Australian Spam Bill Not So Good After All? 131
crazney writes "Electronic Frontiers Australia has criticized the anti-spam bill proposed by the Australian government. You can read their full analysis here"
"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors
To Luddite or to not Luddite (Score:2, Informative)
indeed (Score:3, Insightful)
No. (Score:1)
Nobody will take action against a spammer under that threat.
critisize?? (Score:5, Funny)
Crikey, there's a huuuuuge spelling mistake lying in the article text *just above me*. This one's a real beaut, too mate! It would be sick if you just fixed that up there...
</crocodile-hunter>
Re:critisize?? (Score:1, Funny)
BTW, in Australia we have a special word for people like Steve Irwin...we call them "idiots".
Minister Alston: A Wishlist (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Minister Alston: A Wishlist (Score:1, Funny)
What about local telnet? Wouldn't ssh be a better choice?
Re:Minister Alston: an EX-Minister (Score:1)
Re:Minister Alston: A Wishlist (Score:2)
Well there's an oxymoron.
Good to see some sense (Score:5, Insightful)
These laws were a case in point, but any comments here or elsewhere that questioned the new laws were howled down in the shared "spam-is-evil" sentiment. Spam is a pain and is hard to defend - but defeating spam should be a case of the right tool for the job. The right tool is rarely legislation - yet it is the first we seem to reach for.
I'm glad that there is some well thought out legitimate questioning of these knee-jerk reaction laws.
Re:Good to see some sense (Score:2)
Technology in and of itself is not the solution. Nor is legislation in and of itself. Nor is preventive education in and of itself (it potentially could be, but it'd be a huge task, and the fi
Re:Good to see some sense (Score:1)
If the spammers are forced off-shore, then those IPs can be blocked.
Either way, I doubt anyone is going to invest in expensive anti-spam measures until the legislation is finalised.
What (Score:5, Funny)
Whats that Skippy ? You threw another spammer down the mine shaft. Good roo.
Simpsons (Score:1)
Re:What (Score:2)
While it's not very accurate, that is a part of American history, and I wouldn't get pissed off if referred to in that way. Although I understand (in both cases) it makes the speaker of the phrase look like a wanker to the person from that country...
Alcohol, Tobacco, and SPAM? (Score:5, Insightful)
(Now, I'm all in favor of gun control. Just not more legislation until the ATF actually does something.)
Re:Alcohol, Tobacco, and SPAM? (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem with enforcing gun control laws is similar to the problem with enforcing spam laws.
Anyone can make crude offensive firearms quickly and cheaply in their own basement.
Anyone can make crude and offensive spam quickly and cheaply in their own basement.
The advantage the spammers have over the gun makers is that the spammer can make spam in somebody else's basement will still sitting snuggly in their own.
To enforce a law first you have to be able identify violators. Then you have to be able to arrest them, inside your own jurisdiction.
The big spammers protect themselves and are immune from any law. Thus antispam laws are only going to end up getting used against minor players, kids sending out "flyers" for their ball game and such. A granny thinking she can make a few extra bucks by peddling her hand crocheted doilies with some email.
They'll throw the book at them too.
Tackling the spam problem by making laws is just as silly as it would be to try to outlaw a common weed.
The problem is inherent in the system. Fix the system, no more problem.
KFG
Re:Alcohol, Tobacco, and SPAM? (Score:1)
If I want email, I'll ask for it. I can subscribe to list servers, software updates bulletins, and lots of other requests for email. I don't think anyone has a right to put mail in my mailbox unless I consent to it. If I do business with someone AND I consent to email notices, then fine. If I put an "email me here" link on a web page, then anyone can email me.
I don't want someone's kid emailing me a request for donation or a grandma
Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh, wait. I just sent some emails to the people who own:
mail006.syd.optusnet.com.au
mta05.mail.mel
mta04.mail.mel.aone.net.au
And told them to stop the spamming. Yeah, I'm getting these "Microsoft Net Update" mail messages at a rate of about 6 an hour. "Please install this latest update, rejwk.bat". Please wash my balls.
