Posted on 09/24/2006 4:54:12 AM PDT by jwparkerjr
September 21, 2006 (IDG News Service) -- Computer security analysts who fight spam face the same thankless task as goalkeepers: They don't get much credit for the unsolicited e-mail they stop, only demerits for the ones that get through.
But those few messages that wriggle past increasingly sophisticated filters constitute the greatest threats on the Internet.
The messages range from relatively harmless pitches for human growth hormones to ones with malicious code attached that could steal passwords or documents from a machine.
The sheer volume of spam still threatens to bring the Internet to a crisis point. Up to 90% of all e-mail traffic is spam, a figure that has crept upward in recent years. The forecast isn't good, either.
"We see spam just going up to the point where Internet servers start having difficulty," said Steven Linford, chief executive officer of Spamhaus, a London nonprofit organization that generates a list used by technology companies and organizations running e-mail servers to block spam.
"Spam will tend to increase to where it will be 99 percent of all e-mail on the Internet," he said. "At that point, governments will start to take notice."
(Excerpt) Read more at computerworld.com ...
Where I used to get about 200 e-mails a day I am now gettng well over 400.
Is there a sight anyone can point out
that covers the latest computer upgrades
and technology?
The one that gets me is the "Nigerian" scam.
You wouldn't believe the number of, mostly elderly
people, who fall for this perposterous diddle.
With ATT Yahoo DSL we get virtually zero spam, maybe five in one year. Guess someone's figgered it out?
Know Your Enemy.
The vast majority of spam comes not from real servers on the Internet, but Windows PCs that have been owned. Since they aren't real mail servers (they just blast spam out to real servers) the trick is to set your mail server to initially reject all mail and tell the originating server to try again later.
My mail server gets a request from a sending host, records the IP address, then boots the email back with a 450 error. Since an owned Windows box doesn't queue mail, it just drops the spam on the floor and I never see it. When a real server gets this, it queues the email and sends it again in about 5 minutes. When my mail server sees that it's a real mail server, it takes the IP, adds it to a "known good" list and accepts the message.
There are some rather broken systems out there that don't behave properly and have to be manually whitelisted, but there are scores of ready-made whitelists of servers that don't work. They are known to be real servers so it doesn't really increase your risk of getting spam.
Using this method my site went from several thousand spam messages a day to less than 5 a week.
It depends on your needs. At my company, we have a problem filtering out spam without also losing legit e-mail. For instance, we actually DO BUSINESS with Nigeria.
After a year of getting about 80 spam mails a day on my office computer (over 300 over the weekends), all of a sudden, about two months ago - it dropped to approx. 15 a day. In fact, for the first time in ages, one morning, I turned on my computer to find NO spam at all! I don't know what happened. Just glad it's dropped.
Here's something..
http://www.webattack.com/main.html
Hope that helps somewhat..
The first 2 are more the software update sort, while the last 2 are more information and tech talk type..
But you can find a bit of both on any of these sites..
MajorGeeks is my primary source for updating spyware and antivirus, firewall, etc..
The worst spammer I've found is TRACFONE.
I bought one of their cheap phones last March to try out. Had to register landline, email and Tracfone. Got spam after spam after spam. Got 2 email offers every other day on each--landline, email and Tracfone.
I called and emailed to get off their spam list. I didn't renew the time on the phone, so it ceased in May. In August, I was still getting spam email offers.
I have them blocked.
That's bad when one wants to use a 'utility company' but quits because the company is so irresponsible.
Oh - and I know this isn't spam, but a virus - my Norton antivirus blocked an e-mail with the "mydoom" virus in it. E-mail was sent from the french department at Rice university in Houston, Texas! I don't even know anybody at Rice university! I live in Pa.!
If you don't mind saying what email server software are you using? Thanks.
bookmark
But...But...WE PASSED A SPAM LAW!
We use Spam Bully 3. Do you know how this software looks at and decides an email is SPAM? We have a folder set up in our Outlook and 95% of our spam goes there. The problem I see is that it still gets to us but is sent away from our INBOX to the SPAM folder.
I have been getting spam titled Pepsi vs Coke or Coke vs Pepsi, 1 every hour on the hour, 24 of them a day. I can't get rid of it. Anyone else having this problem?
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