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A New Tool In The Spam War
Ethan Preston, 2005-01-12

Arbitration is part of the next wave of security measures, and can be effective against spammers who illegally harvest email addresses from a honeypot on your website.

Comments Mode:
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-13
Anonymous (2 replies)
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Anonymous (1 replies)
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Dmitriy M
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-24
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-14
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-14
Anonymous
Do I see a hole in this? 2005-01-14
Tom Haddon (1 replies)
Do I see a hole in this? 2005-01-19
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Do I see a hole in this? 2005-10-03
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Anonymous
Re: A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Robin Green (1 replies)
A cunning plan, very cunning... with only one tiny flaw.

It is highly implausible that any jurisdiction would accept an "agreement" between a human and a piece of software that attempts to exhaustively follows links. Dumb-as-rocks software certainly cannot meaningfully agree to anything. Even more so, the user of said software cannot meaningfully agree to anything that he doesn't even know exists, much less has agreed to. The concept is laughable.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/291/30075#30075
Re: A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-17
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Anonymous
Issues in reliability 2005-01-19
Cohen
so all an spammer needs to do... 2005-01-19
Bipin Gautam <visitbipin.@hotmail.com>
Cross contamination = reasonable doubt 2005-01-24
Zaferus (1 replies)
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-24
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2007-05-28
Anonymous







 

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