Spam invasion targets mobile phones
HONG KONG, China (Reuters) -- If you thought your spam problems couldn't get any worse, check your mobile phone.
Cell phones are becoming the latest target of electronic junk mail, with a growing number of marketers using text messages to target subscribers.
Mobile phone spam has yet to approach anything like the volume of the e-mail variety, but the problem is growing in a region where the average user sends as many as 10 SMS (short message service) messages a day.
"SMS spam is certainly something that people are focusing on, particularly in markets like Japan where it is a common problem," said Jeff Bullwinkel, a spokesman for Microsoft Corp, which is spearheading a worldwide anti-spam campaign. "It's big in markets where mobile communications are prevalent."
Mobile phone companies were reluctant to talk about the trend, but evidence of the problem abounded on the Web site of NTT DoCoMo, Japan's biggest mobile phone company.
The site carries cautionary words about a junk message regarding the need for B-negative blood for a child's operation, and instructions to forward a chain-mail or face financial consequences.
The phone company also warns of messages claiming to come from DoCoMo asking people to send money to a particular bank account.
Individual users face difficulty blocking such messages because of their random origins, although DoCoMo lets users set accounts to receive only messages from specified sources.
SMS spammers in Japan typically find their prey by generating at random the e-mail style addresses used for text messaging in the country, a DoCoMo spokesman said.
Taking legal action
DoCoMo -- whose users send and receive 10 messages a day on average -- is fighting SMS spam through measures such as blocking huge quantities of messages that lack specified recipients, he added.
It is also taking legal action, and has cut off 2,173 lines because of spam abuse and sought damages in some cases.
Text messages are big money spinners for mobile operators, reaping profit margins of 60 to 80 percent, so the networks can benefit financially from such spam even as they fight it.
But for users, SMS spam has the potential to become a big headache in Asia, where short messaging has become a way of life for many. Marketers have noticed the trend and increasingly use the medium as a tool for their trade, analysts said.
The Philippines leads the region in SMS use, with cell phone users sending an average 252 messages per month, according to marketing information group TNS. Singapore, China and Japan are the next biggest users.
Mobile phone users in China sent a whopping 10 billion messages during last month's eight-day Lunar New Year holiday, or 7.7 for every one of the country's 1.3 billion people.
Marketers like the immediacy and quick attention SMS messages typically receive from users, said Chi-wing Chan, regional director for telecommunications and technology at TNS.
He said text messages from retailers offering discount "coupons" are already common, particularly in Singapore, and can even be tailored to activate when, for example, a network identifies that a subscriber is close to destinations like shopping malls.
He added that SMS messages -- be they spam or legitimate -- also tend to receive immediate attention in Asia.
"People like to receive messages," he said. "They think it's cool. When you get an SMS message you deal with it immediately, but for e-mails it just feeds into your e-mail box."
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/ptech/0...eut/index.html
wonder if it those sms messages counts towards the limited number of sms messages that come with the plan?
Yes, most campanies treat SMS like calls, where incoming and outgoing are counted against the package.
"One would like to believe in the freedom of music."
-Rush "Spirit of Radio"
My profile in Cnet's "Three I can't live without"
i've already gotten some spam messages on my phone.
GET LAID NOW!
GAY MEN HOT HOT HOT CLICK ME ::wtf?::
DOWNLOAD THIS TO STOP THESE MESSAGES
hey where are we gonna go for dinner tonight?
/me thinks ^ was his
i coulda swore you said sausage...http://home.comcast.net/~eddyisgreat/Sig0183.jpg
So you end up PAYING for spam..? Glad my next cell will be a cheap basic model that can take a few good falls. None of that LCD flip phone fancy boy crap for me...lol
The only power tyrants have is the power relinquished to them by their victims. —Étienne de la Boétie
www.dakota-fanning.org
www.elle-fanning.net
I'm still waiting for a cell phone I could drop down a flight of concrete steps without damaging it.Originally Posted by CCSDUDE
"CompuGeek your geekiness is unsurpassed except by your virginity." - Trilobyte
dude someone sent one of those to me wasting my minutes well I would go and shoot the fucker...... or make him pay my bill
-NEVER ARGUE WITH A FOOL; HE WILL SOON BEAT YOU WITH EXPERIENCE
-EAT AND SLEEP. YOU MIGHT THINK THAT'S A GIVEN BUT NO-IT'S NOT. EAT AND SLEEP. IDIOT.
You should see my old ass T-mobile cell...the LCD is cracked in 3 places making 25 percent of the screen black and thus unviewable. The body WAS silver now it's smeared dented plastic yellow/silver...Originally Posted by CompuGeek
I've dropped it down two flights of steps...in the snow...on sidewalks. You name it I've probably dropped it there.. The fall that killed part of the LCD was a 2 story fall out my back window... Lets just say I was partaking in some THC fun made a jesture at the open window and didn't keep a good grip on it...
The only power tyrants have is the power relinquished to them by their victims. —Étienne de la Boétie
www.dakota-fanning.org
www.elle-fanning.net
LOL CCSDUDE ur little avitars and sigs trip me out, do you spend hours on photoshop doin that XD. BTW for my phone its free to recieve messages sry guys =/
i coulda swore you said sausage...http://home.comcast.net/~eddyisgreat/Sig0183.jpg
I have only recieved 1 of those spam messages I belive it was like 2 months ago... I dony really care though cuz i have a pretty big im plan but if I where to get a lot i would be complaining to my mobile service company. @ CCSDUDE you might have some problems trying to find service for old phones.
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