Steve Linford, Spamhaus Internet Terrorist Organization
Becoming what you oppose
Editorial by Dave Hayes
Many folks have asked me why I stopped "contributing" to the everlasting debates in NANA (news.admin.net-abuse.*). I generally respond with something along the lines of "I don't wish to become that which I oppose". Indeed, recently I've "plonked" several entities (among them the terrorists known as "spamhaus" and "spews") simply because I no longer wish to beat my head against the stone wall of ignorance.
Terrorists? Yes that's right. One definition of "terrorism" is "attacking innocents in the name of your cause". Nowhere is this more ironic and extreme than in the deeds of my old nemesi, the anti-spammer zealotry collective, some of whom are now known as spamhaus and spews. The terrorism they practice is implemented in the form of "mail blacklists".
Blacklists are not a new notion. In the 1950's, the infamous McCarthy blacklists contained names of "possible communists", which ultimately led us to a more sterile culture.
The social costs of what came to be called McCarthyism have yet to be computed. By conferring its prestige on the red hunt, the state did more than bring misery to the lives of hundreds of thousands of Communists, former Communists, fellow travelers, and unlucky liberals. It weakened American culture and it weakened itself. ---Victor Navasky, Naming Names (New York: Viking Press, 1980)
Modern internet technology has created our own version(s) of social blacklists. Many anti-spam zealots have turned to this method for freeing their mailboxes from spam. Simply expressed, these organizations maintain databases which are supposed to contain the IP addresses of known spammers. They then provide these databases to various electronic mail servers, so that the servers can reject email based on what's in these databases.
The bottom line is, if the machine that sends your email is on this list, a number of mail servers will automatically reject all email from your server.
If (and only if) they restricted these blacklists to actual spammers, I doubt very seriously that I would have problem with this practice. If we could trust human beings to maintain a logical and calm viewpoint about life, I doubt that I would have a problem with these blacklists. Unfortunately we cannot trust these things in either case.
Fact: Spamhaus and spews have added innocent IP blocks to their blacklists.
The anti-spammer idealotry goes like this: "Anyone who gets service from a network friendly to spammers is supporting the spammers and therefore our enemy." (The friend of my enemy is my enemy too?)
So here's how this goes. Once a network provider is branded "a communist"...er excuse me..."a spammer", ALL of their IP ranges are blocked. Typically a network provider is providing services for smaller service providers, many of whom would never and have never engaged in spamming of any kind. No notice is really given on these blacklisting events, rather you find out when mail starts bouncing to some destination. Usually an end customer is the first to notice, and that customers is directed by the bounce to complain to...their own ISP!
In essence, the customer is tricked into presenting the terrorist anti-spam agenda to the ISP. The ISP turns around and finds out that -their- provider (or provider's provider) is what the anti-spam zealots want "silenced". Until that target complies with their arbitrary agenda (usually of the form "stop spamming", but this is not always true...see below), everyone else has to suffer with electronic mail blocks.
What's wrong with this? Everything.
*
First and foremost, the most often heard reason anti-spammers are so rabid about anti-spam is "it makes electronic mail unusable for average people". If this is true, then how does blocking innocent email help this situation? In fact, blacklisting innocents contributes to the problem. The hypocrisy here is so thick I doubt even a knife can cut it.
*
The dishonor of the practice of blacklists is amazing. Many naive internet mail administrators add blacklists like spamhaus "because they work to reduce spam". Lots of these sites have no idea that they are being cut off from legitimate email because of these machinations. If their customers really knew that they were cutoff, I wonder how many would still buy service? Getting rid of spam is one thing, blocking that key business email that means $100K in sales is quite another.
Lets take this one step further. Person A buys email service from ISP X who is using Spamhaus to block spam email. Person A's daughter, who's income is very low due to being a student in college, buys email service from ISP Y (because it's cheap) who uses IAP S as their connectivity. ISP Y buys network from IAP S because it's cheap. Due to real life constraints, the only contact Person A has with their daughter is email.
