Spammers using stealth software to hijack PCs
Spammers using stealth software to hijack PCs

Spam approaches 95 per cent of all email

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

Written by Robert Jaques

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.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Fewer respondents found spam annoying compared to last year

Surfers learn to tolerate spam

New survey suggests a fall in the 'annoyance' factor 12 Apr 2005

 

Spammers exploit Pope's death

Papal bull 11 Apr 2005

Rootkits leave antivirus systems powerless

No defence in standard antivirus code 18 Mar 2005

Second virus targets MSN Messenger users

Spammers on the look out for new recruits? 08 Mar 2005

Porn plummets as spammers clean up

Dating services and financial scams on the rise as spam hits 90 per cent 01 Mar 2005

Mobile spam volume doubles

Operators face customer backlash as unsolicited messages soar 01 Mar 2005

Anti-spam spending set to soar

Worldwide revenue to exceed $1.7bn in 2008, reports IDC 24 Feb 2005

Tenth of junk email now MP3 spam

Penny stocks promoted as MP3 voice messages 30 Oct 2007

Underworld economy runs on bots and spam

Market for hijacked PCs fuels online crime 10 Apr 2008

Free smartcard travel arrives

But bus operators do not yet have equipment needed to read cards 20 Mar 2008

today's top stories

Analysis: The true cost of printing

Organisations need to get a better sense of how much they spend on printing before finding ways to reduce it 05 Sep 2008

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Looking to the future - exclusive Michael Dell interview

Dell's chief executive talks to Computing about the way the company continues to adapt to major changes in the industry 04 Sep 2008

Interview: Delivering power where it's needed at Betfair

The online gambling firm is putting its money on grid computing and virtualisation to underpin global expansion 04 Sep 2008

E-paper displays are an open book

A display revolution is on the way - but only once the user interface issues are solved 04 Sep 2008

Most commented stories

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

When mobile phones include inbuilt payment technology - would you use one instead of cash?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

BlackBerry BoldVideo

Video Review: BlackBerry Bold

Technology editor Daniel Robinson takes a hands-on look at the latest device from Research in Motion 01 Sep 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Latest in-depth articles

A meetingAnalysis

Turning adversity into an advantage

IT chiefs under pressure to make cost cuts can turn the situation to their benefit 04 Sep 2008

CloudAnalysis

How to introduce cloud computing into your organisation

Best practice advice from Forrester Research 04 Sep 2008

Primary Navigation