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homer
25.07.2005, 09:13
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From: "SPAMIS:" <contact [at] spamis.biz>
To: <Hostmaster>
Subject: MICROSOFT Planning to Purchase World's Largest Spyware Company to Spam 40,000,000+
Date: Sun, 24 Jul 2005 xx:xx:xx -0100
MIME-Version: 1.0


As Originally Reported by the NEW YORK TIMES 06/30/05:

BREAKING NEWS:

MICROSOFT PLANS TO BUY THE WORLD'S LARGEST SPYWARE COMPANY IN
AN ATTEMPT TO SPAM 40 MILLION+ COMPUTER USERS WITH MICROSOFT ADS

----- ---- --- -- - -

By Ray Everett-Church / eSecurityPLANET
July 18, 2005

Ray Everett-Church is a principal with PrivacyClue LLC, a
privacy consultancy. He is a founder of CAUCE, an anti-spam
advocacy group, and he is co-author of ''Internet Privacy for
Dummies.''

----- ---- --- -- - -

It's been a bad month for Microsoft's efforts to promote their
visions of trustworthiness and authentication in Internet
commerce.

Just as the ground began to crumble beneath Microsoft's "Sender
ID" email authentication proposal, it was discovered that the
Redmond, Wa.-based software giant was considering acquiring
Claria, one of the world's most notorious adware and spyware
companies.

Let's look first at the email authentication wars. As I've
discussed previously, the battle over email authentication has
been raging for several years. Among the many proposals being
considered by the email industry and Internet standards community
is Microsoft's Sender ID: [ID filtered]
"Sender Permitted From" or SPF standard.

Both SPF and Sender ID: [ID filtered]
DNS entry that define what IP addresses should be permitted to
send email for that domain. These definitions embedded in the
sender's DNS records are then queried and parsed by the receiving
server to determine whether to accept or reject a particular piece
of email.

As I reported back in October, Microsoft's Sender ID: [ID filtered]
became the subject of much scorn when it was discovered that, at
the same time they were promoting Sender ID: [ID filtered]
they were trying to patent the technology surrounding Sender ID.

In the intervening months, numerous major service providers
participating in the Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group, an
industry consortium that is promoting the development of new email
authentication standards, have continued to test Sender ID. Their
recently released findings are not good news for Microsoft.

According to the technical committee's white paper :

"At best, SPF and Sender ID: [ID filtered]
issued by a foreign country: they show that the vehicle is
permitted to drive in that country, but make no indication as to
whether that country=92s regulations are similar to yours =96 and we
can only assume that the driver inside is permitted to use that
vehicle."

But the committee went on to explain that along with these dubious
benefits, there were some significant downsides to implementing
Sender ID.


These include:

* Forwarded or re-sent mail will fail authentication without
changing email systems to re-write return addresses and add new
headers;

* Those sites publishing authentication records must ensure that
their records permit mail from all possible points of origination
or risk having legitimate email mislabeled as spam;

* This method of authentication does not provide protection against
forgery of the most common user-visible mail headers;

* Receivers must be aware that performing some checks in accordance
with Sender ID: [ID filtered]
results due to misinterpretation of the Sender's authorization.,
and

* If your operation provides email services to roaming users, you
may need to forge or add certain headers in order to ensure
successful authentication.


As a result, several major service providers have removed their
Sender ID: [ID filtered]
avoID: [ID filtered]

But just as the industry is backing away from Sender ID, Microsoft
rekindled fears of monopolistic bullying tactics by unilaterally
declaring that all email sent to MSN and Hotmail would be scanned
for Sender ID: [ID filtered]
email doesn't pass a patent-pending Sender ID: [ID filtered]
labeled as spam and consigned to the dreaded Spam folder.

Just as the world was trying to digest what Microsoft was
attempting to shove down its collective throat, word leaked out
that Microsoft was in talks to buy Claria, formerly known as Gator
-- one of the world's most notorious peddlers of spyware and adware
-- which I will call malware hereafter for the sake of brevity.

According to several news reports, Microsoft has been eager to
compete in the online advertising markets dominated by companies
like Yahoo and Google. Experts suggest that buying Claria would
give Microsoft a jumpstart in the market because of Claria
advertising network consisting of more than 40 million souls who
receive Claria annoying pop-up ads.

As one commentator wrote, this move "underscores just how eager
Microsoft is to catch up with Google, the search and advertising
giant."

Eager? How about desperate?

