Situational Awareness: Spam Crisis and China
Gary Warner, Director of Research at the UAB Computer Forensics, posted a very interesting analysis from the past 48 days concerning the amount of spam which has ties to China.
The post is a call for increased awareness of the situation with certain registrars and hosting providers in China who have become spam havens in recent times. It is our hope as with Gary's that by exposing the amount spam, fraudulent messages, and criminal activity occurring within a few areas of China, that those of you who have contacts in China may be able to educate our respective counterparts at ISPs, hosting providers and in law enforcement to the statistics. With that education, we expect that the government or high level business personnel will take appropriate steps to mitigate this situation as has been done with other locations in years past.
Thanks Gary for posting this very enlightening blog located at garwarner.blogspot.com/2009/06/spam-crisis-in-china.html
With that form of spam crisis in mind for everyone, I am curious if anyone else in higher education noticed that the last couple of classes of freshman do not use email at an increasing rate. It has been my observation that the spam problems along with the growth of social networking sites like facebook and twitter that this future generation will continue the trend away from traditional email delivery in lieu of other forms of messaging. This seems to be causing some problems within the higher-ed community with how to officially communicate to students without looking like spammers ourself in these other communication venues. Perhaps a new crisis on the way for those of us who must do "official spam" to our organizations.
Scott Fendley
ISC Handler on Duty
Comments
i've been saying for years that there needs to be some serious reform over at icann... so many registrars should be losing their accreditation for blindly registering fake domains.
joeblow
Jun 21st 2009
1 decade ago
One must wonder how a more general shunning of the problem areas of the net, however unlikely, might spur a much-needed cleanup. The first thought that comes to mind is "can of worms".
Ken
Jun 22nd 2009
1 decade ago
on the flipside however, i sent an abuse@ email to an ISP in quebec because one of their hosts was pounding my firewall for what appears to be no reason. some port i don't even use or recognize. no response for a month. tried the "responsible person"... no response for a month. i tried a third time and all i got back was "i need the host causing the problem". what?? if they even read the email, they would see the huge log i had sent them.
intelligence barrier? maybe we should also be considering who is allowed to be an ISP.
joeblow
Jun 23rd 2009
1 decade ago