting)
Stolen blatantly from a fellow calling himself Stilgherrian on a mailing list: Linguistic research into what people choose as usernames. What's more popular, generic 'sales@' addresses, or 'contact sales manager Sarah Jones at sarah@'? What's the propo
Interesting clause (Score:3, Interesting)
Exception--conspicuous publication
(2)However, if:
(a)a particular electronic address enables the public, or a section of the public, to send electronic messages to:
(i) a particular employee; or
(ii) a particular director or officer of an organisation; or
(iii) a particular partner in a partnership; or
(iv) a particular holder of a statutory or other office; or
(v) a particular self-employed individual; or
(vi) an individual from time to time holding, occupying or performing the duties of, a particular office or position within the operations of an organisation; or
(vii) an individual, or a group of individuals, from time to time performing a particular function, or fulfilling a particular role, within the operations of an organisation; and
(b) the electronic address has been conspicuously published; and
(c) it would be reasonable to assume that the publication occurred with the agreement of:
(i) if subparagraph (a)(i), (ii), (iii), (iv) or (v) applies--the employee, director, officer, partner, office-holder or self-employed individual concerned; or
(ii) if subparagraph (a)(vi) or (vii) applies--the organisation concerned; and
(d) the publication is not accompanied by:
(i) a statement to the effect that the relevant electronic account-holder does not want to receive unsolicited commercial electronic messages at that electronic address (emphasis mine); or
(ii) a statement to similar effect; the relevant electronic account-holder is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to have consented to the sending of commercial electronic messages to that address, so long as the messages are relevant to:
(e) if subparagraph (a)(i), (ii), (iii), (iv) or (v) applies--the work-related business, functions or duties of the employee, director, officer, partner, office-holder or self-employed individual concerned; or
(f) if subparagraph (a)(vi) applies--the office or position concerned; or
(g) if subparagraph (a)(vii) applies--the function or role concerned.
So, in other words, if I don't put a big notice on my e-commerce website saying "Don't even think about spamming these contact e-mails," I can expect to have to muck out the mailbox three times a day, as usual. Oh, wait; per the law, it will all be relevant to my business, and therefore legitimate.
Sorry, buddy. Spam is spam, no matter how it's sliced.
Re:Interesting clause (Score:2)
Sure. Provided that all of those messages are relevant to your e-commerce site. What do you supply that requires such a big penis?
Note the "the relevant electronic account-holder is taken, for the purposes
I will never call this a pinup (Score:2)
I will never call this man [smh.com.au] a pinup.... NEVER do you hear me?!
Still a complete dropkick (Score:2, Informative)
It's hard to imagine that he personally understands the issues involved. It seems more likely that he's been given advice, and not gotten involved or objected because it's all gone way over his head.
It's when he makes off the cuff comments that his general cluelessness about IT is revealed - he didn't earn the title of "Biggest Luddite in the World" for nothing. Aside from the comments on closing chatrooms that several other posters have mentioned, he's also recently been taken to task over comments he m
Privacy Act (Score:2)
The privacy act means that companies can only use information colelcted for the purpose that it was collected, unless the person who's information is collected agrees for it to be used for other specified and explained purposes.
The SPAM laws are basically enforcing the opt-out option, and making it easier to prosecute people who abuse the privacy laws (eg companies acquiring harvested lists from overseas organisations who are not subject
A technical problem takes a technical solution. (Score:3, Interesting)
Here is a copy of a letter which i sent to the Australian Government in relation to this matter which was published in the the Australia IT.
This email is intended for Minister Richard Alston, but is applicable to any persons within the Australian government who are responsible for administering, overseeing, and maintaining Australia's Information Economy.
Whilst I applaud the Australian Government's strong stance on SPAM email and its recent decision to fast track legislation to prevent it, I am gravely concerned by the nature of this legislation with regard to its stance on list-generating software.
At face value it may seem as though it is a good idea to prevent people from mining email addresses from the Internet, however upon closer inspection I hope that you will come to see it as I do, shortsighted, dangerous, and detrimental to the Information Economy.
My concerns arise from a fundamental view of what the Internet is and what it represents. Without a doubt the Internet has become much more than its designers ever envisaged, the current day invocation of Internet is as a medium for the publishing and sharing of information and, perhaps more importantly, it is also a medium for free speech and dissemination of data.
By moving to restrict the ability to harvest this information, the Australian Government will be unwittingly placing restrictions not on what is published, but rather how it is allowed to be received and distributed. This course of action may have far reaching implications and consequences for the Information Economy which the Australian Government is poorly equipped to understand.
From a technical perspective the Internet is still in its infancy, its current invocation will not last for ever, and so legislation which effects the flow of information needs to be carefully considered for the implications it may have on the future evolution of the Internet and therefore the Information Economy.
The Internet is an architecture built on flexible and generic standards, for instance an email address is actually a subset of a much wider standard for representing information called a Universal Resource Locator (URL)* which in itself is derived from a wider and even more generic standard called a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI).