In my opinion, picking up Claria for its advertising network is
like buying a former nuclear bomb testing site because the lack of
anything standing gives you such great views in all directions.
Just don't touch anything, ignore the three-headed rabbits
populating the poisoned ground, and you'll be fine.

There are plenty of other ad networks out there, most of which got
to be successful without engaging in deceptive, unfair, and
lawsuit-provoking activities.

Some might say Microsoft and Claria have been unwittingly working
together for a long time. Claria advertising reach is directly tied
to its years of distributing malware and long history of its paid
"affiliates" taking advantage of security holes in Microsoft=92s
operating system to install the software surreptitiously and without
end-users permission.

In its defense, Claria claims to be migrating its business model to
one focused on more legitimate forms of business. But like the Gotti
family and their garbage hauling business, I have a feeling that it
is going to take them some time to stop living off their other gigs.

More recent reports suggest that an acquisition of Claria is never
going to happen because Claria reputation is too tarnished for even
Microsoft's tastes. But that didn't stop Microsoft from giving Claria
a pre-engagement gift just last week -- downgraded threat rating in
Microsoft's anti-spyware utility!


According to Eric Howes of SpywareWarrior.com:

"Several sources have now confirmed that Microsoft downgraded its
detections of Claria=92s adware products in the latest update (#5731)
to Microsoft AntiSpyware released today. Where Microsoft AntiSpyware
used to detect Claria=92s products and present users with a Recommended
Action of 'Quarantine, following today=92s update Microsoft AntiSpyware
now presents users with a Recommended Action of 'Ignore[.] Users can
still change the action to =93Quarantine=94 or =93Remove.=94

In the end, though, this is nothing new. As I've noted before , other
security software makers have gone soft on malware. Microsoft's is only
the most recent, and to my way of thinking, the most unprincipled and
morally corrupt.

So the next time you hear pronouncements from Microsoft about their
efforts to make your computing experiences safer and more secure, a
deeper look may suggest that Microsoft's effort to be part of the
solution includes taking a bigger stake in the problem.


END OF ARTICLE

[Part 52 of 178]
[SPAMIS: Strategic Partnership Against Microsoft Illegal Spam]

Wie jetzt, Part 52 of 178? Kommt da noch mehr so Sch****?

Edit: www.spamis.org ergibt:

This domain has been suspended. Domain owner, please contact support for more information.
:D

homer
25.07.2005, 20:43
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Mon, 25 Jul 2005 xx:xx:xx +0300
From: SPAMIS <contact [at] spamis.info>
To: poor [at] spamvictim.tld
Subject: MICROSOFT Planning to Purchase World's Largest Spyware Company to Spam 40,000,000+
Date: Sun, 24 Jul 2005 xx:xx:xx -0600 EST
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Mime-Version: 1.0

trekkie
07.08.2005, 15:53
Lang, lang ist's her, aber gestern kam doch tatsächlich mal wieder der SPAMIS-Müll rein:


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Message-ID: [ID filtered]
From: "SPAMIS: Strategic Partnership Against Microsoft Illegal Spam" <contact [at] spamis.org>
To: <meinname[at]afwdallmx.t-online.com>
Subject: Quote From California Legislator Debora Bowen About Microsoft
Date: Sat, 06 Aug 2005 xx:xx:xx +0300
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
boundary="--8987324750123429691"
X-TOI-SPAM: u;0;2005-08-06Txx:xx:xxZ
X-TOI-VIRUSSCAN: unchecked
X-TOI-MSGID: [ID filtered]
X-Seen: false
X-Collected-By: GMX/T-Online 2
X-GMX-Antivirus: 0 (no virus found)
X-GMX-Antispam: 2 (GMX Team content blacklist)
X-GMX-UID: [UID filtered]

CALIFORNIA LEGISLATOR Debra Bowen is Quoted as Saying:

"Trusting Microsoft to protect computer users from spam is like putting telemarketers in charge of the do-not-call list."

----- ---- --- -- - -
MICROSOFT CRITICIZES SPAMMERS AND SPAMS THEMSELVES?

Do You Feel It Is OK for the World's Largest Software Monopoly to Spam and Nobody Else? You Make the Decision...

Shouldn't the Largest Monopoly Worldwide be Setting an Example?

-> Remember MICROSOFT Sends SPAM For Thousands of Companies.

