Explorer said:
About a month ago, I set the spam filter on the mail server to allow "all" E-mail messages through. The number of spam messages suddenly jumped to more than 500! So, I know the filter works to an extent, but the spam-bastards keep changing their originating addresses so often that the people who create these spam filter lists for E-mail servers (via their spam magnets) can't possibly keep up with the spammers. Spam volume AND content is only getting worse. I probably get a dozen rape / incest / etc spam messages a day now, which I didn't get 8 months ago.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't preventing people from sending multiple messages at the same time prevent or at least limit SPAM? If a spammer had to individually send the SPAM to every addressee, there wouldn't be enough hours in the day to reach any significant number of people, and the economics of SPAM would change.
These SPAM blocking filters should automatically block any e-mail that doesn't have the addressee in the TO: header. Most SPAMs have something like "TO:undisclosed recipients".
Maybe it's just my ignorance, but it should be a great deal easier to stop this problem at the ISP level than people claim. Besides, perhaps better identification verification when you register with an ISP would help, as well as a black list of known spammers who would not be able to get services with any ISP. From what I've read, 99% of the spamming worldwide is caused by a few thousand individuals. It shouldn't be terribly difficult eventually track them down, fine them, perhaps put them in prison.
Another possibility I've thought of is sending a return mail to the spammer which contains a virus that destroys hardware. One of my mother's friends got such a virus once, and he said it made his system unusable. I normally wouldn't believe such a tale, but he is very knowledge about computers, and was a systems programmer for most of his working life. If a spammer's machines are destroyed as fast as he/she spams, that sort of solves the problem, doesn't it? :lol:
The US should follow the lead of the EU and ban SPAM. Enforcement may be difficult at first, but a few high profile prosecutions and multi-million dollar lawsuits, and the word will get out that spamming is unacceptable. It's a shame every new technology has to be abused by fu*king advertisers. Given the kind of garbage spammers sell, it's amazing anyone at all responds, and it is those who do who are largely to blame for the rise of this blight on the Internet. Maybe it should be illegal to respond to SPAM as well.