the missing deep thought
Nov. 6th, 2003 12:34 pmWhat this country really needs is a recognized spam industry, so we can regulate it. I was thinking about "do-not-spam" lists, but that won't work unless we can actually find the people to penalize for spamming. It's a lovely thought, though. In my own private utopia, an ISP would be able to put itself on the do-not-spam list, thereby putting all of its users on the list. Up to now, it's been working somewhat backward. A user gets spam, reports it to the ISP, the ISP attempts to block the spammer, the spammer moves on to another address, repeat ad nauseam. It would be easier if a user got spam, reported it to the ISP, the ISP put itself on the do-not-spam list, the spammer tried it again and got fined for ignoring the do-not-spam list. Of course, this will never happen, for the same reason I keep getting snail mail addressed to "Resident". (There are probably six or seven other problems with my idea, too, but I can dream, can't I?)
On a somewhat-related note, am I wrong in assuming that the links in spam messages that say "click here to remove yourself from this list" are just looking for valid e-mail addresses, and clicking on them will only lead to my getting more spam?
On a somewhat-related note, am I wrong in assuming that the links in spam messages that say "click here to remove yourself from this list" are just looking for valid e-mail addresses, and clicking on them will only lead to my getting more spam?
(no subject)
Date: 2003-11-06 11:08 am (UTC)