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How
Spammers Fool Whitelists - And How to
Stop Them |
by:
Paul
Judge, CTO, CipherTrust, Inc. |
Effectively
stopping spam over the long-term requires
much more than blocking individual IP addresses
and creating rules based on keywords that
spammers typically use. The increasing sophistication
of spam tools coupled with the increasing
number of spammers in the wild has created
a hyper-evolution in the variety and volume
of spam. The old ways of blocking the bad
guys just don't work anymore.
Examining spam and spam-blocking technology
can illuminate how this evolution is taking
place and what can be done to combat spam
and reclaim e-mail as the efficient, effective
communication tool it was intended to be.
One method used to combat spam is whitelisting.
Whitelists are databases of trusted email
sources. The list may contain specific email
addresses, IP addresses or trusted domains.
Emails received from a whitelisted source
are allowed to pass through the system to
the user's email box. The list is built
when users and email administrators manually
add trusted sources to the whitelist. Once
built, the catch-rate for spam can be close
to 100%, however, whitelists produce an
inordinate number of false positives.
It is virtually impossible to produce an
exhaustive list of all possible legitimate
email senders because legitimate email can
come from any number of sources. To get
around this difficulty, some organizations
have instituted a challenge-response methodology.
When an unknown sender sends an email to
a user's account, the system automatically
sends a challenge back to the sender. Some
challenge-response systems require the sender
to read and decipher an image containing
letters and numbers. The image is designed
to be unreadable by a machine, but easily
recognizable by a human. Spammers would
not spend the time required to go through
a large number of challenge-response emails,
so they drop the address and move on to
those users who don't use such a system.
Whitelists are only partially successful
and impractical for many users. For example,
problems can arise when users register for
online newsletters, order products online
or register for online services. If the
user does not remember to add the new email
source to their whitelist, or if the domain
or IP address is entered incorrectly, the
communication will fail. Additionally, whitelists
impose barriers to legitimate email communication
and are viewed by some as just plain rude.
Whitelists are not widely used by email
users and administrators as a primary tool
to fight spam because of the high number
of false positives, and the difficulties
in creating a comprehensive list of email
sources. Because whitelists are not widely
used, spammers typically do not develop
countermeasures. As with other spam fighting
techniques, whitelists are most effective
when used in conjunction with other anti-spam
tools.
The Solution
When used individually, each anti-spam technique
has been systematically overcome by spammers.
Grandiose plans to rid the world of spam,
such as charging a penny for each e-mail
received or forcing servers to solve mathematical
problems before delivering e-mail, have
been proposed with few results. These schemes
are not realistic and would require a large
percentage of the population to adopt the
same anti-spam method in order to be effective.
You can learn more about the fight against
spam by visiting our website at www.ciphertrust.com
and downloading our whitepapers.
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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