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To: Gut Trader who wrote (269276)12/2/2003 12:30:42 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 436258
 
This story was printed from silicon.com, located at silicon.com

Story URL: silicon.com

Spammer's porn trick attacks spam busters
Will Sturgeon
silicon.com
December 02, 2003
Anti-spam organisation Spamhaus is the victim of a devious spam email doing the rounds, which makes it a target of floods of angry emails.

Recipients are told that they have subscribed to a child pornography mail order service and that a set of CDs containing pornographic images of children is already being mailed out to them.

The email states that if they believe they have received the message in error then they should contact the administrators and cancel their order. Scared that they may be about to receive illegal pornography and having been warned that they will be charged $100 per month for the service, many may instantly fire off an angry email, without thinking.

However, it is likely that there are no CDs in the post and no service behind this email - rather it is the work of an aggrieved spammer.

The clue to this lies in the fact that the email address given links to anti-spam organisation Spamhaus - which has become particularly unpopular with spammers because of its efforts to stamp out unsolicited email.

A particular hate figure within the organisation is founder Steve Linford who this year entered the top 20 of silicon.com's Agenda Setter's poll because of his sterling work fighting spam.

The spammer is clearly hoping to overload Spamhaus's servers with emails from angry email users aggrieved that they have been falsely accused of buying child pornography.

The email also contains a link to the Spamhaus website where users are promised the best "selection of porn to suit every taste".

A statement on the Spamhaus website says: "The Spamhaus Project blocks and terminates spammers from the internet, therefore it's no surprise spammers hate us, just as thieves hate the police."

It goes on to detail the methods some spammers will go to in order to have their revenge. "A common practice of spammers is to "joe-job" anti-spam organisations, by sending out spam fraudulently claiming to be sent 'by' the anti-spam organisation. Spammers...dupe people into harassing anti-spam organisations such as Spamhaus by flooding us with complaints."

Users should be careful upon receiving spam which annoys them that they do not turn their ire on the very organisations fighting their corner.

On the bright side - if there is one - Spamhaus may take some delight in knowing its efforts have the spammers so concerned that it is being singled out for this treatment.

For more information on the work Spamhaus is doing, click here.

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