Comments on: Feds preparing to jail more spammers?
A U.S. Justice Department attorney says more criminal prosecutions of spammers are on the way, but will that warning deter would-be junk mailers?
A U.S. Justice Department attorney says more criminal prosecutions of spammers are on the way, but will that warning deter would-be junk mailers?
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You go Feds!
Through common sense, I might have gotten 15 or so pieces of spam through email this entire year. That is a generous estimate.
Why not go after after both?
bulk rates.
I do take the time to glance at my junk snail mail because it may
contain some good stuff like pizza coupons.
Legit. Just like TV commercials. Legit.
They are not gaining unauthorized access to private computer systems and using your bandwidth and CPU time for free, to earn their money.
Cyber spammers steal processor time and bandwidth.
They also cripple computers and net connections.
They also cause undo hardship to the receivers and their mail servers, causing most of us to spend hours per day manually deleting spam.
Many of my clients deal directly with the public so their email addresses are readily available and email communication is very important to their businesses. In highly competitive businesses where timely response is critical, spam is very, very costly. Anyone that has ever had to tab through a dozen spam messages on a portable device or missed an important email relegated to the bulk folder knows the high cost of spam.
Again, if spammers and virus writers were publically executed, I would cheer.
Life is way too precious and way too short to waste even minutes every day dealing spam and spam related problems.
Spammers will just move to countries where the law hasn't caught up to technology yet. Jailing and fining some won't stop it.
through off-shore servers. I don't have a need to email with anyone
outside of the USA so would be possible on the server level to block
email coming in from overseas? I understand that other people do
need to email with people outside the USA and it that case they can
use a different POP server or whatever.
penny stocks. I don't know if the person/persons ultimately
responsible for sending that spam is an American, maybe they are
Chinese-Canadians who now live in the USA, like Tommy Chong.
Boner and weight loss pills, Chinese fen stocks, and OEM software
make up most of the spam sent to my addresses. Recently I have
started seeing more "... has sent you an e-card" I don't know what
they are selling as I never click through or load the images.
Though myself, and not an advocate of public execution of spammers, tempting though it might be ;-)
responsible for food safety oversight.
- btw...
- by jatos July 13, 2007 9:33 AM PDT
- that was intended as reply to the public execution suggestion.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
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