[WSIS CS-Plenary] Spam as an issue
Jonathan Cave
j.a.k.cave at warwick.ac.uk
Tue Feb 1 16:20:21 GMT 2005
At 12:58 01/02/2005, Fede wrote:
>On Tue, 2005-02-01 at 10:14 +0100, Vittorio Bertola wrote:
> > So you think that there is no need for global regulation of spam?[...]
> > it will just let you lost in cross-border legal procedures while the
> > spammer has all the time to finish the job and disappear.
>
>I have a feeling that you forget that there is a reason why those pesky
>"cross-border legal procedures" exist: to keep citizens of country A under
>their own legal framework, instead of having them subject to country B's
>laws. Those legal systems are different for a reason.
That's not wholly accurate - there are mutual recognition and
choice-of-venue provisions. In general, a citizen of A can be prosecuted
for an offence committed in B if the act is also an offence in A, though
there are important practical questions about who bears the burden of
prosecution, where the trial takes place and how law officers from one
jurisdiction get evidence from another. The Indymedia case lately discussed
in this list comes to mind...
>Of course, spam is a problem. Over 70% of my incoming mail is spam, and
>I'm not happy with all the spam from spam-friendly countries, but maybe
>that's the price we need to pay to avoid the current tendency towards
>blanket "harmonization" of everything.
Co-ordination and local versions of common standards are attractive
alternatives to harmonisation. Things don't have to be the same, just aware
of and sympathetic to each other.
But political will is very important: a jurisdiction that has a positive
'trade balance from its citizens' spamming activities abroad will be no
more likely to cooperate in effective spam control than a jurisdiction that
is a net seller in eCommerce would be to support Internet taxes or duties.
On the other hand, many of these 'independent' jurisdiction find
international pressures a handy way to win domestic battles (the history of
the WTO telecom agreement being an exact case in point).
>Not to mention that spam will stop dead on its track the moment the
>majority of people are educated enough to stop falling for it. Calling for
>better and deeper education strategies for all is something everyone could
>probably agree on as a goal we want WSIS to concentrate on. It would
>eliminate not only spam, but a lot of other problems, and create a lot of
>opportinities. More efficiency in getting unpleasant people behind bars
>doesn't have nearly as positive a ring to it.
As far as I am aware, the *vast* majority of people are already aware of at
least the current types of spam. But for spammers sending millions of
messages a day the enterprise is profitable if even a tiny minority
respond. It is also a bit unfair to say 'falling for it' as though spam and
fraud were one and the same. True, much of it is phishing for identity
theft opportunities - but the majority to date consists of unsolicited
commercial offers - if people want to buy these goods, they will. If spam
is a cheap way to reach these customers, it will be used. Why should spam
be easier to stop than junk mail or junk faxes? The public interest arises
because the costs imposed on others
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3352111.stm) are very large compared
to those experienced by the spammers. Unless the education solution is much
more effective than any other education programme has ever been, it won't
make a difference. By the way, is there any evidence that spamming is
inversely correlated with either general education or Information Society
readiness indicators?
Jonathan
> Fede
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