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"gatt" wrote in
: "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... Granted, it wouldn't *stop* spam. However, all reputable ISPs will suspend Usenet access, if not cancel the account entirely, for posting spam. This is part of what I do for a living. Let me tell you....I've gotten about 8,000 mails to the abuse address this month alone, and I have about three hours a week to address them. The higher-ups just don't see a need for full-time abuse management. Not only that, but about half of that IS spam, but unlike other accounts, abuse admins can't filter spam or they'll also filter complaints about spam. So if one person complains about something somebody posted on the internet, a policy administrator MIGHT actually see it and then triage it. "That dude called me a jew" gets bit-bucketed with Scientology threats and other minor issues and addressed IF I have time; generally, though, I have bigger fish to fry such as the phishing scammers out of eastern europe, pedophilia sites (NAILED an entire ring with the help of the FBI in March), denial of service attacks, copyright infringement, etc. I get subpoenas from Homeland Security, the FBI and, most recently, Al Jazeera. (!!) Admins TRY to get it all, but because the friggin' gubmint confounds every attempt to control spam (it's freedom of speech, you see, and people "want" spam...just ask the spammers. And ignore the theft of services...) Geeez....tell that to the nuts over at Supernews. They take spamming so seriously that their filters start taking out the good stuff. Then, if you complain, you get bitched at for complaining and asked why you want spam. To be honest, I'd rather err on the side of getting some spam in order to allow me to NOT miss ANY legit postings. I am an adult and I know how to use a spam filter. If there's something I don't like, I'll block it myself, thank you very much. Besides, one persons spam is another persons gold. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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In article ,
Skywise wrote: Besides, one persons spam is another persons gold. hardly any of it could possibly qualify as gold for even the most twisted mind. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#3
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On Wed, 24 May 2006 04:02:44 -0000, Skywise
wrote in :: Besides, one persons spam is another persons gold. Patronizing spammers is what causes them to persist in their blatant theft of service. Never do that. |
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Larry Dighera wrote in
: On Wed, 24 May 2006 04:02:44 -0000, Skywise wrote in :: Besides, one persons spam is another persons gold. Patronizing spammers is what causes them to persist in their blatant theft of service. Never do that. I think I used the term 'spam' too broadly. There are many posts that I know people bitch about that I have no problem with...and vise-versa. Yes, there's the obvious blatant spam and that should be dealt with. What I was really trying to say is that what one person may consider to be crap/junk/spam may be exactly what another person is looking for. It should be up to the end user to decide what they want or don't want to see instead of some third party deciding based on their own whims. Brina -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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"Skywise" wrote in message
... [...] What I was really trying to say is that what one person may consider to be crap/junk/spam may be exactly what another person is looking for. It should be up to the end user to decide what they want or don't want to see instead of some third party deciding based on their own whims. The beauty of the anti-spam movement is that is has nothing to do with what's being advertised. A spammer could be advertising world peace, they'd still be afoul of the anti-spam guidelines and would legitimately be blocked. It's true that some people over-user the term "spam". But the fact remains that there's a time and place for everything, and advertising has a fairly limited scope IMHO. If it's something I'm interested in, advertise to me in an appropriate way. Until there is a standard for clearly marking advertising and allowing me to automatically opt-out of all of it, none is appropriate in Internet communications such as email, blogs, Usenet, etc. To take any other stance is to render all of those communications useless, as real, informative communications gets swamped by advertising. Up to your email server, it already IS swamped; the only reason any of us can still use email is because spam filtering is working reasonably well. The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. Not that he's incorrect about the underlying facts, but that it's futile to even attempt to do so. Spammers, taking advantage of Internet bandwidth paid for by everyone else, need only the very tiniest response rate. Larry could get everyone he contacts to stop replying, have them get everyone THEY contact to stop replying, and have everyone those contacts contact to stop replying, and it still wouldn't make a dent in the incentive to spam. Pete |
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in news:1279p8lkkv75tb8
@corp.supernews.com: Snipola The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. A reply isn't even what the advertisers are after. They are after someone seeing the ad and then visiting the place advertised. I don't think the advertisers could care less whether anyone replies to the post or not. I doubt that but a handful of advertisement spammers even follow up to see if their posts are replied to or not. Those that do are probably the small timers who are targeting a very specific audience and have only posted to "appropriate" groups. Then, they're probabyl only interested in the fact that there ARE replies and not what is actually being said. It tells them that people have paid some attention to the ad, whether good or bad. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
