Anti-spam activists have upped the ante in their fight against junk email by publishing the details - including credit card information - of people who've ordered spamming services online. Activists published details from order forms left on a monumentally insecure spam services Web site, run by notorious American spammer Robert Soloway, on the newsgroup news.admin.net-abuse.email (NANAE). Names, addresses, phone numbers of seven "would-be spammers" were published on the newsgroup last week. Three of those who ordered a $129 spam run or bulk mailing lists from the site come from the UK, three from the US and one from Germany.
Australian anti-spammer Glenn Barry came across the information while tracking down the source of annoying spam junk email. This led him to the Pakistani Web site. Barry explained to El Reg his rationale for posting credit card details of people who'd ordered spamming services.
"I found the 'orders' page links which listed the orders insecurely with the full identity and credit card details of the people signing up for spamming runs wide open. I thought I would get them before they could get me with a spam run," he said.
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News source: The Reg
Australian anti-spammer Glenn Barry came across the information while tracking down the source of annoying spam junk email. This led him to the Pakistani Web site. Barry explained to El Reg his rationale for posting credit card details of people who'd ordered spamming services.
"I found the 'orders' page links which listed the orders insecurely with the full identity and credit card details of the people signing up for spamming runs wide open. I thought I would get them before they could get me with a spam run," he said.
"The problem is that people are still confused about DRM. They get stuck on areas such as piracy and protection," he said.
"But there is already a lot of technology and laws for this and DRM covers wider issues.
"It is about the application of trusted computing technologies to manage content: who can have access to what and where, for commercial use, non-commercial and a combination of these."
Garnett added that a lack of micro-payment systems, and ongoing negotiations over new business models involving DRM, are also holding back adoption.
The government needs to talk to other countries to push through common global standards demanded by consumers, along the lines of the World Trade Organisation standards that regulate international trade, he said.
Downing Street should also show its support by implementing public programmes adopting these standards, and investigate whether DRM standards can be included into European consultations.
Ian Fogg, an analyst at Jupiter Research, agreed that the government should get involved, but warned that DRM still doesn't figure high on the radar of many internet service providers.
"The internet industry has been looking at how to drive uptake and offer higher speeds, so few are looking at value added services," he said.
"This has left DRM development to just a few and the government's role should be to enable a competitive environment."

Hit the b*stards where it hurts.
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