On CBSSports.com: Today?s Maxim Spin Girl
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Munir Kotadia
Posted on ZDNet News: May 24, 2004 3:59:00 PM

There is no sign of relief for companies already overwhelmed by the sheer volume of unsolicited and unwanted e-mail messages clogging their mail systems. E-mail security firm MessageLabs' filtering statistics for April, which were published on Monday, show that 67.6 percent of all global e-mail traffic is spam.

MessageLabs said it scanned 840 million e-mail messages in April and found that 97 percent of spam is aimed at five countries: the United States, the U.K., Germany, Australia and Hong Kong. The United States has the worst problem, with 83 percent of messages being classified as spam, while in the U.K. that figure stands at 53 percent.

Mark Sunner, chief technology officer at MessageLabs, said that although the United States has the worst overall spam problem, the increasing penetration of broadband in the U.K. could mean similar figures by the end of the year.

"It's only a matter of time until the UK falls victim to similar volumes of spam. When it comes to the Internet, when the U.S. sneezes, the rest of us catch a cold," Sunner said.

One small U.K. company with just six full-time employees claims to have already caught the American spam cold. Vbug, a Microsoft developer support company, which has been running for 10 years and has had a Web site for the past seven years, last month received around 720,000 e-mails messages, 99.84 percent of which were spam.

Graham Parker, Vbug's chairman, said his employees had to spend more time each day finding the few legitimate e-mails among this mountain of spam.

Parker suspects Vbug could have been the victim of a malicious spamming campaign, but he concedes that it could be because the same e-mail addresses have been published on the Vbug Web site for so many years.

"E-mail addresses get harvested from Web sites and then are sold on. We have had our domain for the last seven years and are now in the process of celebrating our tenth birthday," said Parker.

Parker considered changing the company's e-mail addressed to a new domain, but was worried about losing touch with older contacts, so instead signed up E-mail Systems, a small e-mail-filtering company.

"By changing e-mail addresses, you run the risk of losing contact with people you want to stay in touch with. Instead, we installed our spam filtering system three months ago and it made a dramatic change, overnight," Parker said.

Any filtering software contains the risk that legitimate messages may be filtered out by mistake, but Parker said this is a small price to pay.

"There is an issue with false positives, but to lose the odd e-mail is worth it. It is a no-brainer," Parker said.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 37 Talkback(s)
try using a rule
I use rules (in Outlook and Outlook Express) to do what you want. Basically, I have set up a DELETE ALL incoming messages, EXCEPT those that come from a specified list of people. Voila - no spam! ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: fairy12 Posted on: 08/17/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
But Congress passed a law!  Franklin_z | 05/24/04
Uh, yeah.....  John E Wahd | 05/24/04
The SARE Ninja's are at the ready  UncleBubba | 05/25/04
As long as morons are buying, spammers will spam  archerjoe | 05/24/04
Re: As long as morons are buying  issthatso | 05/24/04
No it's not 2/3rds it's 95% based on our experience !!!  realitycheck101 | 05/24/04
Spammers  bpretty | 05/24/04
boucing is not good  toadlife | 05/24/04
Mail Washer Spam. . .  boomslang_z | 05/25/04
And Spyware is 2/3 of all downloads  BitTwiddler | 05/24/04
Spam  Dataman_z | 05/24/04
Good luck to you.  Patrick Jones | 05/25/04
On Monday Morning. . .  boomslang_z | 05/24/04
How to report SPAM fraud  paulogle | 05/24/04
Who do you tell ?  J_P | 05/24/04
Next time I'll read before I post  J_P | 05/24/04
spam was 90% of my personal email too.  bwright@... | 05/25/04
Bouncing does not really work  jonesoc | 05/25/04
Mailwasher Spam. . .  boomslang_z | 05/25/04
98% seems reasonable  svine | 05/25/04
Thanks to WORMS my luck's running out  Phil Nospam | 05/25/04
Spam becoming an impossible task to eliminate.  DJnRF | 05/25/04
Spam typically 90-98%  jonesoc | 05/25/04
99% on Hotmail, Yahoo and other free email providers  kchahal | 05/25/04
ISP services and their connection to Spammers?  6shots | 05/25/04
hotmail does have option  mixpix | 05/25/04
ISPs  DigitalFrog | 05/25/04
this idea won't work  Phil Nospam | 05/25/04
try using a rule  fairy12 | 08/17/04
840 million for the month?  rpmyers1 | 05/25/04
SPAM  Linux User 147560 | 05/25/04
That can be fixed. . .  boomslang_z | 05/25/04
My mail now has 0% SPAM  Palmloyal.com | 05/26/04
Bluebottle.com  the_doge | 05/27/04
If it's spam...  Albee_Freeoneday | 05/26/04
Bomb the companies  bpretty | 05/26/04
100% spam free email  dfrench | 08/04/04

What do you think?

Dedicated Hosting

  • If the cost of building and managing a robust technology infrastructure is prohibitive for your small or mid-sized business (SMB), managed hosting may be worth another look. For help determining whether a managed or dedicated hosting solution makes sense for your business, read this informative blog post by Josh Hoskins.
  • From our sponsors
    Click Here
  • The Planet
advertisement
Click Here