Skip to comments.
Record Broken: 82% of U.S. Email is Spam
Datamation ^
| May 5, 2004
| Sharon Gaudin
Posted on 05/08/2004 5:40:33 AM PDT by FourPeas
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61 next last
This jives with my experience, too. The vast, vast majority of the e-mail I receive is spam. I keep a 'Spam' folder just so I can go searching when it appears I've missed an e-mail that I actually want. I've had to go searching there more times than I can count.
1
posted on
05/08/2004 5:40:35 AM PDT
by
FourPeas
To: FourPeas
More like 85%, but what's a few percentage points among friends...... ;-)
2
posted on
05/08/2004 5:45:47 AM PDT
by
b4its2late
(Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else.)
To: FourPeas
This can't be 'cause congress passed a law outlawing spam.
3
posted on
05/08/2004 5:46:45 AM PDT
by
Drango
(A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
To: FourPeas
But, I get letters from interesting Nigerians
all rich and separated from their money.
One claimed to be stuck in orbit.
4
posted on
05/08/2004 5:48:33 AM PDT
by
Diogenesis
(We do what we are meant to do)
To: Diogenesis
stuck in orbit That's where I'd like to put them. They'd make very appropriate space junk.
5
posted on
05/08/2004 6:00:12 AM PDT
by
FourPeas
(By dint of railing at idiots, we run the risk of becoming idiots ourselves. ~Gustav Flaubert)
To: Diogenesis
But, I get letters from interesting Nigerians all rich and separated from their money. You too? I didn't want to mention it, but I got an email about a month ago, I answered back, and as soon as the deal closes I'm gonna be rich, rich, rich. Yesterday I wired the Prince $10,000 to close the deal and I'll fly to Lagos next week to pick up the cash. I won't be able to sleep this weekend!
6
posted on
05/08/2004 6:03:26 AM PDT
by
Drango
(A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
To: FourPeas
The solution will be to wage economic warfare, not against the senders of spam, but against the advertisers who make use of it. Once the consequences of associating oneself with spam outweighs the potential benefits, it will stop.
7
posted on
05/08/2004 6:07:48 AM PDT
by
Physicist
To: FourPeas
so bad here=almost 99%- that i changed my email address. now no more email.
8
posted on
05/08/2004 6:08:58 AM PDT
by
camas
To: FourPeas
The one thing I don't understand is that these guys are making money on this, so that means whatever they are advertising is actually real and there is some business behind, why can't we go get those businesses, the root of the problem?
9
posted on
05/08/2004 6:10:55 AM PDT
by
battousai
(Islamic terrorists are like cancer... can you negotiate with Cancer?)
To: Diogenesis
"But, I get letters from interesting Nigerians
all rich and separated from their money.
One claimed to be stuck in orbit."
What?? You mean the pleas for help from the former president of Nigeria is junk mail? I thought he really needed my assistance! Now I'm hurt. :-(
10
posted on
05/08/2004 6:12:36 AM PDT
by
Lockbar
To: FourPeas
If you register for any sites or shareware programs or anything like that, it's best to have a "Spam Account" so that you can be prepared for the huge amount of junk mail you'll get.
Then you use your other account to have your vital communications, etc. I have an AOl name that gets ZERO spam and it's not because I have any blocks up--it's just not in anyone's files.
11
posted on
05/08/2004 6:14:30 AM PDT
by
Skywalk
To: FourPeas
As much as I hate spam, is this that much different than what comes in my mailbox (the USPS mailbox)
12
posted on
05/08/2004 6:21:44 AM PDT
by
ilgipper
To: Skywalk
I use a junk account, too for signups. Recently, I found an outfit called inboxgenius.com. All my incoming mail flows thru them and they filter out spam. Have been using them for about a month and it works great. Cheap, too.
I thought I had a particularly bad problem with spam. But I guess not, given this article. My stats from the filter company says they are filtering 80.17% of my email this month.
To: FourPeas
What's an "open proxy"?
I am a not a computer expert and do not wish to become one, except perhaps as a means of self defense. It just seems to me that we can put men on the moon and control a spacecraft several billion miles from earth, but we can't devise a way to stomp on these bottom dwellers.
The technique of randomly choosing "big" words from a large list to insert in the "subject" line makes much of the spam easy to identify because most often the result makes no sense, but the millions of man-hours spent daily in just deleting this s**t is intolerable.
I would be most curious to hear from others, more expert than I about these things, about what is so hard about finding these a******s and giving them all some serious jail time. No matter where they live. For instance, by can't servers who have a greater than average incidence of hosting these guys be banned from internet traffic altogether? I would be willing to pay to help this happen.
14
posted on
05/08/2004 6:26:51 AM PDT
by
Publius6961
(I don't do diplomacy either.)
To: FourPeas
''You have to wonder if this will eventually affect people using email,'' says Wood. ''We haven't seen a decrease in email usage but we'll have to see how high the numbers go.''
Already has, at least in my case.
15
posted on
05/08/2004 6:26:57 AM PDT
by
elli1
To: ModelBreaker
I keep thinking that there must be some way for legitimate senders to identify themselves to my account in such a way that if they fail to do so, the mail does not come through. Is it really that complicated?
16
posted on
05/08/2004 6:30:35 AM PDT
by
Publius6961
(I don't do diplomacy either.)
To: Publius6961
Use something like Thunderbird, and you won't spend millions of hours deleting spam. At most, a few minutes a day reading headers in your junk box to make sure the 'bird didn't filter out some real mail by mistake.
http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/
To: camas
Get a junk account on yahoo. They have good spam filters.
Then delete/change your isp account address.
Never sign up for anything with your real isp address, always use your yahoo account. Only give your ISP email address to friends and trusted individuals. Works for me. I rarely get any spam through my isp. My yahoo account gets 100s of spam emails a day.
You can also use mozilla email. Mozilla has built in spam filtering.
18
posted on
05/08/2004 6:39:09 AM PDT
by
snooker
To: Drango
If it doesn't work out just shake hands with the guy and it'll make his penis shrivel up and disappear.
19
posted on
05/08/2004 6:42:11 AM PDT
by
johnb838
(Cut off an ear and ask them "How you like me now?")
To: Skywalk
Sadly, I learned the lesson of a spam mailbox too late. I have one set-up now, but my regular one is already on The List. Since we own our own domain and our hosting service allows us unlimited e-mail addresses, I have considered creating a separate e-mail account for each place I do business on-line. That way I know if one of them decides to sell me out to the spammers.
20
posted on
05/08/2004 6:47:26 AM PDT
by
FourPeas
(By dint of railing at idiots, we run the risk of becoming idiots ourselves. ~Gustav Flaubert)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson