The Fight Against V1@gra (and Other Spam)

From the New York Times:

To the antispam researchers at MessageLabs, an e-mail filtering company, each new wave of a recent stock-pumping spam seemed like a personal affront.

The spammers were trying to circumvent the world’s junk-mail filters by embedding their messages — whether peddling something called China Digital Media for $1.71 a share, or a “Hot Pick!” company called GroFeed for just 10 cents — into images.

In some ways, it was a desperate move. The images made the messages much bulkier than simple text messages, so the spammers were using more bandwidth to churn out fewer spams. But they also knew that, to filters scanning for telltale spam words in the text of e-mail messages, a picture of the words “Hot Stox!!” is significantly different from the words themselves.

So the bulk e-mailers behind this campaign seemed to calculate that they had a good chance of slipping their stock pitches past spam defenses to land in the in-boxes of prospective customers.

It worked, but only briefly.

Related posts:

  1. Spam approaches 95 per cent of all email From Vnu Network: The global junk mail plague is to...
  2. Spam doubles, finding new ways to deliver itself From the New York Times (via CNet): Hearing from a...
  3. Lycos’ anti-spam screensaver draws fire From InfoWorld: A screensaver developed by Lycos Europe that gives...
  4. ‘Tis the season to send spam From TechRepublic: In addition to plenty of turkey, a record...
  5. Web site gives e-mail senders a reputation From TechRepublic: A new Web site aims to help determine...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

0 Responses to “The Fight Against V1@gra (and Other Spam)”


  1. No Comments

Leave a Reply