#7
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"Skywise" wrote in message
... "Peter Duniho" wrote in news:1279p8lkkv75tb8 @corp.supernews.com: Snipola The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. A reply isn't even what the advertisers are after. They are after someone seeing the ad and then visiting the place advertised. I'm not talking about email replies to the spam itself, nor is Larry. Please take particular note of definitions 2 and 3: re·spond (r-spnd) v. re·spond·ed, re·spond·ing, re·sponds v. intr. 1.. To make a reply; answer. See Synonyms at answer. 2.. To act in return or in answer. 3.. To react positively or favorably: The patient has responded rapidly to the treatment |
#8
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in news:127a276hanrnoa6
@corp.supernews.com: "Skywise" wrote in message ... "Peter Duniho" wrote in news:1279p8lkkv75tb8 @corp.supernews.com: Snipola The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. A reply isn't even what the advertisers are after. They are after someone seeing the ad and then visiting the place advertised. I'm not talking about email replies to the spam itself, nor is Larry. Please take particular note of definitions 2 and 3: I see the problem here. We're talking two different things. I'm think of usenet only whereas you guys are talking everything, usenet, email, etc.... Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
#9
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On Wed, 24 May 2006 15:58:22 -0700, "Peter Duniho"
wrote in :: The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. Perhaps you are able to suggest a superior course of assault on spammers. Not that he's incorrect about the underlying facts, but that it's futile to even attempt to do so. With reasoning like that, there's no need for laws in this nation of ours; we should just open our borders and let the flood of immigrants overwhelm our nation's systems of justice and social services. Futility be dammed; I'll resist in any way I can, rather than submit to criminality. Spammers, taking advantage of Internet bandwidth paid for by everyone else, need only the very tiniest response rate. Larry could get everyone he contacts to stop replying, have them get everyone THEY contact to stop replying, and have everyone those contacts contact to stop replying, and it still wouldn't make a dent in the incentive to spam. Only a reduction in responses to spam will effectively have any impact on spammers. While you may well be correct in you analysis of futility in the scenario you put forth, it is the only power we have at this time. Perhaps, when/if the IP address assignment scheme is ever improves so that unassigned IP address traffic is routed to dev/null, there may be a better course of action. Until that time, I believe we all have a responsibility not to reward spammers by so much as opening their unsolicited e-mail or clicking a link in the Usenet articles. Just because you feel that such a course is futile, does not make it unreasonable considering the present lack of alternative actions available at this time. |
#10
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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message
... The only thing Larry is wrong about here is his misguided attempt to try to get people to stop responding to spam. Perhaps you are able to suggest a superior course of assault on spammers. Of course I am. Not that he's incorrect about the underlying facts, but that it's futile to even attempt to do so. With reasoning like that, there's no need for laws in this nation of ours; What an absurd conclusion. Using your logic, you could justify dress codes as a preventative measure to rape. Calling in question one particular proposed solution to a problem in no way implies a general lack of concern for the problem. To assert otherwise is to engage in the same sort of "if you're not with us, you're against us" crap that the war-mongerers engage in. [...] Only a reduction in responses to spam will effectively have any impact on spammers. Absolutely false. "A reduction" will accomplish nothing. It is true that "a complete elimination in responses" will have an impact on spammers, but that's a different goal than "a reduction". We've already had "a reduction", and we only have MORE spam. In fact, "a reduction" without "an elimination" only encourages more spam, because as the response rates go down, the number of spam messages needs to go up in order to maintain or increase the same total number of responses. Furthermore, eliminating responses to spam is NOT the only way to have an impact on spammers. There are other effective means, which have actually been used successfully so far. We are very early in the fight against spam, and effective techniques need to be given time to work. But they are working, and none of the effective techniques involve bothering to try to get people to not respond to spam. While you may well be correct in you analysis of futility in the scenario you put forth, it is the only power we have at this time. Again, not true. Rather than lobbying the Usenet community, you could be lobbying your own politicians to make effective anti-spam laws. "Only power"? Hardly. [...] Just because you feel that such a course is futile, does not make it unreasonable considering the present lack of alternative actions available at this time. Don't take it personally. I never called your approach "unreasonable", just "futile". If you want to keep at it, be my guest. I made a simple comment about the likelihood of it being useful, nothing more. If you want to turn it into a big argument, be my guest, but your approach will still remain futile, and you'll be wasting precious time you could be using to fight spam on fighting me instead. Now that seems silly. Pete |
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