-> Just Because The Words "Microsoft" Aren't In The Spam, It Doesn't
-> Mean They Don't Profit a Fortune in $$$ From Their BCentral
-> Listbuilder Spam For Hire Email Spamming Service.

----- ---- --- -- - -
[QUOTES 11 to 35 of 750 COMPLAINTS on MICROSOFT'S SPAMMING]

All Archived for Public Viewing on Google Groups Newsgroups:
news.admin.net.abuse.email & Listserv SPAM-L Mailing List


11- "Microsoft is going to spam no matter what anyone says.
The whole "Master suppression list" is a farce. All it
does is keep the most vocal complainers quiet by not
sending any spam to them. Microsoft DOES NOT care what
people want or don't want." - Zeh Suna

12- "there is a creditability problem when Microsoft keeps
spamming after numerous persons have pointed out there
is an abuse problem especially when there is a Master
suppression list." - Richard

13- "My work mailbox has been pretty obscure, so it gets
very little spam generally, and this is the first time
I have ever been spammed at work by an organization
that would be considered "legitimate" by some." - Errol

14- "I was getting an East Coast edition of some Microsoft
newsletter at a nonexistent mail address on a placeholder
website that can't send mail or browse, isn't indexed,
and resides on a BSD box. I don't know where they get
those addresses."
- John Nagle

15- "Just got this from Microsoft themselves. I never
registered with them without a plus-style trap box
(should be tygris+ms [at] ...) so this looks like to be a
Washington-State Law violation. Anyone else get this?
(Also looks like direct to MX spamming, too)"
- Daniel S. Riley

16- "Microsoft haven't been very good about honoring their
commitments to clean up their act. I'd say an RBL is
in their future."
- Jay

17- "Microsoft was even sending spam to a domain I own that
just has a placeholder web page with no contact
information. It can't send mail or web browse at all.
Yet Microsoft spammed it."
- John Nagle

18- "I bounce everything from newswire.microsoft.com. A few
months ago, they started adding the news. to it, so I
bounce that too."
- Nick Nicholas

19- "There's two ways to LART Micro$haft, fusion warheads
(too destructive to all that nice lumber), and using
MacOS/LINUX/BeOS..."
- Jason Crowell

20- "I HAD subscribed to about three of their lists,
primarily developer stuff, but when they spammed madly
about 6 - 8 months ago, I went through our contacts
here at IU and got a PR guy, and raised hell."
- Ron

21- "Where is Microsoft getting these email addresses? Are
they buying them from other companies? Are they
stealing them with stream sniffers? (They write the
"TO" address in all uppercase.)"
- Blornx

22- "Microsoft newswire is still spamming. Some of us at
work got one today for Publisher"
- Kelly Striker Price

23- "Microsoft has recently been sending me the German
language edition of the Microsoft Internet Newsletter.
I never signed up for anything from Microsoft, and
certainly not auf Deutsch. Their unsubscribe procedure
doesn't give any feedback."
- Dan Riley

24- "My work email account doesn't get spam, was never given
to Microsoft, and we are not registered users of
Publisher -- we don't even own it or use it"
- Blornx

25- "Microsoft is still Microsoft. following are my spam
report and Microsoft's reply. Gee, how dID: [ID filtered]
be so predictable, how dID: [ID filtered]
would say that they would take no action towards
reducing their cooperation with this spammer."
- Norman Diamond

26- "Microsoft got lots of press for Microsoft's pretense of
opposing spammers, but all of that is just more lies.
Microsoft will continue cooperating with Microsoft's
spam partners, redirecting from g.msn.com to
choice-is-yours.com"
- Darwin

27- "There's no other way to stop receiving their spam...
they won't remove you, and there's no way to LART
Microsoft."
- John Nagle

28- "It was the same with me when I complained to Microsoft
about their BCentral counters that were being largely
used in spams. They always answered with the "this mail
dID: [ID filtered]
wrote back to the followups."
- Darwin
29- "I still get spam from/implicating bcentral.com. I
complain through spamcop. Nothing happens."
- Bj

30- "Microsoft has been known to send spam to people who do
not use their junk and have never requested any mail,
alerting these uninterested non-customers to the
availability of patches to fix problems with MS
products."
- Stinky

31- "One of the best spams actually from M$ was the Y2K spam
run. I didn't own a single PC at the time yet I received
this email several times. Go figure."
- Norman

32- "It's easier to just block them. I can't imagine getting
anything, ever, from Microsoft by email"
- Magenta Sky

