My Spam analysis for the week of Nov 2 - 8, 2009
This is the latest entry in my weekly series about classifications of spam, according to my custom filter rules used by MailWasher Pro. The categories are shown on the "Statistics" page > "Junk Mail," as a pie chart, based on my custom filters and blacklist. The amount of email flagged as spam is shown on the "Summary" page of Statistics.
Spam levels have decreased 6% this week from last week's level. Fluctuations in spam levels sometimes are seasonal, or may be due to problems or successes Bot-masters have with maintaining the command and control (C&C) servers used to reactivate sleeping zombie computers in their spam Botnets. Or, these changes in spam levels may be caused when large numbers of zombie computers are disinfected, or taken offline by the ISPs who provide Internet connectivity to them. In case you didn't already know this, almost all spam is now sent from "zombie" computers in spam Botnets, unbeknown to the owners of those infected PCs.
The classifications of spam in my analysis can help you adjust your email filters according to what is most common, on a weekly basis. Most of the spam this week was for knock-off (counterfeit) Chinese watches, male enhancement and fake pharmacy scams and counterfeit Viagra. Not ot be out-done, the Nigerian scammers were busy again last week, promoting their usual 419 and lottery scams. 100% of all email coming to me, with African IPs in the headers, are 419 scams.
Since virtually all spam is now sent from and hosted on hijacked PCs that are zombie members of various spam Botnets and all email sender addresses are forged, there is no point in complaining to the listed From or Reply To address. These accounts are inserted by the same script that composes the spam on the compromised PCs. These are innocent spam victims themselves, whose harvested names are reused in forged From addresses. This practice is known as a "Joe Job."
See my extended comments for this week's breakdown of spam by category, for Nov 2 - 8, 2009 and the latest additions to my custom MailWasher Pro filters.
MailWasher Pro spam category breakdown for Nov 2 - 8, 2009. Spam amounted to 6% of my incoming email this week. This represents a -6% change from last week.
"Other Filters": | 20.00% |
---|---|
Viagra: | 13.33% |
Lottery Scams: | 6.67% |
Counterfeit Watches & other knock-offs: | 6.67% |
Known Spam TO: | 6.67% |
Known Spam User Agent: | 6.67% |
Pharmaceutical Spam: | 6.67% |
Hidden ISO or ASCII Subject: | 6.67% |
No Subject: | 6.67% |
Blocked Country: | 6.67% |
African Sender: | 6.67% |
Blacklisted Senders: | 6.67% |
MailWasher Pro intercepts POP3 and IMAP email before you download it to your desktop email client (e.g: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Windows Live Mail) and scans it for threats or spam content, then either manually or automatically deletes any messages matching your pre-determined criteria and custom filters. It is my primary line of defense against incoming spam, scams, phishing and exploit attacks. If you are not already using this fine anti-spam tool I invite to to read about it on my MailWasher Pro web page. You can download the latest version and try it for free for a month. Registration is only required once, for the life of the program.
To protect your computer from web pages rigged with exploit codes, malware in email attachments, dangerous links to hostile web pages, JavaScript redirects, Phishing scams, or router DNS attack codes, I recommend Trend Micro Internet Security. It has strong realtime monitoring modules that stop rootkits and spam Trojans from installing themselves into your operating system. Also known as PC-cillin, it is very frequently updated as new and altered malware definitions become available and it checks for web based threats and new malware definitions by searching secure online servers owned by Trend Micro. This is referred to as "in-the-cloud" security.
All of the spam and scams targeting my accounts were either automatically deleted by my custom MailWasher Pro spam filters, or if they made it through, was reported to SpamCop, of which I am a reporting member, and manually deleted. MailWasher Pro is able to forward messages marked as spam to SpamCop, which then sends a confirmation email to you, containing a link. You must click on the enclosed reporting link and open it in your browser, then manually submit your report. This is how SpamCop wants it done.
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