Information, Computer and Network Security Terms Glossary and Dictionary

 

SPAM and Anti-Spam Technologies

SPAM is acryname of 鈥淪tupid Pointless Annoying Messages鈥? Spamming is the use of any electronic communications medium such as email, instant message and mobile phone messages to send unsolicited messages in bulk. The most common form of spam is that delivered in e-mail as a form of commercial advertising. However, spammers have developed a variety of spamming techniques, which vary by media: e-mail spam, instant messaging spam, Usenet newsgroup spam, Web search engines spam, weblogs spam, and mobile phone messaging spam. Spam is often used by phishers and pharmers to gather sensitive information from the Internet for personal gains.

Spamming is widely reviled, and has been the subject of legislation in a number of jurisdictions, including the United States' CAN-SPAM Act of 2003.

There are many anti-spam tools available to reduce spam from various channels. Many ISPs and email service providers have implemented anti-spam systems. The techniques used by spammers are evolving, so should be the anti-spam technologies. This is an on-going race. The main anti-spam technologies currently available include:


First generation

Second generation

Third generation

Basic MTA controls

Realtime Black Lists (RBLs)

Artificial intelligence

While lists and black lists

Signature networks

Machine learning

Keyword searching

Bayesian filtering

 

Message envelope tests

 

 

Message header tests

 

 

Simple DNS tests

 

 


 

 


Related Terms

Spam, Anti-Spam, Phishing