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: 951
Comments: 28
block bottom
spacer spacer
image Spam-Spackers: Microsoft Set to Show Spam Strategy image
Microsoft


Microsoft Set to Show Spam Strategy
E-mail 'Caller ID' system validates the source of messages.
Paul Roberts,
IDG News Service
Tuesday, February 24, 2004

Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates will use the RSA Conference in San Francisco to unveil a proposed open technology standard that Microsoft hopes will make it harder to fake the source of unsolicited commercial e-mail.

On Tuesday, the company will release a specification for an antispam technology called Caller ID, a Microsoft-developed take on sender authentication technology that tries to validate the source address associated with an e-mail message, according to John Levine, co-chairman of the independent Antispam Research Group, part of the Internet Engineering Task Force.



Spam Fight
A Microsoft spokesman could not confirm the information about Caller ID, but said that Gates will be talking about spam in a variety of different contexts in his keynote speech at the RSA security show, and that Microsoft's internal Anti-Spam Technology & Strategy Group will be making an announcement as well.

Sender authentication is rapidly gaining acceptance among e-mail experts and Internet service providers as a weapon in the fight against spam. On Monday, Sendmail announced that it will develop and distribute sender authentication technologies to its customers and the open source community to combat spam, viruses, and identity fraud in e-mail.

Sendmail will incorporate a selection of sender authentication technologies into its open source Mail Transfer Agent, including a technology called DomainKeys that is championed by Yahoo and proposals put forward by Microsoft and others, Sendmail said. A Microsoft spokesman confirmed reports that the company will be releasing a sender authentication plug-in along with Sendmail.



Tracking the Source
Caller ID is akin to other sender authentication proposals circulating among leading ISPs and e-mail security experts, Levine said. In particular, it is similar to a nascent technology called Sender Policy Framework, developed by independent antispam researcher Meng Wong of e-mail forwarding service Pobox.com.

Instead of analyzing the content of messages to spot spam, the SPF protocol allows Internet domain administrators to describe their e-mail servers in an SPF record that is attached to the Domain Name System record using a special SPF description language. Other Internet domains can then reject any messages that claim to come from that domain but weren't sent from an approved server, Wong said.

Caller ID also relies on administrators adding lists of published e-mail servers to the DNS record for their Internet domains. Whereas SPF uses its own syntax for listing the domain addresses, Microsoft's Caller ID uses Extensible Markup Language to describe the valid e-mail servers, Levine said.

Also, SPF allows e-mail gateways to analyze the e-mail envelope, a wrapper for the message that is transferred between mail servers before the full message is sent. Messages that do not come from a valid server at the domain are dropped before any message content is sent. In contrast, Caller ID analyzes the sender IP address information stored in the e-mail message header, which requires the whole message to be downloaded by the receiving e-mail server before it can be accepted or rejected, he said.

Microsoft has been developing Caller ID internally for the last year and consulting with antispam researchers in private for the last month, Wong and Levine said.



Experts Take a Look......................................
More at PCWorld
Posted on Tuesday, 24 February 2004 @ 18:17:47 UTC by phoenix22 (1149 reads)
[ Trackback ]
image

"Spam-Spackers: Microsoft Set to Show Spam Strategy" | 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: Microsoft Set to Show Spam Strategy (Score: 0)
by Anonymous  on Thursday, 18 March 2004 @ 21:41:27 UTC
Quite nice,
after I read you article I made some research and found http://www.nospamproxy.de
It supports it allready and my SPAMlevel really went down.


 
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)
· Microsoft
· OpenSource
· HotScripts
· W3 Consortium
· Spam Cop
· Google Microsoft Search
· Microsoft
· Technet Online
· HotFix & Security Bulletins
· More about Microsoft
· News by phoenix22


Most read story about Microsoft:
Microsoft Security Bulletin MS06-001: Official WMF Patch

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