Don't Buy (Ad Space) from Spammers

By By Brian McWilliams, Guest Columnist | Published January 10, 2005, 12:00 AM

PERSPECTIVE Imagine the uproar if Symantec bought advertising banners at VX Heavens, an underground Web site for computer virus writers. Or if Verisign paid for ad space at Carders Portal, a favorite site of phishing scammers. Even worse, what if both security companies were promoting how-to books about writing viruses or conducting identity theft?

People would rightly be asking, whose side are these guys on, anyway? Why are they giving money and weapons to the enemy? (The paranoid have long suspected antivirus software companies of supporting virus-writers in order to keep business going strong.)

Those same questions were on my mind last week when I spotted a new ad at SpecialHam.com, a Web site where spammers get together and trade e-mail lists, line up "bulletproof" Web hosting, and otherwise make deals. A large banner ad promoting a new book from Syngress called Inside the Spam Cartel currently appears in the "Sponsor" section on the SpecialHam homepage. Other sponsors in the banner rotation include Blackbox Hosting, a notorious firm that provides Web sites to spammers, and Send-Safe, a Russian company that makes spam-sending software.

According to the book's cover, Spam Cartel is a guide for "security professionals, law enforcement, hackers, and programmers" who want to learn about "the dark side" of spam, presumably to better protect Internet users from junk e-mail.

So, why the ads at SpecialHam? If Spam Cartel truly is any good at revealing how spammers work (nearly a fourth of the book is devoted to defeating spam filters), won't promoting the book at SpecialHam hurt the efforts of spam fighters, even as the ads line the pockets of the site's operators?

The book's author is anonymous and claims to be a spammer, so I don't expect him to lose any sleep over the ethics of advertising at a spammer site. But the stakes are a little different for the book's technical editor, Jeffrey Posluns, and the fellow who wrote the Foreward, Stu Sjouwerman. Posluns is a certified information security professional (CISSP), while Sjouwerman runs Sunbelt Software, a company that sells anti-spam software. Both would seem to have a clear conflict of interest if they were to aid and abet spammers.

Now, I've always been a big believer in full disclosure. I see no point in trying to repress information about vulnerabilities in software systems. So I don't object in principle to Spam Cartel spilling the beans about how to be a spammer. (In the near future, I hope to do a proper review of whether it succeeds in that task.)

What bothers me is the duplicity. You can't claim to be educating people for battle against junk email, while at the same time giving both money and weapons to spammers. With these ads, it's crystal clear whose side Spam Cartel is on.

Editor's note: After this piece was originally posted, Syngress Publishing issued the following statement:

"Neither Syngress nor any of our associates sponsored the banner ad on SpecialHam.com in any way, shape, or form. We were completely unaware that it existed before seeing mention of it in your article. We are currently doing everything possible to have the banner removed. We do not in any way condone the spam trade and absolutely none of our marketing efforts or dollars are going towards any Web site, magazine, group, etc to support the spam trade or to entice them to buy our book."

Brian McWilliams is a journalist and author of Spam Kings: The real story behind the high-rolling hucksters pushing porn, pills, and @*#?% enlargements.

Comments

To further add to your conspiracy theories...Sunbelt is a majorly Scientologist company.

Here is the guys site: http://myreligion.scientologist.net/stusjouwerman/

Score: 0

|

Scientology happens to have quite a reputation for spam...

http://www.cs.uu.nl/wais...logy/spam-team-faq.html

and more here

http://blog.glennf.com/mtarchives/003714.html

Wooo....

Score: 0

|

...so the man who runs Sunbelt Software is assisting spammers...another reason to dislike PestPatrol.

Score: 0

|

Yes, Sunbelt is a major distributor of PestPatrol (among many other products)...

But if I'm not mistaken, Sunbelt also have a legal agreement with GIANT, and as a condition of the acquisition Microsoft's now providing them with their spyware signatures for the next couple of years too.

I'm sure MS is thrilled by this kind of stuff...

Score: 0

|

I believe this conflicts with CISSP ethics.. He might have an issue with keeping his certification.

Protect society, the commonwealth, and the infrastructure

http://www.cissp.com/cissps/Ethics_Code.asp

Score: 0

|

Can Linux do BitLocker better than Windows 7?

Betanews kicks off a new series with a look at how the Linux operating system's FDE stacks up against BitLocker, the Windows feature that today commands a $120 premium.

Firefox 3.5: The need for speed

This has been the big payoff week for Mozilla's developers, who worked overtime to squeeze out the last drop of performance from their new JavaScript engine.

'GeoHot' gets a shower, cleans up nice, reveals new iPhone 3G S jailbreak

Either puberty has been very kind to the author of the new 'Purple Ra1n' jailbreak tool, or George Hotz may also have some adequate Photoshop skills.

What's Next: Obama gives 'Einstein' the go-ahead, while China gives 'Green Dam' a thumbs-down

Plus: If you put up a Web site and name it after you and you're a federal judge, you might not want a bunch of weird nudity hanging around on it.

Why would Windows 7 customers spend $120 more for BitLocker?

For pre-orders from now until July 11, Microsoft is offering the Windows 7 Professional SKU for a very steep discount. So why invest in Ultimate?

Geeks vs. journalists: A tale of two worldviews

Recovery with Angela Gunn Why geeks think most mainstream journalism is flaky, and why the mainstream thinks geeks are trying to kill them. (They're both right.)

Fire in downtown Seattle data center knocks out businesses, online services

Small fire has global impact with payment centers, city services down.

Hybrid satellite cell phones aren't far off

The first satellite in Terrestar's hybrid cellular/satellite phone network has been launched.

SMS could be a critical iPhone vulnerability, says white-hat hacker

Mac hacker Charlie Miller knows how to get into your iPhone.

Will Oracle's Java-based Fusion middleware 'fuse' with Java?

Now that Oracle has acquired Sun Microsystems, Java developers and supporters are wondering when Oracle will formally welcome Java into the family.

All together now: iPhone and Palm Pre, likely to both grace O2's UK portfolio

European wireless network operator O2 has reportedly reached a deal to exclusively carry the Palm Pre in the UK. O2,...

Vista's dead: Microsoft kills an OS and no one cares

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Can you kill an operating system? Microsoft is about to find out.

Kantaris Media Player 0.5.7

July 3 - 5:34 PM ET

Wine 1.1.25

July 3 - 5:30 PM ET

ChrisTV Online! Free 4.00

July 3 - 5:22 PM ET

glu 1.0.19 RC1

July 3 - 5:11 PM ET

Website-Watcher 5.1.0 Beta 10

July 3 - 1:20 PM ET