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/v3-uk/news/1983630/new-spam-site
16 Apr 2008, Robert Jaques , V3
New figures suggest that 92.3 per cent of all email sent globally during the first three months of 2008 was spam.
The data from Sophos also indicated that 23,300 new spam-related web pages were created every day during the period, or one about every three seconds.
For the first time Turkey’s contribution to the global spam problem puts it in the top three offending countries.
Compromised computers in Turkey are now responsible for relaying 5.9 per cent of the world's junk email, compared to 3.8 per cent in the final quarter of 2007.
The US and Russia maintained first and second place respectively, but both countries managed to reduce their contribution to the worldwide spam problem compared to the final three months of 2007.
However, the number of spam messages sent from compromised Russian computers has more than doubled over the past year.
In the first quarter of 2007, Russia was in tenth position in the chart, relaying just three per cent of the world’s spam. Today this figure stands at 7.4 per cent.
Elsewhere in the chart, the UK is at number 10 with 3.4 per cent of all spam, up from 2.5 per cent and 12th place in the final quarter of 2007.
"Turkey's appearance in the top three makes for an interesting realignment so early in the year," said Carole Theriault, senior security consultant at Sophos.
"But this does not mean that other countries can give up the fight. Spam is a global problem and must be tackled as such."
The US continues to relay far more spam than any other country, but the gap is closing, suggesting that users may be receiving more education on safe computing and becoming more security savvy than before.
Do you agree?
Combat Spam
Spam is a nuisance; not only can it be offensive and expensive - costing UK companies over £1.3 billion a year - it also drains network resources taking up to 50% of available bandwidth. Furthermore the detrimental effect on productivity when mail has to be sorted manually further exacerbates the problem. In short, it is hard to overstate the threat of Spam to the successful operation of UK businesses.
But what to do about it? Unfortunately, for those organisations who think they have got the problem in hand, buying and deploying a spam filter isn?t enough to deal with the issue; businesses need to determine and manage enforceable spam policies.
To combat and eradicate spam we need a global agreement or framework to verify the source of every piece of email and its legitimacy. 85-90% of email going round the world today is spam. We need an open standard and co-operation from the major players in the industry in order to clamp down on the small amount of rogue email servers that are causing this major disruption.
Scott Nursten
managing director
s2s
Posted by Scott Nursten, managing director s2s, 16 Apr 2008