33- "Now I just got off the telephone with Mike at Microsoft
and he apparently lied to me because I just recieved a
new spam from them"
- Jay

34- "What does it take to stop the spam from Microsoft when
MAPS sits on their hands?"
- Mark Ferguson

35- "Considering how much Microsoft spams, that would be funny
if I weren't sure they know perfectly well they'll be
breaking the law the moment it passes, and just don't care.
And why should they? It's not like the law applies to them."
- Magenta Sky


----- ---- --- -- - -
[SPAMIS: Strategic Partnership Against Microsoft Illegal Spam] [Part 37 of 178] - SPAMIS - PO BOX 1259 - SEATTLE, WA 98101 - USA

Interessant ist die Adresse im "to" - wieso schicken die das an den T-Online-MX statt an t-online.de? Es liegt nicht am GMX Sammeldienst, bei anderen eingesammelten T-Online-Mails bleibt das "@t-online.de" stehen...

Seltsame Sache...

:sick:

Sirius
07.08.2005, 16:01
Hallo.

wieso schicken die das an den T-Online-MX statt an t-online.de? Es ist an [mailin16.sul.t-online.de] gegangen und intern von TO über [afwdallmx.t-online.com] weitergeleitet worden.

Grüße

trekkie
07.08.2005, 16:09
Stimmt. Du hast recht - ich hätt' mal den Header genauer anschauen sollen, nicht nur die Adresse im "to"... :o

homer
13.08.2005, 17:51
Der "Spam King" wurde verknackt, und schon ist dieses mistige SPAMIS-Zeugs wieder da. Witzig die Bemerkung:

ABOUT: Scott Richter [ A Current Legitimate Opt-In Emailer ]

Return-Path: <news [at] spamis.org>
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Message-ID: [ID filtered]
Reply-To: "news [at] spamis.biz" <news [at] spamis.info>
From: "news [at] spamis.org" <news [at] spamis.cc>
To: <poor [at] spamvictim.tld>
Subject: MICROSOFT BREAKING NEWS: Tue, August 9th, 2005: 11:53AM ET
Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2005 xx:xx:xx +0300
MIME-Version: 1.0

Text war zu lang, daher kein Quote der tollen Mail.

actro
14.09.2005, 19:37
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Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2005 xx:xx:xx -0300
From: "actro [at] xxxxx.de" <actro [at] xxxx.de>
To: poor [at] spamvictim.tld
Subject: BREAKING NEWS: Microsoft Plans to Outsource Over 10,000 Jobs to China
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Saturday, September 3rd, 2005 - 12:20am
SEATTLE TIMES / By Brier Dudley - Technology Reporter

Die Mail erspare ich mir mal, stand eh nur Blödsinn drin.. Ist dagegen ein Kraut gewachsen? Ich kann mich jedenfalls nicht erinnern, mich dort angemeldet zu haben, geschweige denn lässt sich auf der Seite ein "unsubscribe" finden (nicht, daß ich es benutzen hätte wollen..)

tnx, Matthias

Goofy
14.09.2005, 20:13
Welche Domain wurde denn beworben?

Der Soloway kann einfach seinen Privatfeldzug gegen MS nicht lassen... :sick:

actro
14.09.2005, 20:20
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2002468560_msftgoogle03.html

habe mir allerdings nicht dir Mühe gemacht, das Zeug zu lesen.. als Linuxer bin ich nicht so interessiert an Wintendo..

komisch ist nur, daß die Mail an eine rein private Mailadresse lief, die nur zur internen Kommunikation innerhalb einiger Projekte benutzt wird. Sie taucht in keinem Forum auf und ist auf keiner meiner Webseiten zu finden. Ich werde meinen Spamfilter wohl schärfer trainieren müssen ;)

Goofy
14.09.2005, 21:03
Ach so, er verlinkt nur auf einen Zeitungsartikel.
Es handelt sich da nicht um eine SPAMIS-Domain, sondern um die der Seattle-Times, die natürlich mit seinem Spam nichts zu tun hat.
Ohnehin ist sein Gesabbel völlig offtopic
Nachdem man ihm spamis.org und spamis.biz zugemacht hat, traut er sich nicht mehr, für sein Gesülze neue Domains zu opfern.
Man kann da momentan nur filtern, z.B. nach dem Begriff "SPAMIS" (taucht immer wieder in den Mails auf).

actro
14.09.2005, 21:30
na denn bin ich ja beruhigt ;)

*in ignorelist schieb*