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Stopping Spam. Joshua Goodman and others.

by Goodman, Joshua; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 70Business. Publisher: Scientific American, 2005ISSN: 1522-3191;.Subject(s): CAN-SPAM Act (2003) | Computer algorithms | Electronic mail messages | Electronic mail spoofing | Identity theft | Internet advertising | Junk e-mail | Optical character recognition devicesDDC classification: 050 Summary: "In 1978 the first spam e-mail--a plug from a marketing representative at Digital Equipment Corporation for the new DEC-system-20 computer--was dispatched to about 400 people on the Arpanet. Today junk correspondence in the form of unwanted commercial solicitations constitutes more than two thirds of all e-mail transmitted over the Internet, accounting for billions of messages every day. For a third of all e-mail users, about 80 percent of the messages received are spam. Recently spam has become more threatening with proliferation of so-called phishing attacks--fake e-mails that look like they are from people or institutions you trust but that are actually sent by crooks to steal your credit-card numbers or other personal information. Phishing attacks cost approximately $1.2 billion a year, according to a 2004 Gartner Research Study." (SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN) The article discusses "what can be done to stanch the flood of junk e-mail messages."
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REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 70 (Browse shelf) Available
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REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 68 Searching for the Why of Buy. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 69 75 Years of Ideas. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 7 Bottom Dollar. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 70 Stopping Spam. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 71 E-Commerce Gets Smarter. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 72 The Idiot Consumer. REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 73 Why Medical Malpractice Caps Are Wrong.

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.

Originally Published: Stopping Spam, April 2005; pp. 42-49.

"In 1978 the first spam e-mail--a plug from a marketing representative at Digital Equipment Corporation for the new DEC-system-20 computer--was dispatched to about 400 people on the Arpanet. Today junk correspondence in the form of unwanted commercial solicitations constitutes more than two thirds of all e-mail transmitted over the Internet, accounting for billions of messages every day. For a third of all e-mail users, about 80 percent of the messages received are spam. Recently spam has become more threatening with proliferation of so-called phishing attacks--fake e-mails that look like they are from people or institutions you trust but that are actually sent by crooks to steal your credit-card numbers or other personal information. Phishing attacks cost approximately $1.2 billion a year, according to a 2004 Gartner Research Study." (SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN) The article discusses "what can be done to stanch the flood of junk e-mail messages."

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