IAP S suddenly gets put on the anti-spam master blacklist. The same day, Person A's daughter has a car accident. A roommate desperately tries to send email to Person A but it's blocked. Worse, it's blocked because these zealots have an idealogical cause which is set up to be more important than a person's life. This is the height of dishonor.
*
The practice is quite criminal by many definitions and with criminals on all sides:
o
Any ISP that is blocked is told to "comply with our demands or be blacklisted" (a.k.a. extortion).
o
Attacking innocents in the name of their cause (a.k.a. terrorism).
o
Since the control of the blacklist is out of the hands of the service provider who subscribes to it, by law you must clearly state "random people may be blocked to your email box by other people who are not under our control" before selling "email services". I've never seen this stated on any ISP ad. (a.k.a false advertising)
o
Blacklisting ISPs is a good way of knocking them out of business (a.k.a restraint of trade)
o
If spam ever goes away, these organizations will also. Thus they have a vested interest in keeping spam alive (a.k.a playing both sides of the street)
Do note that the anti-spammers claim these practices are not criminal and will "reduce economic support for the 'spam friendly' ISPs". This claim is quite erroneous:
Fact: Spammer companies have far more money than most innocents.
Yep, to the tune of millions of dollars per month. SPAM is big business. Do you think that the income of one little ISP with 1000 customers is going to make any difference against the large income of a spam company? No! All that does is clear more bandwidth for the spammers to use, should the little ISP cave in and switch to another provider.
While there's no proof (that I'm aware of), it's not so far fetched to open up questions of collusion between "the providers that are anti-spam" and the "anti-spam blacklists". Certain providers, to compete, may pay the blacklist groups lots of money to keep attacking innocents, which gets them more customers in the long run as ISPs fold because they cant afford the connectivity provided by the "anti-spam supporter" providers.
I've established some things here:
1. In my opinion, blacklists are bad.
2. The anti-spammers are resorting to clearly criminal activities to further their goals: extortion, restraint-of-trade, terrorism.
3. The effect the anti-spammers are trying to have by blocking innocents only works to destroy email connectivity, the cure is worse than the disease.
This brings me to my concluding point. The original complaint against spammers included accusations of being criminal. Most spammers are considered criminal. Yet look at the anti-spammers! In their undying eternal zeal to end spam, they have become just what they oppose! Criminals and email destroyers. Gee, isn't this what they call the spammers?
The aware person realizes that fighting something only makes it stronger. Indeed, when you see two people rabidly on one side or the other, it's very hard to distinguish the two. They almost appear to be the same person, willing to commit any atrocity for the sake of their ideology or economics. What more do I need to know?
So, in a roundabout way, that's why I don't participate. I've done my days of tilting at windmills. I've presented my pearls, but the swine didn't hear any of them. They've misrepresented my position countless times for their own agendas, failed to understand even the most basic of the concepts I've explained, and twisted what I've said to make me out to be something I am not. ("Spam supporter"...lol)
I have finally realized that it has less to do with the ability to understand, it's mostly that they are not willing to understand. So in that climate I should once again venture forth into that primal never-ending argumentia that is NANA?
No. I'm sorry. I have far better things to do.
Becoming what you oppose
Editorial by Dave Hayes
Many folks have asked me why I stopped "contributing" to the everlasting debates in NANA (news.admin.net-abuse.*). I generally respond with something along the lines of "I don't wish to become that which I oppose". Indeed, recently I've "plonked" several entities (among them the terrorists known as "spamhaus" and "spews") simply because I no longer wish to beat my head against the stone wall of ignorance.
Terrorists? Yes that's right. One definition of "terrorism" is "attacking innocents in the name of your cause". Nowhere is this more ironic and extreme than in the deeds of my old nemesi, the anti-spammer zealotry collective, some of whom are now known as spamhaus and spews. The terrorism they practice is implemented in the form of "mail blacklists".