* Please refer to http://www.w3.org/Addressing/ for more technical details on the URI and URL.
By attempting to legislate against software which extracts email addresses from web pages or other content on the Internet, the Australian government is potentially legislating against software which harvests any kind of information based the URI/URL standards. Much of the software which performs such data mining activities is used for generating indexes of the Internet for use in search engines.
Search engine technology, and therefore data mining, is the most critical and heavily used application on the Internet today. Whether it be individual users, small business, corporate entities, or governments, they are all heavily dependent on search engine technology. Without such technology and the freedom to produce new innovative software utilising Internet standards, the Information Economy would surely be doomed.
What the Australian Government may not be aware of, and what the legislation probably overlooks is the fact that software designed to support the URI/URL standards will often not distinguish between and Email address (i.e. mailto:oof@foo.org) and a conventional HTTP address (i.e. http://foo.org).
The Australian Government cannot pass legislation which will effectively stifle existing search engine technology and future innovation in that area. Data mining based on existing Internet stand
Some wrong, some right (Score:3, Insightful)
"Address-harvesting software must not be supplied, acquired or used"
Making a class of software illegal regardless of its use or usefullness is wrong. Period.
As to address-harvesting, I've written my share of address-harvesting software that was for perfectly legitimate reasons (statistics usually, though for anti-spam reasons in one case).
There is good in the bill though. It seeks to regulate a few things oddly (e.g. requiring "unsubscribe" facilities is pointless when almost all mailings are one-time events) but does avoid trying to regulate the way mail is formed and does leave legitimate forgery available to the average mail sender. There is one common form of forgery that this makes illegal, and I might have to have a talk with our legal counsul about it (since the law covers mail originating in Australia, not just mail recieved there). Our anti-virus software may be violating this law...
Still, it's less draconian and less spam-industry-friendly than many ill-conceived laws I've seen.
I'd still rather that governments stay out of it, or just fund the open source development of reputation-based anti-spam mail server software, but I guess that's a lost battle and everyone is too spooked by spam to see the long-term anymore.
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:1)
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:1)
I'd rather someone buy my vote with an issue than with money.
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:1)
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:1)
Oh, good point.
I don't vote anyways, so I really don't know what I'm talking about.
I would, however, vote for a presidential canidate if they had a solid plan to use alternate energy sources.
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:1)
Re:It's not that hard to redeem yourself... (Score:2)
Re:Sad that something similar won't work in the US (Score:1)
that's beacause in Australia... (Score:2)
Not an aide that wrote it (Score:3, Informative)
Regardless, Alston would still have had the final say and would have checked off on every aspect of the bill
Re:Not an aide that wrote it (Score:2, Informative)
Let's face it - the man's a Collingwood supporter. You can't get much closer to the bottom of the evolutionary ladder than that.
Re:Easier solution (Score:1)
"jenna jameson raped by a horse!!!!!!!"
am i advocating the censorship of horses raping women? yes, i am.
also, "just deleting it" costs at least time for the individual, and money for commercial entities. i won't bother to go into that.
Re:Easier solution (Score:4, Insightful)
How is that "more damaging" ? While yes, it's perhaps ugly to see flyers stuck up all over the place, they're just visual - you can easily ignore them by not looking at them.
It's like banner ads on webpages. It doesn't take much to become conditioned to ignoring them. When ads first started appearing in the middle of article text, they were very obtrusive and annoying. Now people are used to them, and it's easy to skip right past. Your brain just instantly says 'thats an ad, no interest to me' with perhaps the slight few that get your attention somehow. (And note to banner desingers/PHB's/whatever: that doesn't mean flashing graphics! That actually makes it worse, your brain just treats it as 'white noise' and totally blocks it out).
I can notice this effect personally (and I'm sure many others can too) when I start reading an article that has an image for a headline (instead of using HTML). I'll be reading, and thinking 'what the hell is this about?' because to me, it just seemed to dive right into whatever it is talking about.. I'll have to sit back and take an overview of the page, then suddenly I realize that the headline is in giant letters right at the top. The problem was, my brain filtered it out just like it would for an ad or any other crap they stick in.
Back to the flyers-vs-spam issue: while flyers are something you can look past and ignore, spam is something that you have to directly deal with. Perhaps it's pressing delete, perhaps it's setting up a filter (and hoping it doesn't catch anything legitimate). To take it to the real world, spam is less like flyers on lampposts, and more like a door-to-door salesman. Forces you to answer the door, and deal with him (slamming the door, to telling him what hole to put whatever he's selling in).
I'd much rather have to ignore 40 flyers (by turning my eyes to another direction) than deal with even a couple salesman every day.
Bayesian Filters, Thanks Paul Graham (Score:1)
Re:Easier solution (Score:2)
But when this sort of stuff shows up in my 8-year-old daughters mailbox, I can't 'just ignore it' any more.
Grow a brain. Just because it's not a 'big deal' for you doesn't mean it's not a big deal to other people.
References? (Score:2)
Summary: they told him to go knot himself... (Score:2)
Good idea. (Score:2)