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Social Networks Against Spam







Social Networks Against Spam

Social Networks Against Spam 02/18/2004 02:56 PM

While the various social networking services continue to push forward, some researchers are using the same basic concept of linking people to their friends to see if social networks can help fight spam. The idea is that most people get their email from a limited social network of people, and that network can be worked out by looking at the "to:" "from:" and "cc:" portions of your email. The theory being that if I know two people, they're much more likely to know each other as well, and the system can link them, and assume that if they email each other it's unlikely to be spam. Spam messages, however, have no such linkage, and are more easily picked out from the crowd. Of course, it doesn't sound like this works all that well. You don't get any false positives, but it seems to only recognize a little over 50% of all spam. The folks behind this research say it's still useful, if used in combination with other spam filtering techniques.




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Wisconsin Technology Network,WI-54 minutes agoReaders of DEMOletter know that I've written regularly about so- called social networks, services such as LinkedIn, Spoke, and Google's Orkut. ...

How Many Social Networks Is Too Many?


How Many Social Networks Is Too Many? 11/14/2003 02:29 AM
I keep reading about all these "social networking software" plays, and the amazing thing to me is that, unlike during the last bubble, everyone except people working for these companies or venture capitalists seem to know it's a bubble. Yet, they keep on coming. The latest is that Evite has launched their own version of Friendster tied to their event organizing system, and eMode (known for their fun tests and dating system) has changed their name to Tickle, which is what their Friendster wannabe is called. They also bought another social networking service, to take one of about 100 off the market. Who the hell signs up for all of these systems? Paten ts aside, there is nothing complicated in creating such a site (there's even one Friendster rip off called Yet Another Friendster Rip Off). The complication comes in actually making money from such a site. The odd thing, though, is the rampant skepticism about these sites. In the 90s bubble years, it was never like this. Sure, there was some skepticism, but not the near universal skepticism that is focused on social software space right now. What's funny is that you would think so much skepticism would make the VCs stay away, but the reverse is happening.

Alumni social networks


Alumni social networks 06/01/2004 11:40 PM
Th efacebook, Bruinwalk, and Online Networking.

Thefacebook.com recently included UCLA in its collection of universities—generating 3,500 new UCLA users in just one month. It appears that UCLA’s bruinwalk.com will also be adding social networking functionality to its menu of services, according to Phillip Lin for the Daily Bruin.
bruinwalk
Bruinwalk.com plans to offer services both ‘comparable’ and additive to Thefacebook.com.

What social networking services are currently lacking on Thefacebook.com? Do any readers utilize this university service?

[The Social Software Weblog]

Can't say anything about UCLA - but I know that Affinity Engines has a system for USC, as well as Stanford and an upcoming one for U. of Mich.


Social Networks Visualiser 0.32


Social Networks Visualiser 0.32 05/12/2004 05:34 AM
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Looking for gold in social networks


Looking for gold in social networks 02/10/2004 02:36 AM
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Photos and Social Networks


Photos and Social Networks 03/14/2005 06:11 PM

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IFTF on Social Networks


IFTF on Social Networks 04/09/2004 04:02 PM
Next week I'm attending an Institute for the Future event on their technology forecast. Came across a sample report on Social Networks in the World of Abundant Connectivity (.pdf) that had this great comment on technology product design: Social networks...

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Social Networks Visualiser 0.33 05/23/2004 10:28 PM
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Inferring and Visualizing Social
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Inferring and Visualizing Social
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01/22/2004 06:16 PM
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Missing the Point of Social Networks


Missing the Point of Social Networks 01/03/2004 11:02 PM
I thought I was done talking about this stuff, but I guess not. In response to my FriendRank post, I noticed something on StartupSkills.com that I've been hearing lots of recently: Like so many people, I've used Friendster and found it an intriguing idea from both a technical and business standpoint. It is a revolutionary concept, although by no means is it original. Social networking is a subject taught in business schools around the globe. The 'entrepreneurial model' of social...

