An online resource, Postmaster offers tools to help Internet service providers, e-mail service providers and legitimate bulk e-mailers combat junk e-mail, streamline the reporting process for spam and assist in delivering legitimate bulk e-mail to MSN Hotmail users.
Postmaster will also include the software giant's new Smart Network Data Services, which will provide reports on the types of e-mail being sent to MSN Hotmail accounts. The tracking service will inform ISPs of the volume of e-mail being sent from their IP address to MSN Hotmail users and the percentage of that e-mail that has been tagged as spam by either Hotmail filters or the user themselves.
With that information, ISPs can identify and clean compromised PCs and question bulk e-mailers to determine whether they are spammers.
"MSN Postmaster and Smart Network Data Services represent a move by Microsoft toward broader, more comprehensive and transparent information-sharing with ISPs and e-mail senders," Kevin Doerr, product unit manager for MSN Hotmail, said in a statement.
Security experts say ISPs are reluctant to shut down customers' accounts, even if they appear to be inadvertently pumping out spam. For ISPs, it means lost revenue when they shut down a customer's account while trying determine whether or not the e-mail their customer is distributing is legitimate.
The reporting service seems useless. Why would you go to Hotmail's site to report spam and try to locate their custom headers (that any spammer can forge) and do all this manually, when you can use SpamCop.net to analyze the email headers automatically, and send the reports automatically to any ISP or ESP, not just Hotmail? The reporting of email should not depend on knowing in advance the true source of the email.
As usual with MS, this looks mostly promoational. Perhaps the statistics they are willing to provide other email services can be useful to some postmasters.
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As usual with MS, this looks mostly promoational.
Perhaps the statistics they are willing to provide other email services can be useful to some postmasters.