Last year there was a spoof claim about legislation for e-mail 'postal charges'. It provoked outrage from believers in electronic liberty, people who helped build up the system we now enjoy and who had hoped for a generalised system of self-regulation, without the state getting involved.
When the on-line community was small, people could trust each other and newcomers behaved because they wanted to get accepted
. But the system has now got so big that it can not be run that way.
Junk mail needs one 'hit' per hundred or two hundred to be worth while. Junk e-mail needs maybe one per hundred thousand, which is why you might never ever get anything you'd consider in a whole lifetime of spam-reading
.
I think we need an optional system of e-mail stamps. If you want to stay open to all of the world's junk, fine. But you could pay a small fee, maybe 5 cents a shot, for every message you send. Every message you get, you might be credited 3 cents, though this last would be open to abuse from some ingenious spammer setting up two IDs, running one into massive debt to give the other ID a lot of credit for spamming. Maybe there are technical answers to this.
The point is, you allow this control, only for those who want it, but freedom from Spam would be a major blessing
. As is noted on the current BBC Online discussion, spammers are effectively stealing money from their victims
by wasting their time.
Why don't service providers try it? It could include a 'FreeList' (also called Whitelist) of people you are happy to hear from. Anything else would be at least vaguely targeted at you.
When the on-line community was small, people could trust each other and newcomers behaved because they wanted to get accepted
![[2thumbsup] [2thumbsup] [2thumbsup]](/data/assets/smilies/2thumbsup.gif)
Junk mail needs one 'hit' per hundred or two hundred to be worth while. Junk e-mail needs maybe one per hundred thousand, which is why you might never ever get anything you'd consider in a whole lifetime of spam-reading
![[morning] [morning] [morning]](/data/assets/smilies/morning.gif)
I think we need an optional system of e-mail stamps. If you want to stay open to all of the world's junk, fine. But you could pay a small fee, maybe 5 cents a shot, for every message you send. Every message you get, you might be credited 3 cents, though this last would be open to abuse from some ingenious spammer setting up two IDs, running one into massive debt to give the other ID a lot of credit for spamming. Maybe there are technical answers to this.
The point is, you allow this control, only for those who want it, but freedom from Spam would be a major blessing
![[noevil] [noevil] [noevil]](/data/assets/smilies/noevil.gif)
![[sadeyes] [sadeyes] [sadeyes]](/data/assets/smilies/sadeyes.gif)
Why don't service providers try it? It could include a 'FreeList' (also called Whitelist) of people you are happy to hear from. Anything else would be at least vaguely targeted at you.