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Microsoft Revises Anti-Spam Standard

malebolgia   on 25 October 2004 - 19:12 · 10 comments & 720 views

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Microsoft Corp. on Monday said it had revised its proposal to weed out "spam" e-mail to win over skeptical Internet engineers who have been reluctant to adopt technology owned by the dominant software company. Microsoft officials said they have revised their SenderID protocol to work better with an existing standard and have narrowed their patent application to make sure it does not cover other proposals. The changes have won over at least one important player. America Online Inc., a division of Time Warner In., said it would now begin testing the protocol again after abandoning it one month ago.

Spammers often appropriate the e-mail addresses of others to slip through content filters, a tactic known as "spoofing." Microsoft's Sender ID is one of several proposals that would allow America Online and other Internet providers to check that a message from joe@example.com actually comes from example.com's server computers. Messages that do not match up could be safely rejected as spam. The technology would be invisible to everyday users. Microsoft in May combined its Sender ID proposal with another developed by entrepreneur Meng Wong and submitted them to the standards-setting Internet Engineering Task Force for approval.

News source: Reuters


Thanks to Morgan and Carlo for the heads-up on this one!

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(1 reply) #1 Sn1p3t on 25 Oct 2004 - 19:15

Looks like Microsoft would rather stop spam than lock more market share.
Let's hope the Apache group will accept it.
#1.1 cheesegoduk on 25 Oct 2004 - 23:31
ROFL
(4 replies) #2 Sushubh on 25 Oct 2004 - 19:59
is not google already using yahoo's sponsored technique on gmail?
#2.1 /dev/null on 25 Oct 2004 - 21:11
QUOTE
is not google already using yahoo's sponsored technique on gmail?



Yes, Google's Gmail is using Yahoo!'s DomainKeys filtering software.


mv * > /dev/null
#2.2 Sushubh on 25 Oct 2004 - 21:46
so google has implemented something which microsoft is still developing? cool...

not for the first time that has happened.
#2.3 Jugalator on 25 Oct 2004 - 22:15
QUOTE
so google has implemented something which microsoft is still developing? cool...

I don't think MS is involved in that standard?
#2.4 Sushubh on 25 Oct 2004 - 22:40
the main aim is similar... isn't it? to stop phishing mails... ??

same with google search and msn search or gmail and hotmail or google desktop search and microsoft desktop search??
(1 reply) #3 mcovey on 25 Oct 2004 - 20:33
um... what about users like me who send their mail from several servers. I have a domain that has managed hosting so the "official" servers are my hosts servers but sometimes I use Yahoo! Mail to send them, My ISPs SMTP server or even my own. So what does this mean for me?

I'm telling people... PGP is the best way and it is ALREADY THERE. It verifies the senders identity, encrypts the message and is completely FREE!
#3.1 Andareed on 25 Oct 2004 - 22:05
Both PGP and S/MIME are great for verification and encryption. The problem with both is that you somehow have to get a users public key. DomainKeys (afaik) uses public key encryption and stores the pub keys in the dns records, so it is sort of using the PGP / S/MIME idea.
#4 greg098 on 26 Oct 2004 - 02:42
i get like 200 spam mail a day....help me

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