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October 27th, 2002, 11:13 PM
#11
cwk9 you say we should do it ourselves but how. The person sending out this **** is usually savvy enough to protect themselves from reprisals. You got any good ideas...im with ya!
Ya there’s not much we can do about the people sending the stuff the best we can do is protect our selves from spam its self. Maybe if enough people take measures against theses types of ads spamming will be ineffective to the point that the spammers will just disappear. I’ll admit that’s kind of far fetched since spamming is so cheap even if one out of every 3000 people read your spam its still a success.
Its not software piracy. I’m just making multiple off site backups.
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October 27th, 2002, 11:47 PM
#12
It s sad ppl need to install antivirus,firewalls,anti-spyware tools and ad-blokkers to have a good time on the internet,ie talk with their frends and family.
And when you are not aware of the dangers and spy-ware ie spam,the internet is becomming more and more a bad place to be!
My parrents started using their pc 2 years ago.
Not aware of patching,antivirus or firewalls let allone spy-ware and spam.
When they got their fist spam mail,it took me almost 30 min.to explain them why and how someone they don t know sends them this mail they didn t like!
All i can say,i feel sorry for the ones not aware and i hope there will come global laws to stop this!!!
i m gone,thx everyone for so much fun and good info.
cheers and good bye
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October 28th, 2002, 02:03 AM
#13
Senior Member
another way to blocks ads and popups is to edit the hosts file in your windows folder, you can find premade ones around the net i think you can find one at http://www.kazaalite.com/
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October 28th, 2002, 04:47 AM
#14
Very good suggestions. One thing i was able to find out was that 90percent of the spam came from about 3percent of the IP's as identified in the headers. my server control panel, like most of yours, has a feature where you can configure a block for IP's, subjects, words in the body, or anything after the @ in an address. After i databased (old paper & pencil style ) the addresses, IP's and certain phrases or words in the subject/body, i had about 20 entries and it stopped 98percent of the spam at my server address. There isn't much real control on most "free webbased" addresses you might sign up for, and i found that trying to block with the tools in Outlook Express-6+ was a neverending job with few results. I've noticed that the new Symantec offering has a spam-identifyer which puts the words "spam alert" into the first of the subject line. I'm watching it to see if it "spam alerts" anything i might want to keep, and if it doesn't do so then i might use the Outlook Express blocker to whack anything that has "spam alert" in the subject over to a "check later" folder or just delete it off the server. At one time i installed a program called "Spam Assasin" on my server and it about drove me nuts so i took it off. That was before i had the new domain interface with the newer mail control. I think it's going to be a matter of figure out how to whack the garbage ourselves, as the so called laws are pointless and without teeth. Besides, if the lawmakers actually figured out how to make the spammers feel pain, the sickos would just move offshore and keep up their attack on our privacy. Oh, yes, you can also block your browser from going to certain IP's, so that might help some people. Another thing to watch for is the old "disconnect and redial the 1-900 or a dozen other costly area codes offshore. I keep my modem volume on high, and only got whacked once, it locked up my 'puter so i couldn't disconnect with the mouse so i pulled the phone line right outa the wall. Got billed for one minute at $29, called AT&T billing and explained what had happened (a popup ad sponsored by BMB but not on the AO account) and told them they could delete the charge or i'd go elsewhere for long distance service and they deleted the charge. Then they told me to contact my local phone company and block the 1-900 and other offshore dialings, which i did. I don't call anyone offshore anyway except for one old Leopard-II tanker chief in Germany, and we just write occasional cards now.
If all else fails, hunt them down and shorten their fingers!
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October 28th, 2002, 09:25 AM
#15
Ted >
Trace your spammer back to his host network and get them added to the Real time black hole list (For more info on the RBL see: http://mail-abuse.org/). The RBL is just the sort of thing you suggest - network admins clubbing together to protect their users from the scourge of spam.
Then you can use the RBL data to dissallow incoming connections from Banned IPs to your mail server. Spammers get a neat little message saying that they have been blackholed. (So does everyone else on their network but hey - you can't make sushi without slicing fish - read the docs carefully!).
When an ISP becomes balckholed they very quickly find the user that has been spamming and ban that user instantly (so as to get removed from the RBL list).
It would be nice to be able to pull a few of ones blacker peices of code from ones toolbox and teach the spammers a lesson. It would also be nice to be able to open ones mail without fear of a deluge of non-family-friendly advertising.
But fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to the dark side; and the Dark Side leads to prison, Big Black Bubba, and a sore ringer. Using the realtime backhole list is almost as fun as a DDOS but without the danger of the sore ringer.
\"I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.\"
Sir Winston Churchill.
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October 28th, 2002, 04:10 PM
#16
Re: advertisment goes to far
Originally posted here by Tedob1
How long before advertisment goes to far? Or has it?
At one time I believed that concerned netizens could put a stop to this, but now im beginning to loose hope.
Advertisers destroy software that we put on our computers to stop their spyware and it’s ok. Agreed we didn't pay anything for it, but the fact is we wanted it.
Advertisers install trojans on our systems and protect their "right" to do this with ELUAs. If I put a trojan on a computer and tricked someone into clicking "agree" to a eula, id be in jail
Advertisers are using net send a commonly used admin tool to sneak pop up ads onto our computers causing us to shut down services we might want to use or install costly firewalls.
Advertisers are now spamming blogs, flooding friendly family services with porn and rip-off ads
Advertisers make mailboxes unusable. They fill it with so much crap its impossible to sort out real messages.
They invade every aspect of our lives with blatant disrespect for us, and our governments sanction this. Its good for business, but what about us?
Does anyone think we can still stop this by ourselves, Or is it time to bring in people who will make laws to stop this?
Now I realize not giving your email address out and constantly updating spam filters are effective, but this means behavior that can become anti-social and allot of time spent that can be used for other things.
I guess what it really boils down too is: should the technically inadequate be ignored to keep the Internet un-regulated. Or should the Internet be for everyone and how do we decide just what everyone means.
Nice post.
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October 28th, 2002, 08:46 PM
#17
Junior Member
If anyone is interested, I'm currently working on an email client which guards against spam, does not automatically run .vbs files, etc etc. The result? An environment with much much much less spam (I have a stats thing built into the program, and I now have to sort through 60% less email (about 2% of which is spam!). And to make things even neater... that 2% of spam that does get into my inbox only gets there because it's PGP encoded... I have yet to implement the decode routines to block these emails. Anyway... to address the fact that many users don't know how to properly set up a spam filter, the program automatically has them built in. It has several different settings to block either more or less spam (the default setting blocks nearly all spam, but can be changed based on user needs). I believe this is definately a bonus for the family environment as it blocks out all sex related advertisements. It's also good from the time management point... if you are the kind of person who gets 100+ emails daily, and 90 of them are spam, you'll know that it takes a long time to delete those 90 spams and find the 10 regular emails in there. When you only have 12 messages delivered to your inbox and 2 are spam, your sorting through your emails is obviously a little bit faster. 
I just got one of those stupid net send spams while typing this, so if I can I might try and incoroperate a way to block spames from those into my program as well.
This is not to be taken as an advertisement of my program. It is just to merely show that there are indeed solutions available to stop some of this nonsense! (note I said some and not all!) I can't do much about trojans, virus attacks and EULA's. :P
Anyway, if you are interested in my program, its web site is http://www.compmore.net/~chambers/spam/
McAfee also has a solution to spam problems.
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