http://www.latimes.com/editions/orange/ocnews/20010211/t000012648.html
Sunday, February 11, 2001
By ANICK JESDANUN, Associated Press
NEW YORK--Wars often have their casualties from friendly fire--allies
accidentally killing or injuring their own. The war on spam is no
different.
Aggressive tactics to block unwanted commercial e-mail sometimes weed
out legitimate items. In the name of fighting spam, Hotmail and some
other e-mail services also restrict addresses to which their subscribers
can send messages.
It's a spiraling war of attrition: As spammers find new ways to
circumvent spam controls, mail service providers develop more aggressive
ways to fight them. And that increases the risk of inadvertently blocking
the good mail with the bad.
Gilles Frydman, president of the Assn. of Cancer Online Resources,
said spam filtering at Internet "post offices" sometimes keeps certain
messages from reaching members of his online support groups--often
without their knowledge.
But some network administrators consider e-mail loss a necessary evil
to prevent spam from overwhelming mail servers and clogging the Internet.
A 1999 study by the Gartner Group found that 64% of Net newcomers are
subjected to spam at least once a week. For veterans who've been with the
same Internet service provider for at least three years, the figure rises
to 91%.
"A single spammer can send out 5 [million] to 10 million a day pretty
easily," said Ken Schneider, chief technology officer for Brightmail
Inc., which develops filters for Earthlink and other service providers.
Earthlink estimates that up to 15% of its weekday mail traffic is
spam.
Until recently, Microsoft Corp. blocked users of its Hotmail service
from sending e-mail to Peacefire.org, an organization critical of online
censorship, because the group uses a mail service identified as
spam-friendly.
Although Microsoft ultimately removed Peacefire as a target, many
users complained that the company's zeal amounted to censorship.
The problem isn't limited to Peacefire or to Hotmail.
Topica Inc., which hosts more than 50,000 e-mail lists delivering
about 300 million messages a month, gets inadvertently blocked by a
service provider about once a month, Chief Executive Ariel Poler said.
Last summer, online research company Harris Interactive sued America
Online and other Internet providers for classifying Harris survey
requests as spam, even though recipients had agreed to participate in the
surveys.
Harris ultimately got the companies to accept its mail again, and it
dropped the lawsuits. Harris spokesman Dan Hucko estimates the company
lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in the meantime.
David Cassel, who writes an "AOL Watch" newsletter critical of America
Online, also had trouble e-mailing newsletters to his subscribers.
"What's the point of a mail service if they only deliver some of your
mail?" Cassel asked. "You also have to worry once you hand over to a big
corporation the power to pick and choose which e-mail you receive."
The fight against spam isn't easy.
From a technical standpoint, "there's very little difference between
e-mail you want and spam," said John Levine of the Coalition Against
Unsolicited Commercial Email. "You can't even get two people to agree
exactly what spam is, so you can't produce a perfect spam filter."
Most people agree that unsolicited commercial e-mail sent in bulk
qualifies as spam. But what about unsolicited bulk mail that is
noncommercial, such as those seeking charitable donations or delivering
political messages?
Then there are bulk messages that users unknowingly solicited--for
instance, by purchasing from an e-commerce site without explicitly saying
"no" to promotional materials.
Mail service providers often have to make decisions on the fly about
what is spam and what is not.
They've developed tools to detect mail sent in multiple quantities.
They check for the fake e-mail headers that spammers use to hide their
origins.
Some also use lists of spam-friendly addresses from a Redwood City,
Calif., organization called the Mail Abuse Prevention System, or MAPS.
Mistakes happen.
"Certainly, to most users, if informed of the trade-offs, they hate
spam so much and get so much of it, they find the risk of losing a tiny
bit of mail perfectly acceptable," Levine said.
Spam has crashed or slowed some mail servers, said Margie Arbon, a
MAPS staff member. In other cases, companies have had to add capacity at
significant cost to handle the spam traffic.
MAPS tracks Internet computers that have generated spam in the past,
that relay bulk messages or that otherwise have not done enough to block
spam.
Peacefire's Internet host, Media3 Technologies, got on one list
because some of its customers sell software that could be used to send
spam. Media3 says it doesn't support spam and complains that the MAPS
criteria is too broad.
Peacefire says it was caught in the cross-fire.
Sarah Lefko, a Microsoft product manager who oversees Hotmail, said
spam blocking provides Hotmail users with "a more enjoyable experience."
AOL and Hotmail, among others, can automatically delete the mail
deemed spam before it reaches the user, if the user chooses. Other
services, such as Earthlink and Yahoo, send all suspected items to spam
mailboxes.
Lisa Pollock, director of Yahoo's messaging group, fears that without
effective spam controls, subscribers may find e-mail unmanageable.
"If people don't like our service," she said, "they won't use it."
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