Lucy on Reminder -- /Message
Janna on The Week Ahead
Elaine on Reminder -- /Message
Elaine on The Week Ahead
omaha hold em on Mary Jo Foley on Microsoft Needs To Say No To Web 2.0
morgan on John Cass on Nokia N90 Blogger Campaign
bobbie on Corante 2.0: Hubs In A Network Of Stars
tim on Get Real Minute 29 Nov 2005
penis enlargement: penis enlargement
online backgammon: online backgammon
Upskirt: Upskirt
Hot Teens: Hot Teens
from Jhony: :-)
from Jhony: :-)
poker online: poker online
from Jhony: :-)
from Jhony: :-)
from Jhony: :-)
I was reading the technology newswire at SuicideGirls (proof that I read the articles there), and saw that MessageLabs has announced that 80% of all U.S. email is now spam.
Bob Sullivan[from MSNBC]The firm tracks virus and spam volume by filtering every e-mail destined for its 8,500 customers, and checking it for spam or viruses.
"Twelve months ago we were just about to pass that 50 percent mark [internationally]. No one thought it could keep up that pace of increase, but it has," said Brian Czarny, vice president of marketing at Message Labs.
He made an even more sober prediction: "In terms of what we could in a year, we could see percentages in the upper 90s," he said.
Postini Inc. uses similar technology, scanning some 200 million e-mails each day, and announced similar results at a Congressional hearing on spam held yesterday. According to the firm, 83 percent of the e-mails it filtered last month for its mostly U.S.-based clients was spam. That was up from 78 percent in January, when the new anti-spam federal law, the CAN-SPAM Act, took effect.
I was supposed to speak at the INBOX conference later this week (I have been trapped by jury duty, so I can't go) on the "Is Email Dead?" panel. Well, duh.
I really would like to completely switch over to IM, and treat email like I do postal mail, where I already expect 90% crap.