The Economics of Spam
Tennessee resident K. C. "Khan" Smith owes the internet service provider
EarthLink $24 million. According to the CNN, in August 2001 he was slapped
with a lawsuit accusing him of violating federal and state Racketeering
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statutes, the federal Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act of 1984, the federal Electronic Communications Privacy
Act of 1986 and numerous other state laws. On July 19, 2002 - having failed
to appear in court - the judge ruled against him. Mr. Smith is a spammer.
Brightmail, a vendor of e-mail filters and anti-spam applications warned
that close to 5 million spam "attacks" or "bursts" occurred in June 2002 and
that spam has mushroomed 450 percent since June 2001. This pace continued
unabated well into the beginning of 2004 when the introduction of spam
filters began to take effect. PC World concurs.
Between one half and three quarters of all e-mail messages are spam or UCE
(Unsolicited Commercial Email) - unsolicited and intrusive commercial ads,
mostly concerned with sex, scams, get rich quick schemes, financial services
and products, and health articles of dubious provenance. The messages are
sent from spoofed or fake e-mail addresses. Some spammers hack into
unsecured servers - mainly in China and Korea - to relay their missives
anonymously.
Starting in 2003, malicious hackers began using spam to install malware -
such as viruses, adware, spyware, and Trojans - on the unprotected personal
computers of less savvy users. They thus transform these computers into
"zombies", organize them into spam-spewing "bots" (networks), and sell
access to them to criminals on penumbral boards and forums all over the Net.
Spam is an industry. Mass e-mailers maintain lists of e-mail addresses,
often "harvested" by spamware bots - specialized computer applications -
from Web sites. These lists are rented out or sold to marketers who use bulk
mail services. They come cheap - c. $100 for 10 million addresses. Bulk
mailers provide servers and bandwidth, charging c. $300 per million messages
sent.
As spam recipients become more inured, ISPs less tolerant, and both more
litigious - spammers multiply their efforts in order to maintain the same
response rate. Spam works. It is not universally unwanted - which makes it
tricky to outlaw. It elicits between 0.1 and 1 percent in positive follow
ups, depending on the message. Many messages now include HTML, JavaScript,
and ActiveX coding and thus resemble (or actually contain) viruses and
Trojans.
Jupiter Media Matrix predicted in 2001 that the number of spam messages
annually received by a typical Internet user will double to 1400 and
spending on legitimate e-mail marketing will reach $9.4 billion by 2006 -
compared to $1 billion in 2001. Forrester Research pegs the number at $4.8
billion in 2003.
More than 2.3-5 billion spam messages are sent daily. eMarketer puts the
figures a lot lower at 76 billion messages in 2002. By 2006, daily spam
output will soar to c. 15 billion missives, says Radicati Group. Jupiter
projects a more modest 268 billion annual messages this year (2005). An
average communication costs the spammer 0.00032 cents.
PC World quotes the European Union as pegging the bandwidth costs of spam
worldwide in 2002 at $8-10 billion annually. Other damages include server
crashes, time spent purging unwanted messages, lower productivity,
aggravation, and increased cost of Internet access.
Inevitably, the spam industry gave rise to an anti-spam industry. According
to a Radicati Group report titled "Anti-virus, anti-spam, and content
filtering market trends 2002-2006", anti-spam revenues were projected to
exceed $88 million in 2002 - and more than double by 2006. List blockers,
report and complaint generators, advocacy groups, registers of known
spammers, and spam filters all proliferate. The Wall Street Journal reported
in its June 25, 2002 issue about a resurgence of anti-spam startups financed
by eager venture capital.
ISPs are bent on preventing abuse - reported by victims - by expunging the
accounts of spammers. But the latter simply switch ISPs or sign on with free
services like Hotmail and Yahoo! Barriers to entry are getting lower by the
day as the costs of hardware, software, and communications plummet.
