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Porn Spammers Get Prison Time

Pornographic Spammers Get 5 Years in Jail

About the only creature lower on the totem pole than the nefarious telemarketer is the spammer. With these creeps, you can't even take solace in the fact that they're only doing their job, which is why it fills us with a sick sense of giddiness every time one of these obnoxious mass-e-mailers gets tossed in the clink.

The latest bozos to get nailed for filling our In-boxes with junk e-mail are Jeffrey A. Kilbride, 41, of Venice, California, and James R. Schaffer, 41, of Paradise Valley, Arizona, who should be spending roughly the next five years for e-mailing graphic porn images advertising hard-core sex sites. Anyone who received the e-mail was able to view them.

Kilbride was sentenced to 72 months behind bars, while Schaffer will be spending the next 63 alongside him. The difference in sentences is due to Kilbride being charged with obstruction of justice for trying to prevent a witness from testifying against the duo. Otherwise both men were charged with sending spam messages with forged headers and domain names, conspiracy, fraud, money laundering, and obscenity -- all under the Can-Spam Act.

In addition to their jail sentences, Kilbride and Schaffer were fined $100,000 and ordered to pay $77,500 to AOL (Switched.com's parent company). They also had to cough up $1.1 million in illegal proceeds.

Anything that prevents more spam from coming to our In-box is a-okay with us.

How about you? Do you think these guys got what they deserved, or is the sentence too harsh? Let us know.

From Information Week

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Computers

Study Claims 83% of All E-Mail is Spam

83% of All E-Mail is Spam

For most Internet users, retrieving wanted e-mail messages is like hacking through the dense underbrush of a rainforest using a Jason Voorhees-sized machete. But, instead of vines and tree branches, it's pitches for stock deals and Canadian penis pills you're hacking through.

Though junk mail is a modern inconvenience we've mostly gotten used to, it's no less shocking to learn that spam now accounts for a whopping 83% of all e-mail messages sent and received worldwide -- this according to a new study by e-mail security firm IronPort Systems. That's 60 billion to 150 billion bogus messages every single day.

Here are a few ways of deflecting some of that garbage:

  • Keep two e-mail addresses –- one for personal correspondence and one for Web sites that request your e-mail address, like when you're shopping or signing up for contests.
  • Do not use your real e-mail address on your personal Web site, blog, MySpace page or Facebook page. Ditto for Craigslist or any other type of online classified ad. That's because spammers use programs called bots, which are constantly trawling the Internet in search of new addresses to hammer with junk mail.
  • Services like Dodgeit.com, myTrashMail.com and others let you create temporary, disposable e-mail addresses for signing into sites and forums that require an e-mail address to enter.

Find more tips for blocking spam at GeekSugar and Wired.

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Computers

Spam Overtaking Personal Email


What's that putrid smell, you ask? That, friend, is the mounds and mounds of junk mail piling up all over the Internet. According to a new study by research firm IDC, 2007 is the year when the number of spam emails being sent and received will outnumber legitimate person-to-person (P2P) emails. Two factors are at play:

  1. Image-based spam is becoming increasingly popular with spammers and can more easily dodge junk-mail filters.
  2. P2P email traffic is actually decreasing as instant messaging and Internet phone calling gain more and more acceptance.

To learn more about how you can avoid spam, check out this guide from PCSTATS.

From TG Daily

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