PROBLEM OF
SPAM EMAIL
A meeting organized
by the UN International Telecommunication Union in Geneva Jul 11, 2004 has concluded that while there is no
"silver bullet" to stop unsolicited commercial email, solutions
involving legislation, technical innovation and international cooperation could
eventually curb the worldwide abuse of "spam." The meeting was
designed to launch a global effort aimed at eliminating spam, which accounts
for an estimated 80 per cent of all email traffic and costs the global economy
some $25 million in losses each year.
In addition
to strong country laws, technical solutions and international cooperation, the
meeting generated consensus on the need for consumer education and industry
self-regulation as part of a multi-track solution to the nuisance.
Robert
Horton, Acting Chair of the Australian Communications Authority and Chairman of
the meeting, said spam has grown into a major plague affecting the digital
world. "We are facing a global epidemic which can only be combated through
a global and concerted action," he said.
Despite the
enactment of anti-spam legislation in about 30 countries and the introduction
of technical solutions by Internet service providers and end-users, there has
been so far no significant impact on the volume of unwanted email, with
spammers sending hundreds of millions of messages per day.
Increasingly,
spam is being used to support fraudulent and criminal activities, including
attempts to capture financial information such as account numbers and passwords
by masquerading messages as originating from trusted companies, called
"brand-spoofing" or "phishing."
In addition, spam can be exploited as a vehicle to spread computer viruses and
worms.
Mobile
networks face the problem of bulk unsolicited text messages which aim to
generate traffic to premium-rate numbers. As these trends transcend national
boundaries, international cooperation is essential to enforce anti-spam laws.