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SPAM is getting worse!! Up twofold from last year. Does reporting it really matter?

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  • SPAM is getting worse!! Up twofold from last year. Does reporting it really matter?

    Monday, February 5, 2007

    Spam filling inboxes at an alarming rate

    Junk messages are up twofold from this time last year.

    By CORILYN SHROPSHIRE
    Pittsburgh Post- Gazette

    Link to article


    Doomsday predictions that 2007 will be the year that unwanted e-mail – or spam – flood inboxes at unheard of rates are coming true.

    Probably 80 percent of the e-mail that makes its way to Pittsburgh consulting firm McCrory & McDowell is caught in a spam filter, says Laurie Pemrick, who manages the firm's computer systems.

    If she counted the rest of the digital trash – offers for cheap medications, sexual enhancements and get-rich stock quotes – that slips past the computer filters and into employees' inboxes, the figure would be much higher. "I think that's true for our company and that's the industry average," she said.

    Technology experts say she's right.

    Computer security gurus as well as bloggers are noting that spam is up twofold from this time last year. The bombardment, which began at Christmas time – a seasonal high point for spam – isn't letting up this year.

    Much of this new onslaught – and what experts are saying is the most threatening – is known as "image" or "picture" spam, which fools filters designed to look for trigger words such as "stock" or "prescription."

    Roughly 65 percent to 70 percent of spam is showing up in this format, slipping by filters undetected.

    The flood of spam started last year, when Web assaults and spam climbed 2 1/2 times from 2005 levels, according to security software firm SonicWall Inc., based in Sunnyvale.

    Managing the volume of spam is "a Catch-22 for IT people," Pemrick said.

    That's because the more they try to block the bad stuff, the more legitimate e-mail doesn't get through.

    It's a quagmire for computer managers, who say that both scenarios make for complaints from unhappy employees who don't have time to sift through folders chock-full of hundreds of e-mail – both good and bad.

    Spam accounted for $17 billion in lost productivity in the United States in 2005, according to Ferris Research in San Francisco. Around the world, the research firm said, the price tag totaled $50 billion.

    To avoid these electronic productivity killers, Pemrick said she ends up frequently changing the e-mail addresses of employees who are bombarded with spam. Although she couldn't quantify just how much the 75-member firm loses from sifting through unwanted e-mail each year, "I think there's a lot of productivity loss," she said.

    Most of the spam cluttering inboxes is generated in the United States, according to a report from Sophos, a computer security firm with operations outside of Boston. More than 34 percent of all spam in the world comes from U.S.-based computers, said the firm that produces anti-spam products.

    Most spam – about 90 percent, according to Sophos – that is caught by a filter is sent from a "zombie" computer that is taken over remotely by hackers and used unknowingly to send out the junk e-mail.

    "The overriding goal of spam today is profit," said Gleb Budman, senior director of e-mail security at SonicWall. And an increasing amount is intended to enable theft, he added.

    Alan Gilbert has seen an uptick in annoying e-mails since December, and the Virginia-based marketing and communications consultant has taken matters into his own hands.

    He's vigilant about picking and choosing the e-mail he reads.

    Gilbert sticks to his own AOL account as much as possible and uses his clients' corporate e-mail, which often are riddled with spam, only when he has to.

    "I'm pretty conservative about what I look at," Gilbert said. E-mail from people he doesn't know often is sent directly into the trash.

    Still, security experts say he's fighting an uphill battle.
    "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
    -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

  • #2
    It says report missed SPAM to my ISP...I have been doing this and it is worse than b4

    It says report missed SPAM to my ISP...I have been doing this and it is worse than before...does it really make a difference?


    Tips to avoid spam

    Some suggestions to help prevent your e-mail address from becoming a target of spammers:

    •If you need to post your e-mail address on the Internet, obfuscate it so it cannot be easily harvested, such as "name at hotmail dot-com."

    •Check to see if your e-mail address is visible to spammers by typing it into a search engine such as Google. If your e-mail address is posted to any Web sites or newsgroups, remove it if possible.

