Do you believe using SpamCop has an impact on reducing spam? If so, I believe you are grossly mistaken. And, as the title says, using SpamCop does more harm than good. Stealing a phrase from another thread, "fighting the good fight" makes us all feel better, but it doesn't help.
Sure, there are minor successes. A spammer caught here, an open relay closed there. But does that do anything to slow down or stop spammers? No. And I've seen a few people post that the amount of spam has "dropped" to a hundred day by using SpamCop. But there is absolutely no evidence (IMO) that any drop in the number of spam can be directly related to specific spam reports.
Let's look at the immediate impact of reporting spam. As soon as you report spam, the ISP shuts down the spammer who can no longer send email through that ISP. YOU WISH! In reality, the BEST that happens (in almost all situations) is the ISP shuts down the spammer who has already given up on that particular window of opportunity. So the spammer just moves to the next window, and often using the same ISPs over and over and over and over again. (Just how successful has it been to shut down spam from mtu or kornet, or even gaoland who claims to have taken action?)
The next immediate impact is the spammers now have your email address. This is just as good a confirmation that they're hitting a good address as replying to have your address removed from the spammers list. Once you do that, the spammers zero in on you. Now they start to target you with directed spam, including spam using your email address as the "From" address and addressing you by name in the content. And, how many of you have had a spammer use your email address as the source of their spam? When they do that, you get hammered with all the bouncing email from all the bad addresses they blast out their spam to. And, the ISPs, clueless and uncaring as some are, are happy to return bounced mail to your address when your address wasn't used to send the spam in the first place. (And by the way, SpamCop doesn't permit you to report invalid bounced mail reports from ISPs as spam, even though they are much worse than spam, IMO.) And though I can report each spam using only seconds of my time and it must take the spammers a lot longer than that to create a spam directed at me, that doesn't make me feel better. Creating spam is the spammers job/recreation. He/she can spend much more time generating spam than any normal person would be willing to spend fighting it, unless that is your job.
And once the spammers have your address, then the amount of spam just soars. There's no stopping them now. I'm not privvy to all the techniques, but I'd guess that spammers are just as automated as SpamCop. Once they have your address, forget it. You're going to get blasted no matter what you do. If I had to do it all over again, I would NEVER submit spam reports via SpamCop. And I will strongly urge against anyone from starting to use SpamCop.
Now lets look at the next reason why using SpamCop does more harm than good. I think this is a simple numerical analysis (though I'm sure there are those of you who will argue the numbers are not right). A spammer sends a single email to you. You report it to SpamCop in an email. (If you report on the web, the number of transactions are the same. You just shift the transaction from email to a transfer to/from a web site.) SpamCop then sends you a report email. You follow that by following the link to a web site, then submitting the report. SpamCop finishes up by sending emails to one or more people on the report list. So that one spam has led to 5 or 6 messages, and frequently more, being sent over the internet. WOW! The spammer gets a free multiplier of at least 5 or 6. What else could he/she ask for?
So there you have the subject of my post. But I don't think we should sit back and do nothing. I just think that using SpamCop is not the answer and that reporting spam (even to spam[at]uce.gov) has no immediate or long-term affect. I believe we would be much better off taking the time and money we spend reporting spam and spending it on lobbying efforts to change the industry and improve the CAN-SPAM laws.
As some examples (and frankly, I have no idea if these are either do-able or could be made legal), why can't ISPs be required to pre-approve any bulk emailers sending more than some limit? So for those legitimate businesses who send out a large volume of mail (Yahoo/Google groups, for example), they would have to be pre-approved by their ISP (themselves in those examples) before they would be permitted to send the volume. The ISP would be legally responsible for insuring this.
In addition, any ISP or relay should be required to refuse email from any ISP who violates the above paragraph or relay that violates this sentence. So if the spam is coming from mtu and mtu is a known spammer site, no other sites (or sites further down the link) would accept email from that site.
I know, the major companies have been working on killing spam for years. Bill Gates declared once that spam would be gone within some small time frame. Of course, he's admitted there is not much that can be done. I'm not an internet communications expert, but my guess is the technical challenges are just too great to implement spam-stopping changes without making major, incompatible changes to the protocols. But if there are options, we, as a community, should be lobbying for changes rather than wasting our time reporting spammers.
It might take years to have an affect trying to change law, ISP policy or design, but in the end that's the only way we (SpamCop users) will be able to change the way things are.
Just my opinions.
Regards.
Dave W.
