Spammers using stealth software to hijack PCs
Spammers using stealth software to hijack PCs
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Spam approaches 95 per cent of all email

Proxy-generated junk mail set to cause 'meltdown', warns anti-spam firm

Robert Jaques, vnunet.com 07 Feb 2005
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The global junk mail plague is to get dramatically worse as criminal spammers take control of victims' PCs and use them as anonymous proxies to send email via their ISPs' mail relay.

According to anti-spam organisation Spamhaus the recent increase in this proxy-spam activity is caused by newly engineered versions of stealth proxy-spam software released by spammers.

"New versions of proxy packages released by Russian spammers operating in the US now have a feature which instructs the hijacked proxy to send the spam out via the mail relay of the ISP to which the proxy is downstream," Spamhaus warned.

Before this explosion in proxy-generated spam, most email traffic arriving at ISPs' mail servers came mainly from two sources: sent directly by the spammer, or sent by the spammer through a hijacked computer (proxy).

These two sources have been relatively easy to deal with, as they can both be blocked. But Spamhaus warned that the source of incoming spam is changing, and ISPs are seeing far more spam coming directly from the major mail relays of other ISPs.

AOL, one of the first to notice the change, now reports that over 90 per cent of its incoming spam comes directly from other ISPs' mail relays.

"Spamhaus sees this change and the increase in spam it is producing as a threat to be taken seriously," the company stated.

"At the current pace spam could reach 95 per cent of all email traffic by mid-2006, when we would see the beginning of a slow meltdown of email delivery systems caused by overloaded queues and stressed filters."

The organisation advised ISPs to take protective measures, including throttling the outgoing mail from the ISPs of broadband customers, separating incoming and outgoing SMTP servers and mandating email authentication for all customers.

See also:

Fewer respondents found spam annoying compared to last yearNew survey suggests a fall in the 'annoyance' factor  12 Apr 2005
Spammers promote get-rich-quick schemePapal bull  11 Apr 2005
Rootkits allow hackers to hide content on infected computersNo defence in standard antivirus code  18 Mar 2005
Kelvir.B carries Spybot payloadSpammers on the look out for new recruits?  08 Mar 2005
Porn emails drop 92.5 per cent in FebruaryDating services and financial scams on the rise as spam hits 90 per cent  01 Mar 2005
Half of texts received in the US are spamOperators face customer backlash as unsolicited messages soar  01 Mar 2005
Spam is an increasingly serious and expensive problemWorldwide revenue to exceed $1.7bn in 2008, reports IDC  24 Feb 2005
Four-fifths of email now spamConvergence of viruses and junk mail hitting the sector hard  10 Feb 2005
Seven-month investigation to track down alleged drug distributorsPair take stiff action against junk mailers  10 Feb 2005
'Get rich quick' schemeJunk mail campaign offers 'free' copy of latest book  07 Feb 2005
David EmmVirus writers are waking up and smelling the money  04 Feb 2005
Spam now accounts for 88 per cent of all emailHave you been done by a harvester before?  03 Feb 2005
Porn spam soars to 21 per cent in JanuarySpammers getting smarter at targeting unsolicited mail  01 Feb 2005
MailWasherFilter out spam from multiple email accounts  16 Jan 2008

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