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The Heisenberg uncertainty of social
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Adding Fees To Social Networks


Adding Fees To Social Networks 01/27/2004 02:24 AM
Okay, take an idea that's being done to death all over the internet for free - with new (sometimes deep pocketed) players showing up every day. Then, wait until the market is so saturated that most people are already getting sick of the idea... and then try to charge for it. That appears to be the plan of Tickle (formerly eMode) that is now going to try to start charging for some aspects of their "social network" Friendster-clone. Since they know they're the first, and they must know they're going to face backlash, they're only charging if you want to contact someone who is separated by more than four degrees from you - at which point, I wonder what the point of social networking is? If the idea is to meet friends of friends because they might have similar interests, what's the value in using such a system to meet a friend of a friend of a friend of a friend of a friend? Isn't that just a stranger? There are lots of ways to meet strangers online that don't cost money.

Identity Theft and Social Networks


Identity Theft and Social Networks 01/02/2004 06:09 PM
scubacuda writes "This Security Focus article looks at the lack of security social network sites have, particularly their lack of SSL logins, which means a ...

"Social networks: will users pay to get
friends?"


"Social networks: will users pay to get
friends?"
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MSNBC: Social Networks Go to Work


MSNBC: Social Networks Go to Work 07/29/2004 05:06 PM
I just filed this story for MSNBC about the business value of social networking services. Truth or hype: can some SNSes become helpful professional tools for businesses -- in particular, independent entrepreneurs and smaller companies, for whom each new personal connection is a significant business building block? Includes interviews with unrepentant compulsive digital networkers danah boyd, Frank Keeney of SOCALWUG, Noah Glass of audblog, Scott Beale of Laughing Squid, Scott Rafer of Feedster, Travis Kalanick of RedSwoosh (and, once upon a time, Scour.net), and human router Joi Ito -- who said this:
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I think email is broken in a serious way, and SNS is trying to address some of the issues associated with that breakdown. These networks may get it right and really change the way we do business, but we're still at the beginning of the development and evolution curve.

Link

Social Networks: Will Users Pay to Get
Friends?


Social Networks: Will Users Pay to Get
Friends?
02/10/2004 02:55 AM
Despite impressive recent growth, social networking Web sites like Friendster face a challenge: how to make money.

Esther Dyson on Social Networks


Esther Dyson on Social Networks 12/02/2003 10:23 PM

edventure.com/conversation/article.cfm?Counter=4143472
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Competition in Social Networks of Agents


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Social networks by referrer, through
bl0grolls


Social networks by referrer, through
bl0grolls
06/12/2002 06:22 AM
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The problems of visualising social
networks...


The problems of visualising social
networks...
03/06/2004 01:55 AM

From a pithy and somehow true post by Stewart Butterfield on the problems of creating visualisations of social networks:

Artist/curator friend Mark Soo did a piece for one of the Infest openings where he visualized the curators' social network using balloons with people's names printed on them as the nodes and ribbons tying them together as the edges (the data comes from "invites" he got the curators to send to one another). This was a great, inviting, tactile "graph manipulaton interface". But the reason I liked it so much was that it really brought out the problems of social networks visualizations as a way of learning about the networks being visualized: too confusing!

He also cites a few examples of some of the attempts to visualise them - the problems should become self-evident:

Two things immediately occur to me - firstly how do we as humans make sense of this data in our everyday lives (because we're incorporating at least some of it into our mental models, surely, and understanding that would make it easier for us to enhance those models rather than creating new ones that create nothing but cognitive overload), and secondly What would Tufte do?.

Read the comments


MSNBC - Online social networks go to
work


MSNBC - Online social networks go to
work
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Online social networks go to work - Where personal connections lead to professional allies .. it's now online on MSNBC

msnbc.msn.com/id/5488683
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boyd's social networks talk from ETCON


boyd's social networks talk from ETCON 02/11/2004 06:56 PM
danah boyd has posted the text of her ETCON talk, Re venge of the User: Lessons from Creator/User Battles.
Asking favors is fundamentally different than offering them. People gain by being bridges. Thus, to be able to tell you about a job gives me whuffie in our relationship. Feeling pressured to connect you to an open job makes me uncomfortable. In all of the networks described above, the bridge got to control the information flow. In Milgram's "Small Worlds," if you didn't know that i knew the target person, you may not have tried to pass it on to me. If you don't know that i am dating someone who has something that you want, you won't try to pressure me into giving you access to it. Thus, i can choose when to reveal my connections in a situation where i can come across as being helpful, rather than being put in a position to feel cornered. Revealing the network shifts the power.
Link

Missing the Point of Social
Networks...and other things


Missing the Point of Social
Networks...and other things
01/04/2004 12:18 AM
Jeremy Zawodny: "If you really think that Friendster, Tribe, LinkedIn, or any of those other sites are going to survive doing what they're doing today, you're really smoking something. However, if you think that also means the technology isn't worthwhile--that the notion of modeling social networks in software is a pointless exercise, well then you're really smoking something good. You couldn't be more wrong."

