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Glossary
This page provides definitions for common terms and phrases that you may
encounter when working with PEP or dealing with spam in general:
- 404
- Web servers return certain numeric result codes when responding to
requests. 404 happens to be the error code that means the requested file
does not exist.
When you manage to get a spammer's web site shut down for abuse, it's said
to have been 404'd.
- ADDRESS HARVESTER
- An address harvester is a spammer tool that has no legitimate use. It
is software that can scan through web pages, mailing list archives, newsgroup
postings, bulletin boards, chat rooms, etc. and extract any and all e-mail
addresses that it finds. The spammer then adds these addresses to his list
of victims.
This is the reason you'll see people posting with a "munged" address, like
"you@islandnet.com.nospam". Beware that address harvesters are getting
smarter and can often strip out the obvious things like "nospam" (among
others).
- AUP
- Acronym for Acceptable Use Policy (aka: terms of service agreement).
Every responsible ISP has one that prohibits it's customers from participating
in network abuse such as spamming.
- BULLET PROOF
- A spammer's term for an ISP that refuses to disconnect spammers.
- C & C
- Coffee & Cats - it refers to an incident where something a person
said in a newsgroup article caused a reader to laugh hard enough to spill
their coffee on their cat, leading to mayhem. It's used in message subjects
as a warning to readers that the message contains humorous content.
- CANTER AND SIEGAL
- These are a pair of lawyers from Phoenix who gained world-wide noteriety
for spamming Usenet newsgroups with
ads for their green card services in 1994.
- CARTOONEY
- Derived from the word "attorney". Refers to a spammer's lawyers (real or
imagined) that threaten lawsuits. These are often a source of great
amusement.
- DNSbl
- Acronym for Domain Name Service Blacklist or DNS Blacklist.
These are databases that contain IP addresses of known spammers, spamhausen,
rogue networks, etc. that can be used by ISPs to block incoming mail. The
DNS part comes from the fact that you perform lookups on these databases
via the DNS system.
There are many different blacklists out there, all with different pros and
cons. Some are very effective but also block a lot of legitimate mail,
while others are a lot safer but stop very little spam.
- DSN
- Acronym for Delivery Status Notification, which is usually
an e-mail error message.
- DOUBLE OPT-IN
- Spammer speak. Spammers use this phrase to describe regular "opt-in"
mailing lists. They seem to think that a mailing list that doesn't require
confirmation is "opt-in", and by requiring a confirmation it's "double opt-in".
If you see a site that advertises "double opt-in" mailing lists it's probably
run by spammers.
- HAT COLOUR
- From the westerns where the good guys wore white and the bad guys wore
black. It refers to an ISP's stance on spam. They are said to be a
"black hat" if they permit spamming, a "white hat" if they take action
to stop/prevent spamming, or a "grey hat" if they are somewhere in the
middle.
- JOE JOB
- When a spammer forges someone else's name and e-mail address to make them
look like the spammer.
The term comes from an incident where a an ISP known as JOES.COM had a customer
that spammed. The ISP terminated his account and the spammer retaliated by
sending even more spam from another service, forging it to look like it came
from the JOES.COM administrator. JOES.COM was inundated with thousands of
complaints from recipients of the spam and eventually they had to shut down.
- LART
- Acronym for Luser Attitude Readjustment Tool, meaning to adjust
the attitude of a spammer by bringing them to the attention of their ISP.
To LART someone is to file complaints against them.
- LISTWASHING
- When you complain about a mailing list that you never signed up for
in the first place, and the admins simply remove you from the list rather
than terminating the list entirely, they are "listwashers".
- MMF
- Acronym for Make Money Fast. Refers to any type of spam
that promises to make you wealthy, but originally it referred to the title
of a specific pyramid scheme.
- MUNGE
- To modify your e-mail address in a way that makes them useless if
harvested. This is becoming less and less practical as address harvesters
get smarter.
- MURK
- Any disclaimer on a spam that refers to "Bill S. 1618" which supposedly
makes spam legal. The term comes from the name of the senator who proposed
the bill, Frank Murkowski. That bill was never passed and even if it had
it would not have any legal clout outside of the US.
- PEP
- PEP stands for Personal Email Processing. It is "mail delivery agent",
a program that delivers e-mail to a person's mailbox, optionally checking
it against user-supplied filter rules.
- OPT-IN
- A mailing list that a member must deliberately sign up for is an
"opt-in" list. Such a list must require a confirmation from a person
prior to adding them to the list.
- OPT-OUT
- A mailing list that signs you up without your permission or confirmation
is an "opt-out" list. Such a list will soon find itself blacklisted.
- PINK CONTRACT
- Any contract between an ISP and a customer that allows the customer to
spam or commit any other form of net abuse.
- RULE #N
- As in "rule #1" or "rule #2", etc. These are references to the following
"Rules about Spam":
- Spammers lie.
- If a spammer appears to be telling the truth, refer to rule #1.
- Spammers are stupid.
Note: we didn't make these up.
- SPAM
- SPAM spelled with capital letters is a trademark of
Hormel Foods and refers to a canned
luncheon meat product.
When spelled in lower case letters, "spam" refers to junk e-mail. Some
folks restrict the meaning of "spam" to include only unwanted commercial
e-mail. Others insist that it must be unwanted bulk mail.
We define "spam" as any unwanted e-mail at all.
The term "spam" is thought to originate with a
Monty Python skit where a restaurant serves SPAM with every dish. When
the waitress describes the options she uses the word "spam" several times, and
each time she does a group of Vikings start singing about "Spam, spam, spam,
wonderful spam!"
So the term "spam" has come to mean something that interrupts and annoys.
Quite suitable I think.
- SPAMHAUS
- An ISP or other connected server that exists primarily for the purpose
of sending out spam.
- THROW-AWAY ACCOUNT
- A temporary account used for spamming and which is then cancelled or
abandoned.
- TOS
- Acronym for Terms Of Service (see AUP). It also refers to
terminating a user's account for violating the TOS (as in "TOSsing" the
user, or "being TOSsed").
- UBE
- Acronym for Unsolicited Bulk E-mail (aka: spam)
- UCE
- Acronym for Unsolicited Commercial E-mail (aka: spam)
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