Blacklists are not a new notion. In the 1950's, the infamous McCarthy blacklists contained names of "possible communists", which ultimately led us to a more sterile culture.
The social costs of what came to be called McCarthyism have yet to be computed. By conferring its prestige on the red hunt, the state did more than bring misery to the lives of hundreds of thousands of Communists, former Communists, fellow travelers, and unlucky liberals. It weakened American culture and it weakened itself. ---Victor Navasky, Naming Names (New York: Viking Press, 1980)
Modern internet technology has created our own version(s) of social blacklists. Many anti-spam zealots have turned to this method for freeing their mailboxes from spam. Simply expressed, these organizations maintain databases which are supposed to contain the IP addresses of known spammers. They then provide these databases to various electronic mail servers, so that the servers can reject email based on what's in these databases.
The bottom line is, if the machine that sends your email is on this list, a number of mail servers will automatically reject all email from your server.
If (and only if) they restricted these blacklists to actual spammers, I doubt very seriously that I would have problem with this practice. If we could trust human beings to maintain a logical and calm viewpoint about life, I doubt that I would have a problem with these blacklists. Unfortunately we cannot trust these things in either case.
Fact: Spamhaus and spews have added innocent IP blocks to their blacklists.
The anti-spammer idealotry goes like this: "Anyone who gets service from a network friendly to spammers is supporting the spammers and therefore our enemy." (The friend of my enemy is my enemy too?)
So here's how this goes. Once a network provider is branded "a communist"...er excuse me..."a spammer", ALL of their IP ranges are blocked. Typically a network provider is providing services for smaller service providers, many of whom would never and have never engaged in spamming of any kind. No notice is really given on these blacklisting events, rather you find out when mail starts bouncing to some destination. Usually an end customer is the first to notice, and that customers is directed by the bounce to complain to...their own ISP!
In essence, the customer is tricked into presenting the terrorist anti-spam agenda to the ISP. The ISP turns around and finds out that -their- provider (or provider's provider) is what the anti-spam zealots want "silenced". Until that target complies with their arbitrary agenda (usually of the form "stop spamming", but this is not always true...see below), everyone else has to suffer with electronic mail blocks.
What's wrong with this? Everything.
*
First and foremost, the most often heard reason anti-spammers are so rabid about anti-spam is "it makes electronic mail unusable for average people". If this is true, then how does blocking innocent email help this situation? In fact, blacklisting innocents contributes to the problem. The hypocrisy here is so thick I doubt even a knife can cut it.
*
The dishonor of the practice of blacklists is amazing. Many naive internet mail administrators add blacklists like spamhaus "because they work to reduce spam". Lots of these sites have no idea that they are being cut off from legitimate email because of these machinations. If their customers really knew that they were cutoff, I wonder how many would still buy service? Getting rid of spam is one thing, blocking that key business email that means $100K in sales is quite another.
Lets take this one step further. Person A buys email service from ISP X who is using Spamhaus to block spam email. Person A's daughter, who's income is very low due to being a student in college, buys email service from ISP Y (because it's cheap) who uses IAP S as their connectivity. ISP Y buys network from IAP S because it's cheap. Due to real life constraints, the only contact Person A has with their daughter is email.
IAP S suddenly gets put on the anti-spam master blacklist. The same day, Person A's daughter has a car accident. A roommate desperately tries to send email to Person A but it's blocked. Worse, it's blocked because these zealots have an idealogical cause which is set up to be more important than a person's life. This is the height of dishonor.
*
The practice is quite criminal by many definitions and with criminals on all sides:
o
Any ISP that is blocked is told to "comply with our demands or be blacklisted" (a.k.a. extortion).
o
Attacking innocents in the name of their cause (a.k.a. terrorism).
o
Since the control of the blacklist is out of the hands of the service provider who subscribes to it, by law you must clearly state "random people may be blocked to your email box by other people who are not under our control" before selling "email services". I've never seen this stated on any ISP ad. (a.k.a false advertising)
o
Blacklisting ISPs is a good way of knocking them out of business (a.k.a restraint of trade)
o
If spam ever goes away, these organizations will also. Thus they have a vested interest in keeping spam alive (a.k.a playing both sides of the street)
Do note that the anti-spammers claim these practices are not criminal and will "reduce economic support for the 'spam friendly' ISPs". This claim is quite erroneous:
Fact: Spammer companies have far more money than most innocents.
