RSS

Discover news, guides, and products for your business


  • Recommend:
  • 0 Comments
  • Print

Is Your Name a Spam Magnet?

Those whose names begin with a common letter such as A, S, and M are more likely to receive spam that those who start with uncommon ones such as Z and Q, according to research.

Cambridge University security expert Richard Clayton analyzed e-mail traffic logs from Demon Internet and discovered that those with names beginning with more common characters are more likely to receive spam than those with less common ones. (Read the entire report.)

For example, his statistics show that 35 percent of the e-mail received by someone called Alison will be spam, compared to the 20 percent received by someone called Zadie, even though both may have the same e-mail provider.

This contradicts previous theories that it's the section of an e-mail address after the @ symbol that is important to spammers.

"Marmosets and pelicans get around 42% spam (M and P being popular letters for people's names) and quaggas 21% (there are very few Quentins, just as there are very few Zacks)," Clayton wrote in a follow-up blog post correcting the notion (incorrectly reported here) that alphabetical order was involved in an increase in spam attacks.

Clayton claims that spammers rely on 'Rumplestiltskin' attacks, where they trawl through the dictionary, guessing at names to send spam e-mails too, with a high percentage turning out to be real names.

And Clayton's advice to those fed up with spam - pick your username more carefully.

(Jason Snell of Macworld US contributed to this report.)

Macworld
More PC news and reviews at PC Advisor. Story copyright © 2011, PC Advisor. All rights reserved.

Was this article useful? Yes 0 No 0

Comments

Follow us on:
Business News Daily

Get the latest technology news that's important to you and your business, fresh seven days a week.

Featured Webcasts

Free Whitepapers

Software and Services Whitepapers from PCWorld

More whitepapers »

Whitepaper Alerts

Get updates on white papers, case studies, and spotlights on tech products and solutions for your business.