Is spam (junk e-mail) really a big problem?

I have a Hotmail account which I almost never use. The main reason I stopped using it was that 99.9% of the messages were ‘spam’, to the tune of 20-30 per day. I briefly tried using Hotmail’s Junk Mail facility, but it limited the number of email addresses you could block and didn’t seem to work properly, so I gave up on it. I probably should just have given up on the Hotmail account, but I worry that someone might still use it, and it doesn’t take long to scan through the messages.

Suddenly a few weeks ago the amount of spam on this account dropped dramatically, and I now only get a handful of messages each day (all spam). What has Hotmail done? Will the spammers figure out how to circumvent their blocking?

My main email accounts receive a small amount of spam each day, but nothing excessive. I recently upgraded Norton Anti-Virus and Internet Security to the lastest version, and this includes an add-in for Outlook that puts virtually all spam into a special folder – where you can review and purge the messages, so a minor problem has become smaller.

Yet we keeping hearing what a big problem spam has become. This week the SCMP had a piece on the front page of the ‘City’ section saying that “Junk e-mail ‘costs $10bn a year’”. This is based upon a survey commissioned by the Hong Kong Anti-Spam Coalition that says that the average user spend 6.5 minutes per day on dealing with spam. Yeah, right. That’ll be on top of the 30 minutes reading and forwarding jokes and other non work-related emails, two hours surfing the Internet (and two hours updating their blogs).

Email is a marvellous time-waster in its own right, and even if you stopped spam and could prevent people sending jokes etc. through email, it would still be a problem. Email can be addictive, and often interrupts your other work and distracts you from what you are supposed to be doing. A former boss once sent an email to all the employees in Asia and requested a ‘read receipt’. He was amazed how many people had opened the email within a few minutes of it being sent. Some people even get indignant if you haven’t read the email they sent you a few minutes ago, as if you had nothing better to do than read emails.

Junk emails are a tiny irritation and represent only a small amount of the time that email wastes. Yet the Hong Kong Anti-Spam Coalition thinks that the government should regulate it. Are there any laws to prevent companies sending me junk mail through the ordinary post? I don’t think so.

Large companies can quite easily prevent most spam from appearing in the user’s Inbox. I can’t find the article, but a writer on the FT was commenting recently that he longer received spam (though he could visit it on another server if he wished). The reality is that most companies do very little to stop their staff abusing email and the Internet, let alone blocking spam, but the tools are available. When even Hotmail seem to have figured out how to block spam, it can’t be that difficult!

Incidentally, I do have a grudging admiration for the spammers, because they now work very hard to make the subject line grab your attention and appear to be legitimate. I received one (that I haven’t opened) telling me that my account is about to be deleted, and another one (which I did open) offering bargain flights. They have also hi-jacked another domain name I own, and use it to spend spam with a fake sender’s email address, though the only minor inconvenience this causes me is that I get a few messages from AOL telling me that the spam couldn’t be delivered.

I will finish with another quote from the Hong Kong Anti-Spam Coalition: “the finanical impact on the Hong Kong economy [is] also very remarkable”. If you say so.

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2 responses to “The spam scam”

  1. Mike avatar
    Mike

    Today I received 105 e-mails on a long standing account that I have had for more than eight years. Only two of these where legitimate.
    Even if spam filters are used the other 98% of emails still have to be broadcast across the internet before reaching the spam filter.
    Most of the spam e-mails I receive fall into three categories, Promption of pornography, Selling of prescription drugs or Penis enhancement products. Three products that I am not interested in, especially when such deceptive methods are used to attempt to get me to read them.
    It costs money to set up and manage anti-spam software, it costs money to transmit spam, and it wastes my time.
    Spam filters are not as intelligent as you think they are. I have had legitimate e-mails blocked on many occasions by company filters. You can’t tell how many legitimate e-mails you lose if you never receive them.

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  2. Chris avatar

    I don’t deny that it is a problem, but I feel that the impact is not as great as some people say. Whatever Hotmail has done has obviously been effective, and the guy at the FT was satisfied with what his company had done. This ties in with my own experience, but I know other people may not feel the same way.
    All anti-spam tools will sometimes get it wrong, but the advantage is that you can scan through the junk emails very quickly and identify any that you want.
    The bigger problem is the Internet itself. Its open nature is both its greatest strength and its greatest weakness. Spam is one of the prices we pay for that, unfortunately. I don’t have much sympathy for ISPs on this one, because they could do something about it if they really wanted.
    As for individuals, well, some people don’t want unsolicited phone calls, so they don’t have their name in the phone directory and are careful about giving out their phone number. These days they probably also use ‘caller display’ and don’t answer calls unless they know the number. This is likely to be effective, but with the disadvantage that people who really wanted to contact the individual will find it much more difficult. Likewise, if you ignored all email except from known contacts you would eliminate spam – but (as with some anti-spam tools) you may also lose some emails you want. At the opposite extreme, if you scatter your email address all over the Internet, you can guarantee you will receive plenty of spam.
    I am not saying that spam is totally self-inflicted, but one reason why my Hotmail account receives so much spam is that I was foolish enough to sign up for some free newsletters, and I assume my email address was then sold on and appears on countless lists.

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