Product Details
Anti-Spam Measures: Analysis and Design

Anti-Spam Measures: Analysis and Design
By Guido Schryen

List Price: $69.95
Price: $52.93 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

41 new or used available from $26.48

Average customer review:

Product Description

The primary goal of this work is the methodical analysis of the potential, limitations, advantages, and drawbacks of anti-spam measures. These determine to which extent the measures can contribute to the reduction of spam in the long run. The range of considered anti-spam measures includes legislative, organizational, behavioral and technological ones. Furthermore, the conceptual development and analysis of an infrastructural email framework that features such a complementary application, is pointed out.

After the presentation of the technological and organizational facets, the framework is analyzed twofold: its theoretical effectiveness is assessed with the aid of the formal model mentioned above, its storage and traffic requirements are analyzed quantitatively. The author further considers deployment issues, as the framework will have to be integrated in both the technological and the organizational Internet infrastructure.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #950640 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-08-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 209 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review

From the reviews:

"Schryen’s book basically contains his German habilitation dissertation. … This work is a methodical analysis of the potential, limitations, advantages, and drawbacks of antispam measures. ... In summary, Schryen provides a comprehensive overview of the state of the art of the antispam field. An excellent work for those working in this field. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Faculty; researchers; professionals." (C. Tappert, CHOICE, Vol. 45 (6), 2008)

"This book investigates the problem of email spam … . It is well written and important concepts … are exhaustively outlined along with relevant code headers and sensible discussions. I was actually very impressed with the work here and once I started to delve into the contents of this book, I did discover a lot more about this field … . a tour de force of anti-spam measures and I would hope that this book will become a bedtime read for researchers in the field." (Kevin Curran, Informer, Issue 26, Spring, 2008)

"This book … reviews the history of spam, assesses the current situation and the economic significance of spam, analyzes current anti-spam measures, and proposes changes to the email infrastructure framework to address spam. … Anyone frustrated by spam will find the book to be an excellent reference … . The book is a timely review of the current state of spam email on the Internet. It contains thorough references, several appendices, and a good index." (David B. Henderson, ACM Computing Reviews, January, 2009)


Customer Reviews

deployment of methods is a big issue4
Several years ago, Bill Gates famously predicted that spam would soon be defeated. Well, we're not there yet, and this book is proof of that. It describes how antispam measures evolved over recent years. In a competitive feedback loop as spammers responded with adaptive changes to the nature of spam.

One good way to look at this book is to compare it with one of the first books on spam, written in 1998, Stopping Spam. The 9 years between these books led to considerable changes. The biggest difference is the use of a blacklist of domains, applied against links in the message body. A simple and devastatingly effective approach. Easy to understand and implement by an ISP. Yet in 1998, it had occurred to no one. Schryen describes this usage.

Other current ideas include bolting down the mail relays, and securing the sender address. Various ways are mooted, usually involving cryptographic certificates that can be used by a receiving mail provider to authenticate the message or parts thereof. SPF and Domain Keys are explained. But the book devotes space to explaining how deployment of any antispam scheme is also a huge issue. Some methods that require an overhaul of the email protocols, or of other Internet protocols, are awkward for this reason. All the more so if a substantial uptake of the methods across the Internet is needed for efficacy.