True. This reminds me of a tendency I notice constantly and have been meaning to articulate: The inability to see others evolving (companies, products, people), even though one's own vision is all about oneself (or company, or product) evolving.

Come to think of it, this is a corollary to one of my favoriate truisms: We judge ourselves by our intensions and others by their actions.

Detecting Patterns in Complex Social
Networks


Detecting Patterns in Complex Social
Networks
02/16/2004 01:14 PM
BoingBoing reader Roland Piquepaille says:
So-called social networking is very popular these days, as show the proliferation of services like Friendster, Orkut and dozens of others. But do the companies behind these services have any idea of what is hidden inside their complicated networks? When these networks reach a size of millions of users, it's not an easy task. A researcher at the University of Michigan is trying to help, with a new method for uncovering patterns in complicated networks, from football conferences to food webs. This overview contains more details and references about this non-traditional method. It also includes a spectacular representation of the Internet and another image showing a food web at Little Rock Lake.
Link

Namespaces and Social Networks in a
Tagged World


Namespaces and Social Networks in a
Tagged World
02/05/2005 09:12 PM

blog post reprint.jpgDavid Weinberger has a brilliant quick statement about how BOTH namespaces and social networks will be used to disambiguate tags'.

I sure as hell hope so. I'd hate it if there was nothing to disambiguate tags.

Namespaces and Social Networks in a Tagged World
As the interest in tagging and folksonomies grows, we are going to be faced with a choice: Namespaces or social networks.

The problem is that tags are too simple and ambiguous. (That's also their strength, but we'll let that go for the moment.) As tens of millions of people start tagging Web resources, many tags will include too many disparate items: When you're searching for pages about London, do you really want to get pages about Jack London? And, no one really wants information about London; we always want information about some aspect of a topic. So, the "London"-tagged pages about London's club scene are noise to someone looking for information about London's form of government.

Namespaces, or domains of discourse if you prefer, are one way around this. For example, the Global Voices group that encourages inter-national blogging, suggests tagging relevant pages with the prefix "gv" as in "gv:ghana" or "gv:thailand." We will undoubtedly see a proliferation of such prefixes, and if tagging really takes off, we may end up with an unregulated version of the domain system in which multiple organizations squabble over who gets to use a particular prefix.

Social networks provide an alternative. If I knew who the people associated with Global Voices were, and if I knew who was the author of particular tags, I could search for the "ghana" tag and find only the ones created by GV members. That wouldn't be perfect because it would get pages tagged by GV members for personal use, but it might be good enough, especially with further refinement.

This is not an either/or. I'm confident we're going to see both namespaces and social networks used to disambiguate tags. And there are undoubtedly brilliant ideas waiting to be had. But it seems highly likely to me that social networks are going to become more important than ever in a world gone made with tagging.

[Operating Manual for Social Tools]

I love this piece.

It's especially heartening for me to listen to David talk about social networks - as I know he's against the 'Friendster/Tribe' school of thought - but seems to have accepted a more generalized notion of what social networks are - and will be.

Anyway - I never said I liked those explicit social networks - it's just that it was so much dam fun gaming them (apparently Joi had fun -too!) But it's up to folks like David - who keep us honest - especially when it comes to the difference between something explcit liek calling someone "your friend" - versus truth and honesty.


New Search Engine Taps Into Social
Networks


New Search Engine Taps Into Social
Networks
01/22/2004 07:26 PM
Google, the most popular Internet search engine, ranks results by polling all of cyberspace to find the most relevant information. ...

New post to Global Guerrillas:
Terrorist Social Networks


New post to Global Guerrillas:
Terrorist Social Networks
04/09/2004 03:57 PM
Terrorist Social Networks.  A common misconception of terrorist networks is that they are solely violent in nature.

"Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: Missing the
Point of Social Networks"


"Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: Missing the
Point of Social Networks"
01/06/2004 03:19 AM

My 2004 Crystal Ball: Search, Social
Networks, Reputation, RSS


My 2004 Crystal Ball: Search, Social
Networks, Reputation, RSS
12/08/2003 11:43 AM
Given the upcoming new year, I figure it's a good time to share what my crystal ball is telling me. The year 2004 will be exciting for technologists. Pressure has been building in several areas that are poised to really cook next year. Here's my brief take on each of them. Search: Personalization and Relevance Let's face it, PageRank is Dead. Really. I've said it once and I'll say it again. Google knows this. Microsoft knows this. Anyone seriously into...

V2N18 May 3, 2004 Current Awareness
Happenings on the Internet: Online
Social Networks


V2N18 May 3, 2004 Current Awareness
Happenings on the Internet: Online
Social Networks
05/03/2004 06:56 AM
This edition of Current Awareness Happenings on the Internet by Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A. (May 3, 2004 V2N18) is dedicated to the latest happenings in Online Social Networks. Click on the audblog link at the bottom of this posting to hear an audio by Marcus P. Zillman discussing these new and exciting networks. The below listed sites are some of the latest and greatest online social networks:

Friendster (beta)
http://www.friendster.com/
Friendster is an online community that connects people through networks of friends for dating or making new friends.

Institute for Social Network Analysis of the Economy (ISNAE)
http://www.isnae.org/index.html
The purpose of ISNAE is to study social networks and use the resulting knowledge to promote economic growth and social well-being.

LinkedIn
http://www.linkedin.com/
Find the people you need through the people you trust - Your trusted friends and colleagues can help put you in touch with many more people than you expect; and those people can refer you to thousands of contacts.

Orkut
http://www.orkut.com/
Orkut is an online community that connects people through a network of trusted friends. They are committed to providing an online meeting place where people can socialize, make new acquaintances and find others who share their interests.

PeopleAggregator
http://www.PeopleAggregator.co m/
An Open Source Social Network

Spoke - Extending Business Relationships
http://www.spoke.com/
Delivering insight, influence and access through relationships for greater business advantage.

Tribe
http://www.Tribe.net
This site is devoted to tapping the power of social networks. Their goal is to provide tools that help make your network most useful.

Visible Path
http://www.visiblepath.com/
Visible Path delivers unprecedented reach into companies and access to decision-makers by allowing sales teams to discreetly leverage the relationship capital of the enterprise throughout the sales cycle.

Zaibatsu
http://community.alwayso n-network.com/
Listing for this social networked received from a Slashdot posting ....

Zero Degrees™ - The People Network Company
http://www.zerodegrees.com/
ZeroDegrees (ZDI) automates Milgram's process. ZDI replicates the social process we use when we ask colleagues with an introduction. If no one knows the person directly, they ask others on our behalf. If all parties along the way, agree-an introduction is made and discreet contact information shared.

The Slashdot article that discusses PeopleAgreggator an Open Source Social Network is available by clicking here. Social Networks are gaining great popularity and we will be hearing and seeing many new and niched networks in the near future. Please send me listings of social networks that I have not listed and I will continue to keep this posting up to date.

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Social Influence In Distributed Power
Networks Of The Early 21st Century
Internet


Social Influence In Distributed Power
Networks Of The Early 21st Century
Internet
09/14/2004 07:34 AM
Plastic.com - Tue Sep 14, 09:51 am GMT

Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: My 2004 Crystal
Ball: Search, Social Networks,
Reputation, RSS


Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: My 2004 Crystal
Ball: Search, Social Networks,
Reputation, RSS
12/09/2003 09:42 AM
Zawodny

jeremy.zawodny.com/blog/archives/001178.html
track this site | 5 links


"Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: My 2004 Crystal
Ball: Search, Social Networks,
Reputation, RSS"


"Jeremy Zawodny's bl0g: My 2004 Crystal
Ball: Search, Social Networks,
Reputation, RSS"
12/10/2003 10:15 PM

Social Network Spam = SNAM


Social Network Spam = SNAM 04/28/2004 10:20 AM
Snagged from Michael Tchong's "Trendsetters" newsletter:
Social networks have spawned a new form of spam that uses the FOAF (Friend of a Friend) message feature frequently found in this new genre of networks. Google's Orkut, a network of some 200,000 members, offers the ability to send messages to FOAFs. FOAF messages often contain conference promotions or job postings that, while low in volume, will one day require action on the part of network managers.
Link

Comment spam and its social equivalent


Comment spam and its social equivalent 01/18/2004 09:21 PM

Now that I'm awake from the hotel spam. I guess I should channel my annoyance into at least one more blog entry.

