CastleCops, Internet Crime Fighters
Need help? Click here to register for free! Absolutely zero advertisements on this site!

$9736.22 of $21422.68
left sidedonated so farneed $11686.46 donated to reach our goalright side, our goal
Help CastleCops serve the community on new servers, Donate Here to reach our goal.

Donation/Premium
spacer
block bottom
Security Central
spacer
· Home
· PIRT/Fried Phish
· MIRT
· SIRT
· Deutsch
· Wiki
· Newsletter
· O16/ActiveX
· CLSID List
· Contest2007
· Downloads
· Feedback (send)
· Forums
· HijackThis
· Hijacktrend
· LSPs
· My Downloads
· O18
· O20
· O21
· O22
· O23
· O9
· Premium
· Private Messages
· Proxomitron
· Reviews
· Search
· StartupList
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· WsIRT
· Your Account
· Acceptable Use Policy
block bottom
Survey
spacer
Was 2007 a good year?

Yes it was a wonderful year
Yes, but there is always room for improvement
Status quo
It was a challenge
Other (leave comment)



Results
Polls

Votes: 940
Comments: 25
block bottom
spacer spacer
image Penalties: Congestion charge for spam? image
SPAM
Johnny-B-Goode writes "10:31 Thursday 27th March 2003
Lisa M. Bowman, CNET News.com reports;

Instead of blocking out all spam from our computers, two IBM researchers believe we should accept spam from companies that buy a 'charity stamp'
Two IBM researchers are proposing a new method of fighting spam that would force unfamiliar senders to donate to charity if they want to reach you.

Under the proposal, concocted by IBM researchers Scott Fahlman and Mark Wegman, email senders who haven't been cleared by a recipient would receive a message that their mail did not go through. They would then be instructed that they could reach the intended recipient if they were to pay a third-party site a few cents for a charity stamp.

The money paid to the third-party site, which could range from a penny to a quarter, would be donated to a charity of the sender's choice.

Email bearing the charity stamp could then reach the recipient.

What we're proposing is to change the rules of email just a little bit to make spam go away, Fahlman said. The day you install this is the day you get your last piece of free spam.

Fahlman said the software to channel unfamiliar senders to charity sites, which is only theoretical right now, would probably be under the control of the sender and would sit between a person's mail server and mail client. He also said Internet service providers could use the program as a marketing tool to convince consumers they're serious about controlling spam.

The plan combines the popular concept of a so-called white list -- which only allows emails through from senders on a predetermined list -- and the emerging paid-to-send model, which is currently resurfacing in some anti-spam crowds.

AT&T researchers recently proposed another pay-per-message model, and an Australian entrepreneur announced a service last month called CashRamSpam.com that lets people set a contact fee to reach them via email.

Technologists have long toyed with the idea of pay-per-message plans as a way to control spam, but most say the idea is too unwieldy to implement.

Privacy expert Ray Everett-Church, chief privacy officer for Philadelphia-based consultancy the EPrivacy Group, said the new rash of pay-per-message proposals shows how desperate people really are to control spam. He said such plans in general would be difficult to engineer and confusing because not everyone using the Internet pays in dollars, and are potential magnets for fraud.

I have yet to see one that is either workable or would solve more problems than it creates, he said.

What's more, he worries that charging to send messages would ruin the email system's status as a forum for freewheeling ideas. It certainly would destroy the Internet's ability to let communities grow and to let people build relationships and interact with one another, he said.

But Fahlman, the IBM researcher, said email recipients are entitled to take control of their in-box. I believe we all have an absolute right to read whatever we want, he said. I don't care if it's some politicians looking for votes or some Nigerian looking for bank transfers. If I want to see it, I'll go find it. Copyright © 2003 CNET Networks, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Article and source;
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/story/0,,t269-s2132555,00.html "
Posted on Thursday, 27 March 2003 @ 11:15:00 UTC by Paul (1016 reads)
[ Trackback ]
image

"Penalties: Congestion charge for spam?" | Login/Create an Account | 1 comment | Search
Threshold
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

Re: Congestion charge for spam? (Score: 0)
by Anonymous  on Saturday, 21 June 2003 @ 18:39:51 UTC
Wouldn't this clog up bther system even more ??? Wasted bandwidth going back nad forth. Reallhy stupid...IMO


 
Login
spacer
Nickname

Password

Security Code: Type Security Code: Usage signifies AUP acceptance
· New User? · Click here to create a registered account.
block bottom
Related Links
spacer
· del.icio.us!
· digg it!
· reddit!
· TrackBack (0)
· News.com
· IBM
· HotScripts
· W3 Consortium
· Spam Cop
· C|Net News
· ZDNet News
· More about SPAM
· News by Paul


Most read story about SPAM:
Messenger Pop-up Spam makes us sick

block bottom
Article Rating
spacer
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Bad
Regular
Good
Very Good
Excellent


block bottom
Options
spacer

Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

block bottom
spacer spacer