Yep, to the tune of millions of dollars per month. SPAM is big business. Do you think that the income of one little ISP with 1000 customers is going to make any difference against the large income of a spam company? No! All that does is clear more bandwidth for the spammers to use, should the little ISP cave in and switch to another provider.
While there's no proof (that I'm aware of), it's not so far fetched to open up questions of collusion between "the providers that are anti-spam" and the "anti-spam blacklists". Certain providers, to compete, may pay the blacklist groups lots of money to keep attacking innocents, which gets them more customers in the long run as ISPs fold because they cant afford the connectivity provided by the "anti-spam supporter" providers.
I've established some things here:
1. In my opinion, blacklists are bad.
2. The anti-spammers are resorting to clearly criminal activities to further their goals: extortion, restraint-of-trade, terrorism.
3. The effect the anti-spammers are trying to have by blocking innocents only works to destroy email connectivity, the cure is worse than the disease.
This brings me to my concluding point. The original complaint against spammers included accusations of being criminal. Most spammers are considered criminal. Yet look at the anti-spammers! In their undying eternal zeal to end spam, they have become just what they oppose! Criminals and email destroyers. Gee, isn't this what they call the spammers?
The aware person realizes that fighting something only makes it stronger. Indeed, when you see two people rabidly on one side or the other, it's very hard to distinguish the two. They almost appear to be the same person, willing to commit any atrocity for the sake of their ideology or economics. What more do I need to know?
So, in a roundabout way, that's why I don't participate. I've done my days of tilting at windmills. I've presented my pearls, but the swine didn't hear any of them. They've misrepresented my position countless times for their own agendas, failed to understand even the most basic of the concepts I've explained, and twisted what I've said to make me out to be something I am not. ("Spam supporter"...lol)
I have finally realized that it has less to do with the ability to understand, it's mostly that they are not willing to understand. So in that climate I should once again venture forth into that primal never-ending argumentia that is NANA?
No. I'm sorry. I have far better things to do.
posted bylinford in: linford
Steve Linford SpamHaus.org (Spamhaus Project) to acquire SPEWS blacklist and adopt the SPEWS technology platform and non removal policy.
Combined Company to blacklist up to 20% of Internet IP space from which offending companies will not be removed.
London. - August 11, 2006. Steve Linford AKA Spamhaus, today announced a definitive agreement to acquire the SPEWS Blacklist and its technology in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $5.4 million.
The combination of Spamhaus and SPEWS will provide customers a more powerful set of solutions for blacklisting and punishing Spammers and SPAM friendly hosting companies by listing the IPs in a common black list with no ability for removal. I am tired of chasing these spammers and playing the Wack-a-Mole game with them, as soon as I shut their site down it is up again on another hosting company.
From now on offending companies that support spammers or email marketers in any way shape or form will be blacklisted and will have no chance of removal as both a corporate Identity and the IPs themselves. Basically they will have to throw away the imprisoned IPs and change their corporate identity to do business on the Internet. We also will be including Blog Spam in our area of authority and blacklisting Blog providers and bloggers that do not meet our standards. We feel that compelling internet users to create content and experiences across multiple operating systems, devices and media with set standards is in the best interest of all Internet users. Together, the two companies will meet a wider set of customer needs and have a significantly greater opportunity to grow into new markets, Regretfully there will always be a small amount of "Collateral Damage" to innocent users that happen to be on the same IP space as a spammer or outlaw content website, however we feel that this is an expectable inconvenience for users considering the greater good of removing spam from the Internet.