The use of e-mail and broadband connections by the general population is
spreading. Hundreds of thousands of technologically-savvy operators have
joined the market in the last five years, as the dotcom bubble burst. Still,
Steve Linford of the UK-based Spamhaus.org insists that most spam emanates
from c. 80 large operators.
Now, according to Jupiter Media, ISPs and portals are poised to begin to
charge advertisers in a tier-based system, replete with premium services.
Writing back in 1998, Bill Gates described a solution also espoused by
Esther Dyson, chair of the Electronic Frontier Foundation:
"As I first described in my book 'The Road Ahead' in 1995, I expect that
eventually you'll be paid to read unsolicited e-mail. You'll tell your
e-mail program to discard all unsolicited messages that don't offer an
amount of money that you'll choose. If you open a paid message and discover
it's from a long-lost friend or somebody else who has a legitimate reason to
contact you, you'll be able to cancel the payment. Otherwise, you'll be paid
for your time."
Subscribers may not be appreciative of the joint ventures between
gatekeepers and inbox clutterers. Moreover, dominant ISPs, such as AT&T and
PSINet have recurrently been accused of knowingly collaborating with
spammers. ISPs rely on the data traffic that spam generates for their
revenues in an ever-harsher business environment.
The Financial Times and others described how WorldCom refuses to ban the
sale of spamware over its network, claiming that it does not regulate
content. When "pink" (the color of canned spam) contracts came to light, the
implicated ISPs blame the whole affair on rogue employees.
PC World begs to differ:
"Ronnie Scelson, a self-described spammer who signed such a contract with
PSInet, (says) that backbone providers are more than happy to do business
with bulk e-mailers. 'I've signed up with the biggest 50 carriers two or
three times', says Scelson ... The Louisiana-based spammer claims to send 84
million commercial e-mail messages a day over his three
45-megabit-per-second DS3 circuits. 'If you were getting $40,000 a month for
each circuit', Scelson asks, 'would you want to shut me down?'"
The line between permission-based or "opt-in" e-mail marketing and spam is
getting thinner by the day. Some list resellers guarantee the consensual
nature of their wares. According to the Direct Marketing Association's
guidelines, quoted by PC World, not responding to an unsolicited e-mail
amounts to "opting-in" - a marketing strategy known as "opting out". Most
experts, though, strongly urge spam victims not to respond to spammers, lest
their e-mail address is confirmed.
But spam is crossing technological boundaries. Japan has just legislated
against wireless SMS spam targeted at hapless mobile phone users. Many
states in the USA as well as the European parliament have followed suit.
Ideas regarding a "do not spam" list akin to the "do not call" list in
telemarketing have been floated. Mobile phone users will place their phone
numbers on the list to avoid receiving UCE (spam). Email subscribers enjoy
the benefits of a similar list under the CAN-Spam Act of 2003.
Expensive and slow connections make mobile phone spam and spim (instant
messaging spam) particularly resented. Still, according to Britain's Mobile
Channel, a mobile advertising company quoted by "The Economist", SMS
advertising - a novelty - attracts a 10-20 percent response rate - compared
to direct mail's 1-3 percent.
Net identification systems - like Microsoft's Passport and the one proposed
by Liberty Alliance - will make it even easier for marketers to target
prospects.
The reaction to spam can be described only as mass hysteria. Reporting
someone as a spammer - even when he is not - has become a favorite pastime
of vengeful, self-appointed, vigilante "cyber-cops". Perfectly legitimate,
opt-in, email marketing businesses and discussion forums often find
themselves in one or more black lists - their reputation and business
ruined.
In January 2002, CMGI-owned Yesmail was awarded a temporary restraining
order against MAPS - Mail Abuse Prevention System - forbidding it to place
the reputable e-mail marketer on its Real-time Blackhole list. The case was
settled out of court.
Harris Interactive, a large online opinion polling company, sued not only
MAPS, but ISPs who blocked its email messages when it found itself included
in MAPS' Blackhole. Their CEO accused one of their competitors for the
allegations that led to Harris' inclusion in the list.
