Throwback Thursday: Legal attempts to reduce spam. A UK perspective


This Throwback Thursday, we turn the clock back to November 2003, when spam was such a hot topic that VB decided to launch a dedicated ‘VB Spam Supplement’.

While, today, spam is a problem that is generally very well mitigated, 12 years ago it was a subject of growing concern and was becoming of increasing interest to the AV industry, with a veritable stampede of AV vendors rushing to bring anti-spam solutions to market alongside their anti-virus products.

With volumes of unsolicited email growing almost by the day, there was great interest in the ways in which users were affected by it, so in November 2003,

VB

decided to launch the ‘

VB Spam Supplement

‘, a section of

Virus Bulletin

magazine that would be dedicated to news and articles on spam and anti-spam techniques.



In the first edition of the

VB Spam Supplement

, we heard that the ratio of spam to non-spam messages had recently exceeded the 50% mark — representing a huge 40.6% increase over the preceding 12 months. Meanwhile, in the first

Spam Supplement

feature, anti-spam software engineer Martin Lee summarized from a UK perspective the various legislative attempts to ban the abuse of email by law, concluding that, while legislation can assist in identifying clearly what is and what is not acceptable, “ultimately, while there is money to be made through the sending of spam, this is not a problem that is going to go away any time soon”.

Martin Lee’s article can be read

here

in HTML-format, or downloaded

here

as a PDF.

Posted on 19 November 2015 by

Helen Martin


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