I'm so freaking frustrated, though. I don't know how to filter them, cause they're comming from lots of different (some non-open relay) mail servers, and the messages are innocent enough as to not be words I'd want to filter out of my incomming mail. Plus, all the file attachments and email addresses and attachments are all randomly generated characters.
FUCKING SPAM make the internet unusable! GOD DAMNIT. They took something that was beautiful in it's simplicity, and FUCKING RUINED IT.
GOD, I must be tired to rant, but it pisses me off. Viruses! Spam! Worms! Denial of service! Get sued by the FBI, CIA, RIAA, SCO, FreeMasons! Fuck, it's a wonder anyone's still online.
~Will
Use spambayes (Score:2)
Re:Use spambayes (Score:2)
Part of the problem is that is the email I use for work, and as such, I only check it via webmail. So, clientside baysean filtering is out.
On the server side, it's a very touchy subject on how to deal with spam. It's netmar's primary mail server that comes through. netmar.com's MX record uses our filtered mail server, but our customers start to get really mad when we crank up the filtering (for example, turning on the mail restriction that bounces mail from mail servers without valid rever
Re:Use spambayes (Score:2)
But, everyone who signs up for an account at Netmar gets a username@netmar.com email address, and filtering would be done for every email address. Not to mention, everyone else that uses the mail server. So we're talking thousands of our customers, most of whom use windows, and a good portion of whom aren't as technically literate as you and I. It would be irresponsible for me to want to impose my views of "Microsoft is bad, any mail passing through here with Microsoft
Re:Use spambayes (Score:2)
I'm not 100% on the implications of such a system, but couldn't you use procmail (+ your spam filtering program, I think SpamAssassin can do this) to filter mail only for selected accounts? That way your mail is filtered & every one else's is regular. You could even offer the spam filtering as an optional service to customers. This, of course, is assu
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:1)
Is that just the Swen worm, by any chance? It's all over the place, and sends mail claiming to be from MS Technical Support.
If it is, it's not quite the same as spam - the people sending it to you don't even know they're doing it, so anti-spamming laws aren't going to make them stop. I share your anger at what spam has done to email, but I think it is important to understand it and differentiate it from other annoyances such as worms and viruses if we are to deal with the situation.
Legislation seems
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:2)
I get lots of other spam there, too. There's not too much I can do about it (see other posts in this thread by me). But, yeah, I know that worms aren't the same as spam.
All of these either look like they're from Microsoft Tech Support or they're trying to tell me that a mail has bounced, convieniently it was the attachment.
I wish slashdot still used timestamps for posts, so you could see, but I've had 7 of that worm come in since I posted that pos
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:2)
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:1)
I'll subscribe
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:2)
The latest Spamassassin [rediris.es] catches them all just fine for me - some of them score high enough even without my bayes training. Actually, after upgrading to 2.6, the only spam I see in my inbox is the type with a single image and a buch of random dictionary words, and even those are starting to get caught by my bayes filters (random dictionary words means that there are a lot of words that don't show up in my normal messages).
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:5, Informative)
score MICROSOFT_EXECUTABLE 5
in /etc/mail/spamassassin/local.cf
That way everything with an executable will be set as spam. You can then use sieve or other mail scripting language to filter / discard the messages as apropriate.
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:2)
I practice, mail.netmar.com handles 300,000 pieces of mail a day for over 1000 customers. Many of whom want to get attachments and don't really know much about spam. Many of whom are not technically literate, or less so than you and I.
I'll run it by the boss, though. It's getting really annoying.
~Will
How to get along in life. (Score:1)
Here are some easy solutions to their sorry efforts.
1. Spam: don't post your e-mail address in machine readable format. Pretty much handles it. If people whine about the re-typing, ask 'em if they'd rather be getting e-mail for "Hot Gay Webcam!!!" or "I love you!".
2. Worms/viri: Use non-standard hardwar
Re:How to get along in life. (Score:2)
I don't do this often enough, but I'm only replying to say thank you for your inisightful post.
~Will
Re:Austrailian spam? Naw! (Score:2)
All over again (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:All over again (Score:2)
Is "anti-spam" the new "patriot" or "terror" line? (Score:4, Insightful)
We are asking our governments to step up to do the right thing and protect us from this nonsense, but what they seem unable to restrain themselves from doing is to get their hands on all of it and regulate it.
