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Anti-Spam Research Group (ASRG) 56 th IETF Meeting March 20, 2003 Paul Q. Judge.

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Presentation on theme: "Anti-Spam Research Group (ASRG) 56 th IETF Meeting March 20, 2003 Paul Q. Judge."— Presentation transcript:

1 Anti-Spam Research Group (ASRG) 56 th IETF Meeting March 20, 2003 Paul Q. Judge

2 Agenda bash, Paul Judge, 5 mins Review charter, Paul Judge, 10 mins -----Background and Views of the Problem----- Size of Problem, Laura Atkins, SpamCon, 10 mins The Email Service Providers View: Difficulties of communicating consent, Hans Peter Brondmo, NAI Email Service Provider Coalition, 10 mins Best Practices for End-Users, John Morris, Center for Democracy and Technology, 10 mins How Lawsuits Against Spammers Can Aid Spam-Filtering Technology, Jon Praed, Internet Law Group, 15 mins -----RG Work Items----- Review progress and milestones, Paul Judge, 15 mins Taxonomy of anti-spam technologies, Paul Judge, 20 mins -----Overviews of Different Approaches----- Summary of Proposed Authentication Systems, Philip Hallam-Baker, Verisign, 15 mins A Consent-Based Architecture, David Brussin, ePrivacy Group, 15 mins A Cost-Based Model: “Economic disincentives”, Balachander Krishnamurthy, AT&T Research, 15 mins -----Wrap Up----- Next Steps, 10 mins Agenda

3 Review ASRG Charter

4 Focus and Motivation Focus: –ASRG focuses on the problem of unwanted email messages, loosely referred to as spam Motivation: –Scale, growth, and effect of spam –Was nuisance, Now a significant portion of email traffic –Stands to affect local networks, the infrastructure, and the way that people use email

5 Consent-based Communication Definition of spam is inconsistent and unclear Generalize the problem into one of “consent-based communication” Expressing consent closer to the source makes it more difficult to satisfy all downstream receivers

6 Consent-based Framework Consent Expression Policy Enforcement Source Tracking

7 The purpose of the ASRG Understand the problem and collectively propose and evaluate solutions

8 Understand the problem Taxonomy of solutions Characterization of the problem Requirements for solutions Understand the scope of spam legislation

9 Propose Solutions Novel approaches Standards based on common techniques Combination of approaches Best Practices/Education

10 Evaluate Solutions Usefulness –Effectiveness –Accuracy Cost –Effect on normal use of the system (Change in use, Difficulty of use, delay, etc ) –Monetary costs of using the system (Charge, Bandwidth, Computation, etc )

11 Interaction Developers SoftwareVendors Researchers ISPs Administrators Users Government Build It Enforce It Live With It Deploy It

12 The rest of the solution Best Practices Technology Legislation Education

13 Interaction between Technology & Law Technological Effectiveness Legal Effectiveness Casual Spammer Forwards Chain Letters Hobbyist Spammer Mass BCC mailings with normal clients Small-Scale Spammer Uses spamming toolkit and address CDs Hacker Spammer Develops tools to bypass filters Large-Scale Spammer Well-funded and knowledgeable


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