Comment spam is becoming more "sophisticated". Originally, my policy was to erase stuff that linked to commercial sites if they didn't add to the dialog in the comments. Now comment spammers are actually trying to contribute to the discussion, but still leaving links to their commercial sites. It is much harder to identify as spam. Only by looking at the site that is linked do you realize that its probably spam.

This is sort of the social equivalent to hanging out at someone's party and handing out flyers for penis enlargers at the end of the party.

The problem is, I've always had people who post on my blog partially to promote themselves and their own sites. There are some borderline sites that the spammers are promoting that don't have to do with pharma, sex or gambling. So where do we draw the line?

The new version 2.661 of Movable Type has a feature that allows you to throttle the number of comments from a single IP address over a certain (configurable) time period. It also causes a redirect before linking to the web page of a commenter. (Prevents google juice from being transfered to commenter.) These features are like banning flyers at parties or only allowing a person participate in one discussion at a time at a party. I think this will help, but the question turns into a question that we are faced with in real life. What do we do about people who are blatantly self-promoting in a context where you are allowing anyone to speak freely?


Cleaning spam from swapping networks


Cleaning spam from swapping networks 03/19/2005 03:07 AM
ZDNet Mar 18 2005 12:04PM GMT

Explicitly constructed social networks
not only lack the differentiation that
makes relationships real, they are
falsehoods built to reinforce spectral
relationships and to avoid ending shaky
ones


Explicitly constructed social networks
not only lack the differentiation that
makes relationships real, they are
falsehoods built to reinforce spectral
relationships and to avoid ending shaky
ones
01/05/2004 04:58 AM
Yay to David Weinberger .. Corante Many2Many

corante.com/many/archives/2004/01/04/does_social_software_ matter.php
track this site | 4 links


Social Issues Surround Social Software
(Ziff Davis)


Social Issues Surround Social Software
(Ziff Davis)
06/25/2004 10:06 AM
Ziff Davis - Participants in the Supernova conference give insight into the social dynamics around the use of online social networking services, Weblogs and wikis.
Grok Description matches for Social Networks Against Spam
GrokA matches for Social Networks Against Spam

[OT] Safe spam filtering methods (was:
Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?)


[OT] Safe spam filtering methods (was:
Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?)
06/22/2004 11:56 PM
The Fungi (Jun 20 2004)

From spam drops to spam spray to spam
stream


From spam drops to spam spray to spam
stream
06/05/2004 07:31 PM
I am now getting 2,000+ spams a day. There are 1,440 minutes in a day The rate of incoming spams is therefore getting close to the interval it takes me to check my email and dispose of a single spam: By the time I'm done checking, more spam has arrived. That is the point at which the spam droplets form a continuous stream. And that is the point at which no interval of my life will ever be spam-free again....

Microsoft calls for outbound spam
filtering against spam


Microsoft calls for outbound spam
filtering against spam
06/04/2004 10:42 AM
Computer Weekly Jun 4 2004 2:14PM GMT

Pre-Filtering The Spam


Pre-Filtering The Spam 06/29/2004 03:54 PM
My anti-spam system now uses a variety of server and client side filters to help keep the damn stuff out of the inbox. Now, some are suggesting an even earlier level "pre-filter" for spam. HP Labs has made a fairly simple discovery that even without various email authentication systems, it's pretty easy to get a quick determination as to whether or not an email is spam. The system they developed looks at whether or not the server sending you the email normally sends good emails or sends spam. With that one determination, they can properly pre-classify emails at a pretty high success rate. It's not a replacement for a spam filter at all. They know it's not that good. However, what it can do is do a pre-sort for prioritization purposes -- so that good emails tend to make it through the real spam filters faster. In a number of ways, it's pretty sad that we now need "quality of service" setups for our email.

New Method of Spam Filtering


New Method of Spam Filtering 02/19/2004 02:06 PM

Spam filtering, the next chapter


Spam filtering, the next chapter 05/24/2004 09:17 AM
I've been experiencing good results filtering out spam with a combination of Popfile (a Bayesian classifier) and the built-in filter in Eudora 6.  I get well over 1,000 spams a day, so I need accuracy both in identifying spams and avoiding false positives with legitimate mail. 