We aren't asking for a whole system of regulation, we are just asking for protection.
The problem though, is that there are a lot of other parties who see this whole mess from other (possibly commercial) perspectives, and they want protection too, or whatever you would call doing services to their private interests and agendas.
For example, if we call in the government to help us, are they also going to decide that it is ok for political and non-profit groups to spam each of my email addresses X number of times per year or per month? Is government going to decide that any business can spam me once a year or until I renew my request with them to not be spammed?
Is the Bush re-election campaign going to be able to spam me once a month asking for donations?
Should we be worried that regulation will bring some relief, but with it the legitimization of unsolicited email conforming to the new regulations as an acceptable component of an advertising model for mainstream products and services, especially with telemarketing being clamped down on perhaps more now than in the past?
While I do believe that it is appropriate for us to act through our government to regulate this mess for the benefit of the majority (there is no right or legitimate expectation of private persons to force a communication with another person against his or her will), and ideally they would, I do not have faith in our elected representatives to do the right thing.
I think that is very sad. It seems that realistically our best hope for just and progressive government right now is to elect those who will screw us over least badly with the representative power we give them.
section {.rant}
I don't want to elect agendas or philosophers or idealists. I want to elect, surprisingly representatives, persons who I can in good faith entrust to act as an extension of my person - an extension of my own moral agency, an entity whose actions, good or bad, I am directly responsible for in so far as I am representated by a maximally auditable, responsive, and transparent manner, not used.
Just get it done, damnit.
Re:Is "anti-spam" the new "patriot" or "terror" li (Score:3, Interesting)
In nearly thirty years of voting I've never seen anyone on any ballot that I have felt comfortable voting for, let alone feel they were "my" representative.
I like representative government. I like the fact that politicians are charged with equal representation of all the people in their political jurisdiction, not just me. It keeps me from ru
Re:Is "anti-spam" the new "patriot" or "terror" li (Score:1)
Re:Is "anti-spam" the new "patriot" or "terror" li (Score:1)
It's the Dean compaign that was accused of spamming, IIRC.
Its not suprising (Score:1)
-Gwala
Re:Its not suprising (Score:1)
I think the only entity challenging M$ for the dollar-sign is Gate$ himself...
The angst against Telstra is probably due to being Australian; though what that has to do with spam, I don't know. Telstra entered New Zealand's newly deregulated market a few years ago, and has proved to be TelecomNZ's only real competition. They have built a superior fibre-optic network in Wellington and Christchurch, and continue to challenge Telecom's monopolistic practices here.
I'd be interested to know if TelecomNZ's acqui
Yes, non-Australians please take notice (Score:2)
Not the answer (Score:1)
Re:Not the answer (Score:2)
Legislation is the answer. Legislation is the only way we have to cure social problems, and spam is a social problem.
The answer is in the technology. Where is SMTP version 2 (or whatever) that fixes this shit?
Spam exists because scumbags want to get something for nothing, and don't care how many people they annoy, harrass, or steal from. Technology cannot change this.
Spam does not exist because the protocols allow it, it exists because spammers see nothing wrong in a
Re:Not the answer (Score:1)
I agree spammers annoy, harras and steal from us all, but legislation only acts as a deterent, not a remedy. People still steal, cheat, lie, kill, etc even when we have laws that prohibit these behaviours. You cannot legislate against greed.
As long as there is a way to abuse the system, they will. If the technology makes it impossible for them to disguise their location or i
Re:Not the answer (Score:2)
That is so frustratingly asinine I want to scream. Did you get this crap from your parents, or do you truly believe this? Loose morality can be considered a social problem, yet we can't make legislation to make immorality "wrong," or at least illegal. I agree with you that the true problem lies with the greedy scumbags who send spam, and not necessarily with the technology itself, but legislation does nothin
Re:Not the answer (Score:2)
1) If spammers still spam, then they're still wasting resources that the rest of us have paid for.
2) Technology never solved anything other that a purely technological problem.
2a) There are no purely technological problems.
Legislation is the answer, but we don't need new laws--we just need to prosecute spammers for the fraud, theft, and vandalism they're committing on a daily basis.
