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Old 04-08-2003, 07:51 PM   #1
tw
Read? I only know how to write.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 11,933
Portrait of a Spammer

Quote:
from Washington Post on 8 Apr 2003
Ruling Backs Anti-Spam Activist
Judge Says Web Site Doesn't Have to Be Taken Down

An Internet site that provides personal information about an alleged purveyor of mass e-mail is not harassment and does not need to be removed, a Maryland district court judge ruled yesterday.

Francis Uy, a tech specialist at Johns Hopkins University, posted the site to expose the activities of George A. Moore Jr., owner of Maryland Internet Marketing Inc. in Linthicum. Moore, whose company sells nutritional weight-loss products, such as Fat-N-Emy and Extreme Colon Cleanser, has been identified by spam-tracking
Victims of spammer:
http://www.getspecific.com/Region/USA/States/MD.htm
http://ecommerce.internet.com/news/n...569901,00.html

What he is about:
http://mail.spamcon.org/pipermail/su...ry/003256.html

Websites using that name:
[url=http://www.smtusa.com/Marketing/internet_marketing.asp?txtState=Maryland&txtCity=Potomac[/URL]
http://www.advantageim.com/services/...marketing.html
http://www.impactbusiness.com/marketing.htm

Just some records on George A Moore Jr and Maryland Internet Marketing:
http://www.spamhaus.org/sbl/sbl.lasso?query=SBL8058
http://www.spamhaus.org/sbl/sbl.lasso?query=SBL7478
http://www.spamhaus.org/sbl/sbl.lasso?query=SBL6680
http://www.spamhaus.org/sbl/sbl.lasso?query=SBL6509
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Old 04-18-2003, 09:12 AM   #2
tw
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The Linthicum MD spammer is alledged to sell pirated Norton software. Another in IL is subject to court action according the CNN:
Quote:
from "FTC tries to shut down spam e-mail operation":
The Federal Trade Commission said Thursday that after receiving about 46,000 complaints it had asked a federal judge to halt the operation until there can be a trial. It is the first FTC case involving spam with deceptive subject lines, the agency said.

"When consumers opened the e-mail messages, they were immediately subjected to sexually explicit solicitations," the FTC said. "Because of the deceptive subject lines, consumers had no reason to expect to see such material."

Children may have been exposed to the pornographic e-mail, the agency said.
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Old 04-18-2003, 09:24 AM   #3
BrianR
Cleverly disguised as a responsible adult
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 3,338
HEY! That's right next door...I live in the next town over.

Talk about your small world!

And yes, I have seen these deceptive SPAMS too. I delete them just like all the other SPAM I get

Brian
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Old 04-28-2003, 02:22 PM   #4
tw
Read? I only know how to write.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 11,933
Quote:
from NY Times of 28 Apr 2003
E-Mail Service Providers Unite in Bid to Stop Spam
The three leading providers of e-mail accounts said yesterday that they had started to work together to develop ways to reduce the unwanted commercial messages, commonly known as spam, that are increasingly clogging their customers' mailboxes.
The companies America Online, Microsoft and Yahoo are calling for technical changes in the way e-mail is passed around cyberspace to make it easier to determine who really sent it and what it is about.
Each company has developed its own technologies to identify and discard spam, and they boast of these in their advertising. But even though these systems sidetrack several billion pieces a day, they miss so much more that spam has become a leading source of complaints from users. Many studies show that the quantities of spam have at least doubled in the last year so the companies have agreed to cooperate with rivals.
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Old 04-29-2003, 12:50 AM   #5
Bitmap
Look who thinks he's clever Dan.
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Washington DC Metro Area. Fairfax city
Posts: 226
Quote:
Originaly posted by TW:
The companies America Online, Microsoft and Yahoo are calling for technical changes in the way e-mail is passed around cyberspace to make it easier to determine who really sent it and what it is about.
I don't think i want those companies knowing what's in my e-mail and what it's about. If they put these "technical changes" in to e-mail what's going to stop them from puting them in our every day mail?
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Old 04-30-2003, 10:10 PM   #6
tw
Read? I only know how to write.
 
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Where does it say anywhere that they will access the contents of your E-mail?

In the meantime, with spam sometimes approaching nearly 50 spams every day (this on my protected e-mail addresses), then spam has cause me to delete necessary messages. Spam filters also have delete some non-spam e-mail. However, VA has recently passed a law to make spam illegal.

Currently, spam has jumped from about20% of all e-mails in June of last year, to about 30+% in July, and is now about 45% of all e-mail traffic.

Last edited by tw; 04-30-2003 at 10:12 PM.
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