The biggest problem with my setup is that it all runs on the client side.  Popfile works as a transparent proxy that runs on my Windows machine.  I don't see the spam in my inbox, but I still have to download it before it can be filtered.  As the spam volumes have increased, that has become an increasingly significant burden.  Every check pulls down scores of messages, most of which wind up in the trash.  I've had several cases where the sheer numbers crash Eudora. Getting email through my Treo is basically a waste of time, because it doesn't have the filters.  If I'm on the road and don't check my mail, there are thousands of messages waiting for me when I get back. 

I finally had time this weekend to set up filtering on the server side.  Werbach.com and my other domains run through a Web hosting provider, Pair Networks, which offers a version of SpamAssassin.  The tricky part was configuring it to automatically filter or delete messages, using procmail, rather than just putting something in the email header for later processing on the client. 

I think I have it working now.  I'm using SpamAssassin on a forgiving setting, because the client-side filters are still running after the mail goes through.  If I can just weed out 60% of my spams before they reach my machine, life would be much better.  So far, it looks like I can do significantly better than that. 

I'm still tweaking the set-up, so it's possible some legitimate email will get stuck in the filters.  If you write to me and don't get a response for a while, please try again. 

ISP Hesitate Over Spam Filtering


ISP Hesitate Over Spam Filtering 06/03/2004 02:24 AM
As the spam battle wages on, most of the focus is on end-users and law enforcement. Not too many people seem to focus on the role of ISPs, who sometimes do take a more proactive role in stopping spam. The problem, though, is that when the ISP filters spam, they often run into issues with false positives. If the filters are too loose (to avoid false positives) then too much spam gets through, and users are upset. If the filters are too tight, important messages go missing, and users are upset. Many ISPs are realizing, at the very least, they need to let the end-user have access to the spam folder, so they can occasionally sort through it for false positives - but very few users ever bother to look through it. Some ISPs don't offer any kind of filtering at all, claiming that they don't see how to make money off of it - which seems especially short-sighted. If they can offer sufficient spam filtering, they're much more likely to keep customers than if they simply let everything through when customers are looking to their providers to provide protection from the onslaught of spam. No matter what, it's becoming clear that the spam fight needs to be approached from various angles, and many customers are likely to bail out on ISPs that don't at least offer a spam filtering option.

Verizon sued over spam filtering


Verizon sued over spam filtering 02/01/2005 08:53 PM
Upset Verizon customers have filed a class-action lawsuit over the telco's aggressive spam filtering. Verizon's blacklists are allegedly blocking all mail from some countries.

Human-Powered Spam Filtering


Human-Powered Spam Filtering 09/20/2004 10:28 AM

I thought that our spam filtering had
suddenly got...


I thought that our spam filtering had
suddenly got...
12/29/2003 10:31 PM
I thought that our spam filtering had suddenly gotten way better, but turns out, my pyra.com mail just started bouncing instead of forwarding. Bummer. If you tried to reach me at pyra.com try doing so at google.com. Or just wait (upon DNS updating, it should be fixed).

Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?


Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?
06/18/2004 01:01 PM
Joel Eriksson (Jun 17 2004)

Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?


Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability?
06/17/2004 03:44 AM
R Armiento (Jun 16 2004)

Using AI for Spam Filtering (w/ Source
Code)


Using AI for Spam Filtering (w/ Source
Code)
07/11/2004 09:20 AM

A Unique Approach to Spam Filtering


A Unique Approach to Spam Filtering 07/06/2004 03:03 AM
Frontgate MX brings a New Level of Simplicity to Personal E-mail Protection With a Unique "Single Step" Approach to Spam Filtering. [PRWEB Jul 6, 2004]

Spam filtering with a human touch


Spam filtering with a human touch 09/21/2004 01:11 PM
One company is offering a novel solution to the problem of spam. Will spam filtering done by humans be a hit?

Bayesian spam filtering for the masses


Bayesian spam filtering for the masses 10/30/2003 11:59 PM
Spam, or unsolicited commercial e-mail, is now a sad part of everyday life online. Research companies estimate that more than 50% of the worldwide e-mail traffic is spam. As a result, it's becoming constantly more difficult and time-consuming to sort out legitimate e-mails from the deluge of commercial messages we're being flooded with. But there are ways to fight back. In this series, we'll walk through choosing and setting up a highly effective package for screening out spam.

Mailsmith gets server-side spam
filtering, more


Mailsmith gets server-side spam
filtering, more
07/21/2004 11:18 AM
Bare Bones Software today announced the release of Mailsmith 2.1.2, the latest version of its powerful e-mail client...