A big surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
You have to fight spam by going after what it mostly is: criminal fraud, and the only effective legislation against spam will be increasing the criminal penalties for mail/wire fraud that already exist, perhaps by including any financial participation (vendor/seller/spammer
Re:A big surprise (Score:3, Interesting)
HL Mencken said that there's simple, obvious answer to every problem, and that answer is wrong. The definition of what is spam is the key to any "anti-spam" legislation. If I see a news posting where you wish you had some hard to find widget and I happen to have one and email you that I want to sell it, am I spamming you
Re:A big surprise (Score:2)
Spam is a means of committing a crime. We currently have the laws in place to prosecute those crimes, and that's what we should do. By writing new laws to prosecute the means of committing those crimes, we're implicitly affecting everything else that uses those same means for lawful purposes.
As soon as spam is treated as a crime of its own (as opposed to being a crime by means of fraud, theft, vandalism), then it is forced into the realm of free speech
wasnt it clear last time? (Score:1)
Telecommunications is Oz is stiffled by low population and distance, not Telstra, etc. 90%+ can have broardband, only 5% want it.
Re:wasnt it clear last time? (Score:2)
Um... only 5% want it at $90 a month with severe download limits and heinously huge extra data rates.
And Tel$tra IS a problem, they own all of the network infrastructure yet other companies are supposed to 'compete' with them whilst renting space on the Telstra network. Furthermore, they have the ability to act like a competitive company yet are government-owned and therefore
Nigerian spam is legal under this (Score:1)
Count your change, daughters and pets #2 (Score:2)
Can't bothered reading it (Score:2)
The Spam Bill 2003 - Response to EFA Criticism (Score:1)
The Coalition Against Unsolicited Bulk Email, Australia (CAUBE.AU) [caube.org.au], has reviewed the criticisms of EFA, and found that this label is entirely unjustified. In particular:
Re:Apologies, but... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Criticise is how WE spell it.
Re:Apologies, but... (Score:1)
Re:Apologies, but... (Score:2, Informative)
'Improving' the dictionary (Score:2)
Still, I enjoy the arrogance of Americans who assert that '-ise' is incorrect. I sometimes think such people might actually believe that English originated in America or something.
Actually... (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know what weird dialect you're talking about.
Re:Actually... (Score:2)
America (Score:1, Interesting)
Why couldn't it have stoped there?
No, we thought we were th
From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of spam (Score:1)
No, it's been like that since almost day one; the marines were in Tripoli back when Napoleon was in charge of the land of "freedom fries". The rest of the world is used to it, and on balance the effect has been good (at least from where I'm sitting). The difference is the US has had more economic power than anyone since the end of WWI and even more economic power after WWII.
Something like spam needs either a global response, or a res
Re:Overlords. (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Australia (Score:1, Funny)
aussie oi aussie oi
aussie aussie aussie oi oi oi
Re:Australia (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:!!!This isn't SPAM!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
It isn't a troll.
While not entirely serious (duh!) this is a reasonable facsimile of the sort of spam you can expect to get under laws of this kind. This is one of the reasons it's a bad law. It won't stop spam, just create more "charities," as well as making existing charities adopt some rather strange bed fellows.
The same goes for a do not call lists that exempt charities. Instead of getting calls from MCI you'll start getting calls from United Way selling cheap long distance ph
Re:!!!This isn't SPAM!!! (Score:1)
Re:YOU FUCKING STUPID MODS (Score:1)
By being pure and unadulterated social and political satire. It's the nature of the beast. If you agree with it it's funny and brilliantly insightful.
If you disagree with it it's a troll.
Swift, Dickens, Twain, Orwell. Wonderfull trolls all. I've never been able to understand why Dickens wasn't lynched in the streets for Great Expectations. If you've only seen it on film you only know it with all the satire stripped out of it. Read it. It's hysterical.
If
Re:WE arn't stupid (Score:1)
Some of us live out in the woods and skin woodchucks we find on the road to make things out of them.
I myself live in a small but technologically advanced New York State city (the original home of GE), but if I drive only a relatively few miles in the right direction I'm in territory that makes The New Red Green Show ( roughly the Canadian equivilent of your old The Paul Hogan Show) look like a documentary.
T