    •Set up two e-mail addresses, one for personal e-mail to friends and colleagues, and the other for subscribing to newsletters or posting on forums and other public locations.

    •Many Internet service providers also offer free spam filtering. If this is available, enable it. Report missed spam to your ISP.

    •When filling out online forms, check the site's privacy policy to ensure information will not be sold or passed on to other companies. There may be a checkbox to opt out of third-party mailings. Consider opting out to receive less opt-in e-mail.

    •Do not open spam messages whenever possible. Spam messages often include "Web beacons" enabling the spammer to determine how many, or which e-mail addresses have received and opened the message.

    Source: McAfee.com
    "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
    -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

    Comment


    • #3
      I have finally found a way to kill a large amount of spam. I use a spam filter and using the filter system went into the message text of one of my spam emails. It contained:

      ' '

      Yes that is it......single quote space single quote

      I put in a filter for this and it catches an amazing amount of spam. The best day I have had in a long time was today and this filter was the reason.

      Just FYI. I hope it lasts.
      "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
      -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

      Comment


      • #4
        My server is one of the Yahoo's and it does a pretty good job of catching most spam, but I am currently getting about 50/day in my junk/spam folder. I also have a filter on my outlook which catches anything that sneaks through.

        Comment


        • #5
          Yes my yahoo and hotmail addresses also catch a good amount of spam.

          My main email is via cox cable and Outlook Express. That is where I have the most trouble. Cox's filtering system is not so good so I have my own spam filter on top of it.

          Originally posted by jericap
          My server is one of the Yahoo's and it does a pretty good job of catching most spam, but I am currently getting about 50/day in my junk/spam folder. I also have a filter on my outlook which catches anything that sneaks through.
          "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
          -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by 4ARedOctober View Post
            My main email is via cox cable and Outlook Express. That is where I have the most trouble. Cox's filtering system is not so good so I have my own spam filter on top of it.
            I use regular outlook and not outlook express, so I'm not sure if this will help you or not, but if you go to tools/options/preferences/junk email/options...you could set what level of protection you need. I also went into "International" and checked all the countries which I wanted blocked also.
            I usually do not get any junk mail in my inbox, there may be 1-2 month.

            Comment


            • #7
              I thought of this thread the other day because since I have moved my computer upstairs into my new office; I hardly get any spam.
              Not even in my spam folder..If I get 30/wk it's a lot

              I believe it had to do with the sites that people were viewing on my computer.

              My mother was always playing games, poker, casino style games. She also clicked on the pop-ups that got through, even though I had asked her not to!

              I am amazed how much the amount of spam has decreased. I used to get 50-60/day. Now maybe 5/day.

              Anyway, I hope I didn't just jinx myself.

              Comment


              • #8
                A few weeks back I posted either here or OY about starting to get TONS of spam. No one else had noticed an increase. I went from maybe 5 a day to over 100! I don't know what I clicked on, but obviously something.

                I'd read in the past to not even open them and not to "unsubscribe" because it just confirmed that they'd reached a live address. However, one day I bit the bullet and unsubscribed to every one of the spams. Most seemed to be coming from the same source. Surprise. To my amazement, all that spam stopped immediately. Yes, I still get emails from outside the country, addressed to my dear friend, etc. But those are easy to spot and delete. I'm really glad I decided to unsubscribe.

                Sue

                Comment


                • #9
                  I was surprised to find that my spam (mostly sex-related) went from about 30 a day in each of my mailboxes to fewer than 5 a day now. I checked to see if my settings had changed, but they hadn't. I have AT&T Yahoo and don't know if they fixed it or??? I'm real happy about it, though.

                  Maybe those of you who reported it fixed the problem. If so, thank you!

                  Check out my Websites:
                  https://www.flickr.com/photos/125590882@N04/sets
                  https://www.flickr.com/photos/128252501@N05/sets/
                  https://www.youtube.com/user/murielkf

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