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CNET.com: Microsoft going after Hotmail spammers
Microsoft is turning up the heat on spam, filing a lawsuit to go after people it suspects of having harvested e-mail addresses from its Hotmail servers to spam subscribers.
CNET.com: MSN blocks e-mail from rival ISPs
Microsoft's MSN said its e-mail services had blocked some incoming messages from rival Internet service providers earlier this week, after their networks were mistakenly banned as sources of junk mail.
CNET.com: Porn spam--legal minefield for employers
Lewd e-mail promoting pornography may soon pose more than just a technical challenge in the ongoing fight against spam--experts say it's set to become an acute legal problem, too.
CNET.com: Public access to FTC hurt by spam lists
When Josh Tinnin tried to send e-mail to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission this month, he received an unwelcome surprise: He couldn't.
CNET.com: Spam blocker charges for e-mail
An Australian entrepreneur has created what may be the first antispam service that lets its users charge for the privilege of sending them e-mail.
CNET.com: Spam filter a career killer?
A meeting reminder from the boss, a lascivious letter from a lover, or the daily tally from a fantasy football league: Which e-mail would you read first?
CNET.com: Spam suit rings on Sprint
Sprint Communications is facing a lawsuit in Utah alleging that it sent unsolicited commercial messages, or spam, in violation of a recently enacted state statute.
CNET.com: Spam suits seek poetic justice
Antispam company Habeas is suing bulk e-mailers, accusing them of using its poetry without permission in an unusual use of trademark law to clamp down on spammers.
CNET.com: Standards group takes aim at spam
An influential Internet standards-setting body has begun a close scrutiny of the mounting problem of e-mail spam, in an effort that could have broad-ranging implications for future e-mail use and security.
CNET.com: Start-up wants your help to fight spam
Ordinary Web surfers could play a major role in stemming the rising tide of junk e-mail crippling the Net, if a new anti-spam company hits its mark.
CNET.com: Surviving in spam's shadow
For Janine Popick, spam is a four-letter word.
CNET.com: The DMA's doublespeak on spam
Robert Wientzen, president of the Direct Marketing Association, has an unusual view of what types of junk e-mail qualify as spam.
CNET.com: Yahoo users fume over "spam" switch
Some Yahoo members on Friday reacted angrily to changes in the Web portal's e-mail marketing practices, comparing the company's revised policy to an open invitation to spam.
CNET.com: You've got spam, and more spam
Corporate networks are becoming increasingly clogged by e-mail pitches for pornography, money-making schemes and health products, and there's little relief on the horizon.
CNET: Fat times for spam
In September, more than 17 percent of all e-mail traveling across the Internet could be classified as spam, according to data collected by UK e-mail service provider MessageLabs. The company's figures are presented in its latest monthly report.
CNET: Spam doesn't kill appetite for e-mail
Spam hasn't killed enthusiasm for e-mail among U.S. workers, according to a new study on e-mail use in the workplace.
CNET: Spam: It's more than bulk e-mail
Consumers are increasingly applying the stigma of spam to marketing messages of all stripes, causing headaches for legitimate advertisers on the Web and beyond.
CNET: Spammers slipping ads through Windows
Spammers have co-opted an administration feature in Microsoft's Windows operating systems and are using it to bring up intrusive advertisements on Internet-connected computers.
CNN: Euro ministers agree on spam 'n' cookies
European telecommunication ministers have agreed that unsolicited e-mail and wireless text messages should be prohibited under a new data protection law.
Comment Spam: Google's Toxic Waste Dump
Offers a few suggestions to Google and weblog publishers to thwart those who think they can make money spamming blogs.
CommunityWiki: WikiSpam
Discussion of how to fight wikispam.
Composing a Useful Abuse Report
What to include, what to omit, and who to send it to.
Composite Blocking List (CBL)
The CBL is a DNSBL which takes its source data from very large spamtraps, and lists IPs of open proxies and worms/viruses.
Computerworld: AOL backs away from Microsoft antispam plan
America Online Inc. has decided not to fully support Microsoft's Sender ID spam-fighting plan citing intellectual property concerns from the Internet Engineering Task Force and the open-source community.
Computerworld: AOL sees sharp drop in spam
Spam reports from America Online members dropped from a daily average of almost 11 million in November 2003 to a daily average of about 2.2 million last month, the company said this week.
Computerworld: AOL, Yahoo rolling out sender authentication
America Online and Yahoo plan to begin using technology to verify the source of e-mail messages in coming months as both companies work to stop spam e-mail.
Computerworld: Dual curses: Viruses and spam
Two scourges -- viruses and spam -- are the most vexing e-mail issues for CIOs, according to a survey conducted by Ferris Research Inc. and Computerworld. Regulatory compliance isn't far behind.
Computerworld: E-mail virus turns PCs into spam machines
A new e-mail virus capable of turning infected PCs into "spamming machines" emerged today, targeting corporate and home users in Europe and the U.S., a computer security expert said.
Computerworld: Facing pressure, ISP Savvis moves to cut off spammers
Savvis Communications, one of the world's largest ISPs, said it is terminating service to about 40 of its customers who have been using its networks for spamming purposes.
Computerworld: ISPs file more antispam lawsuits
Microsoft, AOL, EarthLink and Yahoo filed three new lawsuits to stop the spread of unsolicited e-mail.
Computerworld: Judge awards ISP $1 billion in spam damages
U.S. District Court Judge Charles Wolle awarded what is believed to be the largest spam judgment ever to Robert Kramer, an ISP owner who had accused three companies of sending his 5,000 customers millions of pieces of spam in 2003.
Computerworld: Major ISPs sue hundreds of spammers
The lawsuits are among the first filed under a new U.S. law called CAN-SPAM, which went into effect in January.
Computerworld: Microsoft project aims to make spammers pay for spam
The goal is to use technology to make it expensive for spammers who send out millions of unwanted e-mail messages, according to a Microsoft researcher.
Computerworld: Microsoft, AOL, Yahoo unveil antispam guidelines
An industry organization representing heavyweight e-mail providers Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp., America Online Inc. and EarthLink Inc. released recommendations yesterday for ending spam e-mail.
Computerworld: Search goes on for ways to stop spam
At a Global Internet Project conference today, IT and government officials looked at ways to counter the spreading nuisance of unwanted e-mail.
Computerworld: Spam Wars
In the past year, spam has moved beyond personal e-mail accounts, invading business systems and graduating from societal pest to corporate enemy.
Computerworld: Spam: Arriving en masse to an e-mail address near you
Shifting from daily nuisance to serious IT and business concern, uncontrolled spam is prompting customers to arm themselves with tools to fight back against productivity loss, potential liability and bandwidth-clogging consequences that unsolicited commercial e-mail can bring to an enterprise.
Computerworld: Spammers use sender authentication too, study says
The technology hasn't been widely adopted, but spammers are taking it up at a faster rate than legitimate e-mailers.
Computerworld: Study: Amount of spam, virus-infected e-mails rising
A new report analyzing e-mail messages sent last month found that the problem of viruses and unsolicited e-mail continued to grow, hitting manufacturing, banking and finance, and health care particularly hard.
Computerworld: Survey: 86% of spam comes from the U.S.
While IP addresses in the U.S. made up just 28% of the spam-sending addresses in a survey by CipherTrust Inc., those addresses sent out much more unsolicited commercial e-mail than spammers from other nations.

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