CSC 379:Week 1, Group 3: Difference between revisions

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**Spam can be sent from "zombie" machines infected by malware which sends spam, but owned by individuals unaware that their machines are engaging in spamming.  Blocking the domains of these machines would block the receipt of mail from innocent users.
**Spam can be sent from "zombie" machines infected by malware which sends spam, but owned by individuals unaware that their machines are engaging in spamming.  Blocking the domains of these machines would block the receipt of mail from innocent users.
**Spam, especially spam from "zombie" machines, can come from typically reputable domains with thousands or millions of users.  Blocking such domains may degrade the quality of email service provided to a service's users to an unacceptable level.<BR>
**Spam, especially spam from "zombie" machines, can come from typically reputable domains with thousands or millions of users.  Blocking such domains may degrade the quality of email service provided to a service's users to an unacceptable level.<BR>
<B>Prior Permission</B>
<B>Prior Permission</B><BR>
<I>A spam-blocking technique in which a sender must request the permission of either a user or an email provider before mail can be received by that user or a client of that provider.</I>
<I>A spam-blocking technique in which a sender must request the permission of either a user or an email provider before mail can be received by that user or a client of that provider.</I>

Revision as of 23:22, 5 July 2007

Spam-Blocking Techniques

Domain Blocking
A spam-blocking technique which consists of redirecting to "junk" email boxes or filtering entirely all emails from specific web domains which have been blacklisted for spamming in the past.

  • Advantages:
    • Domain-level blocking is an easy and cost-effective way to curtail large numbers of email addresses from which spam is sent. The blocking of a single domain can block an infinite number of possible addresses in that domain.
    • Blacklists used for domain-level blocking may be shared among numerous email providers, thus protecting subscribers to one service from spam sent to subscribers of any collaborating service.
    • As there is typically a fee associated with acquiring a domain, spammers using blocked domains must pay to purchase a new domain if they are blacklisted.
  • Disadvantages
    • Though purchasing domains is associated with a cost, it is typically a marginal expense and well within the budget of major spammers worldwide. Thus, blocking a domain does little to prevent a spammer from spamming from a different domain.
    • Though spam may originate from one address in a domain, blocking the entire domain may result in the blacklisting of multiple addresses of individuals or corporations which have not engaged in spam, and therefore should not have the receipt of their mail blocked.
    • When a web domain previously blacklisted changes ownership, the new owners may remain blacklisted due to the actions of the previous owners, and at no fault of their own.
    • Much spam is sent through "spoofed" email addresses in which the sending domain is misrepresented. Blocking such a domain may prevent the receipt of email from a domain which is not associated with spam.
    • Spam can be sent from "zombie" machines infected by malware which sends spam, but owned by individuals unaware that their machines are engaging in spamming. Blocking the domains of these machines would block the receipt of mail from innocent users.
    • Spam, especially spam from "zombie" machines, can come from typically reputable domains with thousands or millions of users. Blocking such domains may degrade the quality of email service provided to a service's users to an unacceptable level.

Prior Permission
A spam-blocking technique in which a sender must request the permission of either a user or an email provider before mail can be received by that user or a client of that provider.