NJ Spammer Gets Two Years Jail for AOL Spam Scam 73
Tech.Luver writes "A man from New Jersey has been sentenced to more than two years in prison for sending more than a million spam messages to AOL users. 'Todd Moeller was sentenced ... after he was caught making a deal with a government informant to send junk e-mails advertising a computer security program in return for 50 percent of the profits ... Moeller told the informant via instant messaging he could conceal the source of the e-mails through his access to 40 different servers and had profited $40,000 a month from other spam e-mail scams that promoted stocks, prosecutors said.'"
Yeah, right. (Score:1, Interesting)
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Re:Yeah, right. spam spam spam spam and spam. (Score:3, Funny)
(Sorry, the title of the article ending with "spam scan" encouraged me. Spam.)
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Usenet had similar issues until the "NNTP-Posting-Host" header was added and became popular some years back, in the midst of a nasty war of forged cancellation messages on a Usenet newsgroup.
AOL (Score:1, Funny)
You forget one thing. (Score:1)
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It is bullshit. (Score:1)
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Significance (Score:2, Interesting)
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but I assumed only a small fraction of spam came from small operations. Isn't the lion's share believed to be coming from the big guys with massive botnets? And I doubt RIAAesque tactics would scare them. Unless the RIAA managed to lobbby for a few cruise missiles to get fired at overseas targets. (I really wouldn't put it past them)
Here's an opportunity (Score:1)
He does a hell of a lot more damage to the economy than a drug dealer, anyway.
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Cannabis is not particularly harmful, especially when vapourized or eaten instead of smoked.
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heh (Score:1)
Correct (Score:2)
Correct. It can also do more damage, depending on the drug in question, and on the content of the real mail you lost because the inbox was full, or that you accidentally deleted because it drowned in all the spam.
So the fair thing would be to treat the two cases as equally bad per end user. So spamming a million people should be punished like dealing (illegal) drugs to a million p
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But a single SPAMmer can damage many, many more individuals than a single drug dealer. Plus he inflicts collateral damage on numerous organisations on the way by crippling their IT infrastructure with his BotNets.
Use "Rendition" to send convicted SPAMmers to China, where they can be speedily executed and their organs sold back to the West for transplant; it's the only logical solution.
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A person sitting at home smoking pot does not harm me in any way.
A person sitting at home emailing me spam harms my blood pressure.
Re:Here's an opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)
So there remains no law against spam itself, anymore than there is a law against junk mail.
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And, that, completely summarizes the problem with laws today.
The fact that a lobby group is "unwilling to allow any law that might interfere with their clients be passed" should be irrelavant. It shouldn't be up to them to decide.
Sadly though, I think you're 100% accurate -- lobby groups have
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The DMA really wants to enforce the CAN-SPAM rules that make it easy for smart people to filter out the junk but allows it to sail right through to the dumb people who are more willing to buy their stuff.
The problem is the vast number of spammers who AREN'T part of the DMA. That spam is already illegal under the CAN-SPAM act because of the forged headers, lack
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Spam merely lowers the per-message cost by quite a lot, and lacks the paper trail. But in both cases, they are "unsolicited bulk communications". That's the only definition of spam I've seen that can be ea
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One down (Score:2)
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Spam (Score:5, Interesting)
In any case, I wonder why don't they do this kind of sting operations to catch spammers more often. Just the lack of resources or will I guess. If we could somehow link spammers to terrorism I'm sure we'd see this kind of thing a lot more often. Like manufacture a story that Al Qaeda is financed by sales of penis enlargement pills or something?
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YRO Irony (Score:3, Insightful)
Letting any message into your inbox and complaining when it is full of spam is like leaving a cup outside and complaining when it is full of rain.
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Spoken like someone without a clue. Spam is a social problem, not a technical one.
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Will the revenue from scam be taken away? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I bet he was lying through his teeth about how much he made in order to impress the cop and do the deal. If he thinks two years in jail is bad, wait 'til he has to explain to the IRS that he didn't really make all that money and hide it somewhere untraceable. He'll wish he was back in his cell getting corncobbed by Bubba.
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What a great message that is. "Rape children and you're okay as long as you pay your taxes!"
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If you'd worked with Dracula, I bet you'd STILL find that woman scary. I got some advice once from a Canadian version of the creature with respect to my father's estate. It amounted to, "You're right, but you might as well give up now. You're not in a financial position to fight a multi-year court battle, and we're prepared to keep going forever".
I can imagine a typical job interview when they're hiring these people:
"I see the Hobbies and Interests part of your resume lists torturing puppies and ti
Spam (Score:1)
The Spam Demand (Score:1)
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His cellmate... (Score:1)
It was a lot more fun when it wasn't illegal (Score:2)