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On November
11, two United States Internet Service Providers (ISP) banned McColo
firm’s access to the Web, after an investigation conducted by the Washington
Post revealed that the hosting company was actually a haven for spam groups.
Since the ISPs pulled the plug on the firm, Ironport
anti-spam company has informed that junk mail levels had gone down by 70%,
adding though that spamming was still a threat to Internet users.
Spokesman for Ironport Jason Steer has stated that the
decrease was only a temporary one, until spam groups could find other less supervised
locations to host them, when junk mail would begin to flood people’s accounts
yet again. Moreover, he reckoned that junk mail levels would rise again during
the holiday season.
Washington Post newspaper kicked off their looking into the McColo
firm four months ago and after they gathered enough data, they reported their
conclusions to their Internet Service Providers Global Crossing and Hurricane
Electric, which were the ones to take the firm offline.
The investigation’s findings suggested that McColo had been
hosting gangs of spammers that ran botnets, a collection of software robots
used to automatically send spams and malware, which according to provider of
integrated messaging and web security services MessageLabs is behind 90% of spam.
The term spamming refers to the abuse of electronic
messaging services in order to send unsolicited e-mails to a large number of
people.
Although spammers don’t usually receive responses to the
e-mails they send, research has showed that spamming still manages to turn a
profit.
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