Skip to navigation
   
Davey Winder's Blog

30 year old spam

By Davey Winder in Editorial

Posted in Blog, Spam on April 29, 2008 at 10:08 am

Permalink | Author Profile

Although it seems hard to believe, spam is older than many of the people reading this blog entry. On May 3rd, according to New Scientist, will be 30 years old. It was then that one Gary Thuerk, in his role as a marketing man at the old Digital Equipment Corporation outfit, in his wisdom thought it would be a good thing to use this new fangled email and equally new fangled Arpanet network system to send an advertising message to all its users. Of course, back in May 1978, all its users equated to just 393 poor souls. Even in this small amount the spam was not best received and a number of complaints were received by Thuerk, as well as DEC getting a wrist slapping from the Arpanet admin.

Shame that it did not all end there, isn’t it? Today we have some 120 billion spam messages being distributed every single day across the Internet. Sapping resources in terms of manpower, finance and connectivity.

The 30 year birthday will not be getting a nice cake in the shape of a tin of luncheon meat from my wife, who happens to make very nice novelty cakes it has to be said, because I will not allow it. Not least as I don’t feel much like celebrating anything to with spam right now. Having what you might call a middling to high online profile, there is no point in trying to hide my email address. It has been out there too long, it is too widely known, and changing it does not make sense from the business perspective. Unfortunately this does mean that it gets hijacked every now and then by the spammers, as it has been for the last week or so in fact. About 80 percent of my incoming email, ironically once you have filtered out the spam, is made up of bounce messages from other people’s spam filters telling me they think the message I have sent them regarding a Rolex watch, penis powering drug or top financial tip might be a wee bit spammy. No s*** sherlock, really?

As usual, there is no real defence against this. Spammers will always use a readily available email address in order to try and circumvent filters, and these are chosen almost entirely at random. It could be you next week, or the week after. I have long since stopped chasing my tail and replying to folk in horror with ‘it wasn’t me’ messages or even trying to complain to ISPs and the like. Life is too short, time is too precious, and it does no good anyway. All you, and I, can do in these circumstances is weather the storm. A simple filtering rule in my email client to move bounce messages into the spam filter prevents me from having to wade through them with my delete finger primed for action. It’s about the best there is, really.

I do hope that within the next 30 years we have found a way to deal with the spam problem though. Be that through cultural revolt, legislative action or technological advance. I don’t actually care how spam gets stopped, as long as it does…

12345
Rated: 100% (2 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Trackback by Dudley Livesey - February 9, 2012 on 5:47 am

sopa internet blackout…

[…]against Lennox and his family members is now out of the palms of Belfast Metropolis CouncilĀ […]…

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

printing Kin fun President earth hour broadband cloud Porn admin biometrics lawsuit virtual world poll global phishing universe VeriSign stupid scan surveys tech service development Amazon xmas Cisco Internet Trousers ecommerce virtual machine worker monetisation avatar environment fool Browsers Apps money code Finjan dumb botnet support workplace Conference Game Vista services fraud Mars economy office banks hubdub Kill Switch technology OS management virus Nintendo report web Olympics Flash iPhone 3GS Google wifi School MSN BOFH Blogging Project Texas Instruments Bill Gates rootkits payment server The Federation Research terrorism Silverlight outsourcing web 2.0 remote working Army gadgets console Rumour Intel Palm NASA disclosure man-in-the-middle Jesus Phone crime iPhone news virtualisation Hack scam Web Development Dell ISPA Michael Jackson HPC computer Europe SMS GSM size exploit ASUS Recall books HP Spotify work RATM Backlash Steve Jobs Notebooks computing home Geeks Scotland Tesco standards prison campaign Deal Analysis Top 500 Beta credit card fraud eBook museum world of warcraft AMD Psychic credit crunch politics Russia Kindle IP iPhone 3G Harry Potter Meh Advertising Rant remote DNS compromise Mobile Phones MessageLabs MSNBC Children stupidity tax Zango IDC acquisition symantec malware Kaspersky green EU Big Brother MiniBook Eee Mobile Phone Retail Internet Explorer Programming Parenting open source adware betting scareware Texting privacy Acer Apple black hat Ballmer Gateway Patents teleworking Digg documentation staffing mobile Voice economics e-commerce ID Theft holidays Eee PC storage library Google Earth hacker Windows Phone 7 Series millions IT migration USA McKinnon iPod Video Experiment Guardian sick recession Performance computing Netbook search family copyright Madness survey statistics SSL spending Music IBM Press Twitter Windows Blog security Study RAM FBI XP linkedin information hardware Addiction Licensing Developers Sony Enterprise Review christmas games Browser parental control meme mail NBC Steve Ballmer Energy Government data BSI InfoSec Psion Microsoft Gartner hoax science Space Supercomputer debian Firefox GMail VPN trust Software network carbon copy hacking graphics theft ISP digitise Noro Education students OCR Death computers spam Linux ROFL Opinion Mafia transactional security smartphone desktop Top 10 memory Battery Application nightmare social networking encryption patent banking help Military data protection payments Jobs law Palm Pre Funny App Store Windows 7 chips gaming Election innovation VM Banned Architecture Employment Business Android Lotus Adobe Marketing policy Obama snooping Pirate second life Paris Hilton fake Trojan shopping PS3 patch management Johnny Depp App Nexus email hypervisor football productivity worm Networks CAPTCHA archiving Sex Media Data Centre China iPad Facebook Digital Footprint e YouTube Gadget Health Microchip Yahoo
Advertisement
Advertisement