Please install Microsoft Silverlight to view the embedded videos on this website
Click here to download it now
Updates blog
permalinkBlerp

Spam sucks


by Desi Tzoneva on 22 May 2009

Spam comprises between 80% and 85% of all the email in the world, and some would place this number as high as 95%. Spam mail is something that can be annoying, to say the least, and so I’ve decided to dedicate some time to determine what spam actually is.

Some internet sources say that spam can be defined as that activity which involves “the abuse of electronic messaging systems to send unsolicited bulk messages indiscriminately.” And, while the most widely-recognised form of spam is e-mail spam, the term is applied to similar abuses in other media such as instant messaging spam; Usenet newsgroup spam; web search-engine spam; spam in blogs; wiki spam; online classified ads spam; mobile phone messaging spam; internet forum spam; junk fax transmissions; and file sharing network spam. It can also include the spread of computer viruses; trojan horses; or other malicious software, with a possible objective of identity theft.

Spammers do this because it is a cheap alternative to advertising – and because “it is difficult to hold senders accountable for their mass mailings.” The consequences of spamming – reduced productivity and fraud – are borne by the public receiving the spam, and by internet service providers who have needed to adjust to the phenomenon by increasing their capacities in order to cope with the bulk mail received. In fact, the European Union`s Internal Market Commission estimated in 2001 that `junk e-mail` cost internet users €10 billion each year worldwide. Meanwhile, analysts have determined that spam in the US cost approximately $13 billion two years ago.

The top 12 countries that spread spam worldwide are:
1. USA: 28.4%;
2. South Korea: 5.2%;
3. China (including Hong Kong): 4.9%;
4. Russia: 4.4%;
5. Brazil: 3.7%;
6. France: 3.6%;
7. Germany: 3.4%;
8. Turkey: 3.%;
9. Poland: 2.7%;
10. United Kingdom (specifically Great Britain): 2.4%;
11. Romania: 2.3%;
12. Mexico: 1.9%;

I suppose that one of the most important questions to aks here is: “How do we deal with spam?” I know there is software, and ‘otherware.’ But is there more we could do?



Tags: No tags added

Comments:


No comments have been added to this post yet
Add a comment
Name:
Comment
Search
Calendar
Categories
Afrigator