Coupled with other pernicious phenomena - such as viruses, Trojans, and
spyware - the very foundation of the Internet as a fun, relatively safe,
mode of communication and data acquisition is at stake.
Spammers, it emerges, have their own organizations. NOIC - the National
Organization of Internet Commerce threatened to post to its Web site the
e-mail addresses of millions of AOL members. AOL has aggressive
anti-spamming policies. "AOL is blocking bulk email because it wants the
advertising revenues for itself (by selling pop-up ads)" the president of
NOIC, Damien Melle, complained to CNET.
Spam is a classic "free rider" problem. For any given individual, the cost
of blocking a spammer far outweighs the benefits. It is cheaper and easier
to hit the "delete" key. Individuals, therefore, prefer to let others do the
job and enjoy the outcome - the public good of a spam-free Internet. They
cannot be left out of the benefits of such an aftermath - public goods are,
by definition, "non-excludable". Nor is a public good diminished by a
growing number of "non-rival" users.
Such a situation resembles a market failure and requires government
intervention through legislation and enforcement. The FTC - the US Federal
Trade Commission - has taken legal action against more than 100 spammers for
promoting scams and fraudulent goods and services.
"Project Mailbox" is an anti-spam collaboration between American law
enforcement agencies and the private sector. Non government organizations
have entered the fray, as have lobbying groups, such as CAUCE - the
Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail.
But, a few recent anti-spam and anti-spyware Acts notwithstanding, Congress
is curiously reluctant to enact stringent laws against spam. Reasons cited
are free speech, limits on state powers to regulate commerce, avoiding
unfair restrictions on trade, and the interests of small business. The
courts equivocate as well. In some cases - e.g., Missouri vs. American Blast
Fax - US courts found "that the provision prohibiting the sending of
unsolicited advertisements is unconstitutional".
According to Spamlaws.com, the 107th Congress, for instance, discussed
these laws but never enacted them:
Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act of 2001 (H.R. 95), Wireless
Telephone Spam Protection Act (H.R. 113), Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 (H.R.
718), Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 (H.R. 1017), Who Is E-Mailing Our Kids Act
(H.R. 1846), Protect Children From E-Mail Smut Act of 2001 (H.R. 2472),
Netizens Protection Act of 2001 (H.R. 3146), "CAN SPAM" Act of 2001 (S.
630).
Anti-spam laws fared no better in the 106th Congress. Some of the states
have picked up the slack. Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and
Wisconsin.
The situation is no better across the pond. The European parliament decided
in 2001 to allow each member country to enact its own spam laws, thus
avoiding a continent-wide directive and directly confronting the
communications ministers of the union. Paradoxically, it also decided, in
March 2002, to restrict SMS spam. Confusion clearly reigns. Finally, in May
2002, it adopted strong anti-spam provisions as part of a Directive on Data
Protection.
Responding to this unfavorable legal environment, spam is relocating to
developing countries, such as Malaysia, Nepal, and Nigeria. In a May 2005
report, the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development)
warned that these countries lack the technical know-how and financial
resources (let alone the will) to combat spam. Their users, anyhow deprived
of bandwidth, endure, as a result, a less reliable service and an
intermittent access to the Internet;
"Spam is a much more serious issue in developing countries...as it is a
heavy drain on resources that are scarcer and costlier in developing
countries than elsewhere" - writes the report's author, Suresh
Ramasubramanian, an OECD advisor and postmaster for Outblaze.com.
ISPs, spam monitoring services, and governments in the rich industrialized
world react by placing entire countries - such as Macedonia and Costa Rica -
on black lists and, thus denying access to their users en bloc.
International collaboration against the looming destruction of the Internet
by crime organizations is budding. The FTC had just announced that it will
work with its counterparts abroad to cut zombie computers off the network. A
welcome step - but about three years late. Spammers the world over are still
six steps ahead and are having the upper hand.
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Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
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