SPIM SPAM and FLIM FLAM
Tags :Rant
I don't seem to have this issue (finger's
crossed), but apparently it is becoming one for so many people they are
producing stats. What is it I am talking about? Spam on instant
messaging, now referred to as SPIM.
Pornographic messages make up the majority of SPIM
at 70 percent, followed by "get rich" schemes at 12 percent,
product sales at 9 percent, and loans or finance messages at 5 percent,
according to Radicati's research. Nearly all (90 percent) of SPIM messages
are short one-line sentences followed by a URL, such as, "Hello, check
out my Web cam at www.xxx.com."
Do that many of you get that much IM spam? I know it used to show
on ICQ a lot, but not on AOL or the others for me. Has it become
such an issue that we need spam filters for IM now? You can read
the short article on it here.
It includes a growth chart from Ferris Research.
They state that experts
are split about the marketing potential across IM. Marketing potential?
You mean the ability to piss people off more than the email that
we fight already? How about just dropping pamphlets on my house instead
and cut out the technology middleman. Sure we save the killing of
a few billion trees by using the computer driven one. Bits and bytes
are free right? Well not really. Someone eats the bandwidth
cost as small as it might be. I can see logging in to IM and having
30-40 instant pop-ups saying come buy this product as Seen on TV!
Lose weight fast; stop dandelions from growing; paint your walls with ease;
learn how to make better braids in your hair with this simple tool; remove
stains with this new Mango sauce!
I see the use of controlled buddy lists and accepting messages only from
those on your list getting turned on more often if this continues to grow.
MSN and Yahoo have authorizations to let them add you to their list,
while AOL takes the other approach and lets you specify if anyone, no one
or only those on your buddy list can see you. Which approach do you
take?
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On Friday, April 2nd, 2004 by Chris Miller