Forwarded message: [snip]
No, we need a legislative approach, with some technical support to help increase the likelihood that spammers who break the law will get caught. But first it has to be illegal, or else it's all for naught.
Put it this way: I consider my house locked up even if I do have glass windows, and even if glass is rather easy to break.
If it were legal for a person of ill intent to break the glass to get into my house to rob me the first approach would not in my mind be to board up all the glass unless I really lived in some mad max anarchy.
I'd first want to see it made illegal to break into my property. [snip]
-Barry Shein
IMO, spam is already illegal, the problem is getting any police agency to take action. It's theft of service of any system that's relay raped and it's harasssment of the people being targeted as well as theft of service. It takes resources to bounce all those no longer existing email addresses and then even more processing to end up bouncing the bounces. I end up going into our mail spool every now and then and deleting all the bounced spam that can't be delivered. A royal pain in the neck when the outgoing spool is 90% to 100% spam bounces. -- Richard Shetron multics@ruserved.com multics@acm.rpi.edu NO UCE What is the Meaning of Life? There is no meaning, It's just a consequence of complex carbon based chemistry; don't worry about it The Super 76, "Free Aspirin and Tender Sympathy", Las Vegas Strip.