Tag Archives for anti-spam

Anti-spam products are failing users

A survey on the users perception on the effectiveness of anti-spam products was carried out by Brockmann’s & Company.  They surveyed 520 people working in IT, sales, marketing, finance, human resources and administration, or C-level executives.

The rate of customers who are not “very satisfied” is more than 70 percent for six of the eight types of anti-spam technologies. Commercial software filters, such as those produced by McAfee, Symantec and Trend Micro, fully satisfy just 22 percent of users, the report found. Filters that come with email clients, like those from Apple, IBM Lotus and Microsoft, fully satisfy only 21 percent of customers.

Satisfaction rates are similarly low for business-class email hosting providers, filtering appliances, and reputation systems known as “real-time black lists” from Commtouch, IronPort and Spamhaus.

The worst-performing technology appears to come from open source projects like SpamPal and SpamAssassin, which fully satisfy just 16 percent of users.

The most-satisfied customers use challenge-response vendors, which fully satisfied users 67 percent of the time.

Challenge-response tools allow messages from known senders without interruption, since virtually all spam comes from first-time senders. First-time senders are challenged with a reply email telling them to reply, click on a URL, or visit a website to complete delivery of the message.

“This procedure overcomes the weakness of spammers since spammers never monitor the reply-to accounts of their messages,” the Brockmann report said.

Hosted email filtering services such as Google-Postini, AppRiver, and MXLogic performed second best, as customers report being very satisfied 42 percent of the time. These services use the processing power of Internet data centres to scour enormous quantities of email and find suspicious messages, Brockmann said.

People get an average of 11 spam messages per day, accounting for 15 percent of all messages, Brockmann said. That’s after the work done by spam filters. Before filtering, probably 90 percent of email is spam, they say.

Source: Techworld.com

Anti-Spam lawsuit filed seeking $1 Billion

The Utah-based Anti-Spam company Unspam Technologies has filed a one billion dollar lawsuit on behalf of over 20,000 internet users. The suit was filed in Virginia under the CAN-SPAM Act and Virginia law.

They are targeting anyone who targets our members with email spam, comment spam, or harvesting. This lawsuit is unique because they believe it is the first major case in the US to bring a claim against spammers for harvesting email addresses.

Project Honey Pot is the first and only distributed system for identifying spammers and the spam-bots they use to scrape addresses from your website. Using the Project Honey Pot system you can install addresses that are custom-tagged to the time and IP address of a visitor to your site. If one of these addresses begins receiving email we not only can tell that the messages are spam, but also the exact moment when the address was harvested and the IP address that gathered it

For more info visit, http://www.projecthoneypot.org/index.php

latest news and links about email filtering / email monitoring 16.1.07

Email spam gets a new image

Spammers have figured out a number of ways to embed text into images — where anti-spam solutions based on text analyses can’t get to it. And as security vendors have begun building image spam solutions, spammers have created a series of random images for separate mailings that, again, simply won’t be flagged. Or they can put the text into multiple images in each mail. Or use obscure file formats.

Not only do the images elude anti-spam software, their malicious payloads are more likely to be launched by users. And they’re bandwidth- and storage-eaters; the average size of an image spam is 18 KB, compared to 5.5 KB for a text spam.

News Source : IT Business Edge

Trackback Validator - fighting spam comments

Having looked for various WordPress plugins to combat against spamming trackbacks, and read many blog sites, I selected the Trackback Validator Plugin and Bad Behavior for WordPress. As this is a new blog site, I thought now as a good time to increase the anti-spam protection of this blog become it started to bring in new bloggers.


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