After getting spammed, you'll now get spimmed Press Trust of India Paris, April 1 A new form of Internet spam, this time aimed at users of instant messaging (IM) services, is set to explode. The phenomenon has been dubbed 'spim' by experts, who reckon that this year 1.2 billion unsolicited messages will be sent over IM services run by Yahoo, MSN and other companies, and the volume will triple in 2005, New Scientist warns in next Saturday's issue. Seventy per cent of 'spim' is pornography related. Unlike email, IM software allows users to exchange messages in real time. "This makes...