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Evict
the Spammers from Your Inbox |
by:
Paul
Judge, CTO, CipherTrust, Inc. |
Block
Spam and Other Email Threats From Entering
Your Gateway
Spam, commonly defined as unsolicited commercial
email, is a powerful advertising channel
for many products and services. As a result,
spamming has become a profitable business,
driven by the low cost of sending email
compared to other direct marketing techniques.
The high return on investment for spammers
has resulted in an overwhelming volume of
unwanted messages in personal and business
email boxes. Consider this: Conducting a
direct mail campaign costs an average of
$1.39 per person, meaning that a response
rate of 1 in 14 is necessary just to break
even on a product with a $20 gross profit.
Selling the same item via unsolicited spam
email costs only $0.0004 per person, meaning
that a response rate of 1 in 50,000 gets
the seller back to break-even; anything
above that is gravy. With profit margins
like these, it's easy to see why spammers
will try anything to get past anti spam
technology to deliver their messages to
your inbox.
Types of Spam Threats
The recent onset of fraudulent spam variants
such as phishing and spoofing pose an even
greater risk than the spam volume clogging
email servers. Spammers use techniques such
as phishing and spoofing to fool users into
opening messages that, at first glance,
appear innocuous.
Phishing
Phishing is a specific type of spam message
that solicits personal information from
the recipient. Phishers use social engineering
techniques to fool end users into believing
that the message originated from a trusted
sender, making these attacks especially
dangerous because they often con victims
into divulging social security numbers,
bank account information or credit card
numbers. In one six-month period from November
2003 to May 2004, phishing attacks increased
in frequency by 4000%, and the trend continues
upward.
An example of phishing is an email that
appears to come from a bank requesting that
users log into their account to update or
correct personal information. When the users
follow a link embedded in the email, they
are redirected to a site that looks and
behaves like the expected bank website.
However, unbeknownst to the soon-to-be identity
theft victims, the site is actually controlled
by the scam artists who sent the email;
any and all information entered by the victim
can now be used in a variety of ways, none
of them good.
Spoofing
Spoofing is a deceptive form of spam that
hides the domain of the spammer or the spam's
origination point. Spammers often hijack
the domains of well-known businesses or
government entities to make spam filters
think the communication is coming from a
legitimate source.
Today's spammers are more crafty than ever
before and have begun blending elements
of both phishing and spoofing into their
messages, further spinning their web of
deception. The toxic combination of spoofing
and phishing presents a major threat that
can trick most anyone into providing personal
information to a stranger.
Toothless Legislation
On January 1, 2004, President Bush signed
into law the "Controlling the Assault of
Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing
Act of 2003," or "CAN-SPAM" Act. While well
intentioned, CAN-SPAM has done little or
nothing to curb the flow of unwanted email.
In fact, an estimated 97% of all spam email
sent in 2004 violated the Act, and the United
States still dwarfs other nations in terms
of the origin of spam, with CipherTrust
research revealing that an astonishing 56.77%
of all spam comes from U.S.-based IP addresses.
While CAN-SPAM was designed to decrease
the overall volume of spam, the exact opposite
has happened: in 2004, spam accounted for
approximately 77% of all email traffic,
and phishing attacks continue to increase
exponentially, with studies showing an increase
of 4000% from November 2003 to May 2004.
Anti Spam Software for the Desktop
The dramatic increase in spam volume has
prompted a corresponding surge in stand-alone
anti spam software solutions for the desktop,
all with varying levels of effectiveness.
Some anti spam software uses text filtering
to screen incoming messages for known characteristics
of spam, while other solutions rely solely
on reputation systems that monitor and categorize
email senders by IP address according to
their sending behavior. Still other anti
spam software uses "challenge/response filters"
to block unapproved mail until the sender
responds (manually) to a challenge email
sent to their email account to verify his
or her identity.
With so many different methods of filtering
spam, no single software-based desktop anti
spam solution is capable of effectively
stopping spam before it reaches the inbox.
The only way to successfully fight spam
is to create an anti spam "cocktail" including
reputation services, text filters, constant
updates and a host of other best-of-breed
spam blocking methods. Just as importantly,
an effective anti spam solution should reside
at the email gateway, not at the desktop.
Without protection at the gateway, mail
servers waste massive amounts of bandwidth
and storage space processing every message,
wanted or not, and end users face the unenviable
task of deciding what to do with the countless
spam messages that successfully reach them.
Take a Consolidated Approach to Anti Spam
Although it takes a person only a moment
to process a message and identify it as
spam, it is difficult to automate that human
process because no single message characteristic
consistently identifies spam. In fact, there
are hundreds of different message characteristics
that may indicate an email is spam, and
an effective anti spam solution must be
capable of employing multiple spam detection
techniques.
In addition to effectively identifying spam,
businesses must be assured that legitimate
mail is not blocked in error. Even one false
positive, or incorrectly blocked email,
can have a significant impact on businesses
today. Accurate spam blocking requires a
combination of tools to examine various
message criteria combined with real-time
research and intelligence data.
By aggregating multiple spam detection technologies
like text filtering, reputation services,
traffic analysis and other best-of-breed
techniques, and placing the solution at
the email gateway in a hardened appliance,
enterprises can retake control of the inbox.
About the author:
Dr. Paul Judge is a noted scholar and entrepreneur.
He is Chief Technology Officer at CipherTrust,
the industry's largest provider of enterprise
email security. The company's flagship product,
IronMail provides a best of breed enterprise
anti spam solution designed to stop
spam, phishing attacks and other email-based
threats. Learn more by visiting www.ciphertrust.com/products/spam_and_fraud_protection
today.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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