Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Why
Your ISP Takes Bribes From Spammers |
by:
Niall
Roche |
The
lifeblood of the spammer is email. They
need to be able to send lots of it on an
ongoing basis to stay in "business". High
profile spammers can send 80 million pieces
of junk email every single day. Yes one
single person.
ISPs all over the online world have vowed
to stop spammers sending such vast amounts
of email through their mail servers. Do
they really keep their word? All the end
user sees is that the spam keeps coming.
There must be a loophole there somewhere.
There is.
In the soft white underbelly of the internet
there exists something known as a pink contract.
The term pink contract comes from the color
of the famous tinned meat that junk email
gets its name from. A pink contract is simply
a business agreement between the ISP and
the spammer. The spammer agrees to pay the
ISP to turn a blind eye to the junk email
passing through their mail servers.
Surely this is bad business for the ISP?
Well the answer to that is both Yes and
No. Yes it's bad news for the people who
receive the junk email and No it's good
news for the ISPs bank balance. A monthly
pink contract can pay the ISP amounts from
$10,000 upwards. Bearing in mind that the
average work-at-home spammer averages $100,000
net per year the above figure is small change
fo the bigger junk email vendors (the guys
who earn $200,000 - $400,000 per month.)
But..... the CanSpam Act 2003... surely
that's going to make a difference? Of course.
Any ISP in the United States can get in
serious, serious trouble for signing pink
contracts. Problem is that there's a whole
big world wide web out there and the vast
majority of pink contracts are signed with
overseas ISPs where US authorities have
no jurisdiction - China and Russia being
perfect examples.
There's no moral to this story. Spam is
a huge problem that's finally being taken
seriously by Governmental bodies. However
until they start imposing prison sentences
or seizure orders on those individuals and
companies in the pink contract business
the problem can only continue.
About the author:
This article was provided courtesy of Spam-Site.com
which reviews and tests spam
blockers for the business and end user.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|