Saturday, July 17, 2004

Spam grows as spammers mature - News - ZDNet

Spam grows as spammers mature - News - ZDNet:
"It's been 12 months since spam really burst into the public consciousness. Before then it had certainly been a well-publicized problem, but often only with the more tech-savvy while the wider public had far more questions than answers about strange mail appearing in their inbox.

Then last summer the level of spam passed the important watershed of the 50 percent mark--meaning more e-mail traffic was unsolicited than not. For every 100 e-mails the average user was receiving more than 50 that were offering everything from pornographic content to college diplomas.

Since shattering that 50 percent mark the level of global spam e-mail has continued to skyrocket. By most measures that figure is now somewhere around 75 percent. "

But perhaps the biggest change in the spam world has been in the types of e-mails users are seeing. According to the latest figures from Clearswift, the traditional mainstays of the inbox menace--namely pornography and more frivolous offers--are being replaced by financial services, scams and pharmaceuticals which despite the best advice of the 'don't buy from spammers' lobby still seem to have some traction in the marketplace.

http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-5270764.html?tag=adnews

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