Under the terms of the acquisition agreement, which has been approved by both boards of directors, Spamhaus stockholders will receive, at a fixed exchange ratio, 0.69 shares of SPEWS stock for every share of Spamhaus stock in a tax-free exchange.
In the combined company, Steve Linford will continue as chief executive officer and John Reid will remain president and chief operating officer.
Both Spamhaus and SPEWS are passionate about creating and enabling Blacklists that will once and for all curb the growing Spam problem by blocking or "Imprisoning" large blocks of Internet IP space from which there will be no parole and completely blocking internet traffic from specific countries that the are the source of 90% of Internet Spam IE, Russia and China and the Netherlands.
Our combined teams and small army of Internet anti-spam watch dog volunteers will be a powerful force for policing Internet content and forcing hosts to shut down sites that are linked to spam, owned by spammers or promote email marketing in anyway. We are the world leader in Blacklist innovation based around cutting-edge platforms for delivering blacklist feeds, content and applications." This acquisition will give Spamhaus the power to shut down any website no matter where it is located in the world by giving internet hosting providers and bandwidth providers a choice to comply with our policies or to go out of business.
The two companies are developing integration plans that build on the cultural similarities and the best business and product development practices from each company.
Steve Linford
Spamhaus Project.
Combined Company to blacklist up to 20% of Internet IP space from which offending companies will not be removed.
London. - August 11, 2006. Steve Linford AKA Spamhaus, today announced a definitive agreement to acquire the SPEWS Blacklist and its technology in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $5.4 million.
The combination of Spamhaus and SPEWS will provide customers a more powerful set of solutions for blacklisting and punishing Spammers and SPAM friendly hosting companies by listing the IPs in a common black list with no ability for removal. I am tired of chasing these spammers and playing the Wack-a-Mole game with them, as soon as I shut their site down it is up again on another hosting company.
From now on offending companies that support spammers or email marketers in any way shape or form will be blacklisted and will have no chance of removal as both a corporate Identity and the IPs themselves. Basically they will have to throw away the imprisoned IPs and change their corporate identity to do business on the Internet. We also will be including Blog Spam in our area of authority and blacklisting Blog providers and bloggers that do not meet our standards. We feel that compelling internet users to create content and experiences across multiple operating systems, devices and media with set standards is in the best interest of all Internet users. Together, the two companies will meet a wider set of customer needs and have a significantly greater opportunity to grow into new markets, Regretfully there will always be a small amount of "Collateral Damage" to innocent users that happen to be on the same IP space as a spammer or outlaw content website, however we feel that this is an expectable inconvenience for users considering the greater good of removing spam from the Internet.
Under the terms of the acquisition agreement, which has been approved by both boards of directors, Spamhaus stockholders will receive, at a fixed exchange ratio, 0.69 shares of SPEWS stock for every share of Spamhaus stock in a tax-free exchange.
In the combined company, Steve Linford will continue as chief executive officer and John Reid will remain president and chief operating officer.
Both Spamhaus and SPEWS are passionate about creating and enabling Blacklists that will once and for all curb the growing Spam problem by blocking or "Imprisoning" large blocks of Internet IP space from which there will be no parole and completely blocking internet traffic from specific countries that the are the source of 90% of Internet Spam IE, Russia and China and the Netherlands.
Our combined teams and small army of Internet anti-spam watch dog volunteers will be a powerful force for policing Internet content and forcing hosts to shut down sites that are linked to spam, owned by spammers or promote email marketing in anyway. We are the world leader in Blacklist innovation based around cutting-edge platforms for delivering blacklist feeds, content and applications." This acquisition will give Spamhaus the power to shut down any website no matter where it is located in the world by giving internet hosting providers and bandwidth providers a choice to comply with our policies or to go out of business.
The two companies are developing integration plans that build on the cultural similarities and the best business and product development practices from each company.
Steve Linford
Spamhaus Project.
posted bylinford in: linford