Extreme Spam Filtering – When Filters
and Blacklists Are Not Enough.


Extreme Spam Filtering – When Filters
and Blacklists Are Not Enough.
02/07/2005 01:05 AM
Protect Multiple POP, Yahoo, Hotmail, Gmail, or IMAP E-mail Accounts from Spammers with 0Spam.com. Compatible with all E-mail clients and operating systems. [PRWEB Feb 6, 2005]

Microsoft calls for outbound filtering
against spam


Microsoft calls for outbound filtering
against spam
06/04/2004 07:29 AM
SAN JOSE, California -- In its continuing fight against unsolicited commercial e-mail, Microsoft Corp. plans to filter outgoing messages on its consumer mail services and is busy developing new "proofing" technologies, the software maker's chief spam fighter said Thursday.

Microsoft pushes spam-filtering
technology


Microsoft pushes spam-filtering
technology
06/24/2005 03:25 PM
ZDNet Jun 23 2005 2:00AM GMT

PowerMail's user interface, spam
filtering updated


PowerMail's user interface, spam
filtering updated
05/24/2004 09:10 AM
CTM Development has released PowerMail 5.0, a major upgrade of the Mac OS X mail client...

Mailsmith 2.1.2 adds server-side spam
filtering, more


Mailsmith 2.1.2 adds server-side spam
filtering, more
07/21/2004 11:12 AM
Bare Bones Software Inc. on Wednesday released an update to Mailsmi th, their e-mail client for Mac OS X. New features in this release include support for server-side spam filtering, the ability to process incoming messages with Unix tools during download, and new preferences and interface enhancements.

Notice to customers using e-mail
filtering "SPAM" software


Notice to customers using e-mail
filtering "SPAM" software
11/15/2003 11:03 AM
...

Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability? (silently dropping
messages)


Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability? (silently dropping
messages)
06/22/2004 08:18 PM
Martin Mačok (Jun 22 2004)

Eudora 6.0: E-Mail Favorite Gets
Built-In Spam Filtering But Still Shows
Its Age


Eudora 6.0: E-Mail Favorite Gets
Built-In Spam Filtering But Still Shows
Its Age
12/19/2003 11:32 AM
Eudora is an undeniably powerful product. It's fast -- especially when searching thousands of archived messages -- and quite flexible once you take the time to learn its quirks. Its new spam-filtering features are first-rate, especially since they support third-party spam-filtering tools. By Jason Snell (Macworld via MyAppleMenu)

Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability? (silently drop ping
messages)


Re: Is predictable spam filtering a
vulnerability? (silently drop ping
messages)
06/24/2004 04:28 PM
Stephen Warren (Jun 24 2004)

Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer


Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer
07/04/2004 12:11 PM

Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer (KB870669)


Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer (KB870669)
07/02/2004 11:25 AM
Adodb.stream provides a method for reading and writing files on a hard drive. This by-design functionality is sometimes used by web applications. However, when combined with known security vulnerabilities in Microsoft Internet Explorer, it could allow an internet web site to execute script from the Local Machine Zone (LMZ). This occurs because the ADODB.Stream object allows access to the hard drive when hosted within Internet Explorer.

Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer - Win9x
(KB870669)


Critical Update for Microsoft Data
Access Components - Disable ADODB.Stream
object from Internet Explorer - Win9x
(KB870669)
07/03/2004 01:45 PM
Adodb.stream provides a method for reading and writing files on a hard drive. This by-design functionality is sometimes used by web applications. However, when combined with known security vulnerabilities in Microsoft Internet Explorer, it could allow an internet web site to execute script from the Local Machine Zone (LMZ). This occurs because the ADODB.Stream object allows access to the hard drive when hosted within Internet Explorer.

Download details: Critical Update for
Microsoft Data Access Components -
Disable ADODB.Stream object from
Internet Explorer (KB870669)


Download details: Critical Update for
Microsoft Data Access Components -
Disable ADODB.Stream object from
Internet Explorer (KB870669)
07/07/2004 04:43 AM
workaround fix for that latest security threat .. Microsoft Download Center .. Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 .. Update

microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=4D056748-C538-4 6F6-B7C8-2FBFD0D237E3&displaylang=en
track this site | 4 links


Social Networks Against Spam

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