"Our goal is to do everything we can to secure email systems..."
By David Becker
Published: 25 June 2003 08:11 GMT
Microsoft ratcheted up the rhetoric in its war on spam on Tuesday, with chairman Bill Gates calling for government and corporate cooperation to stem the tide of junk email.
"Spam is so significant a problem that it threatens to undo much of the good that email has achieved," Gates wrote in one of his periodic email missives to customers.
Microsoft has become increasingly active in the anti-spam crusade, most recently filing 15 lawsuits against spammers it said were responsible for sending a collective 2 billion unsolicited messages to Microsoft addresses.
The company also has limited spammers' use of Microsoft's free Hotmail service and allowed MSN subscribers to more effectively screen out unwanted messages.
Gates said in the letter that Microsoft researchers are working on other technological fixes, including 'smart' spam filters for mailboxes that would continuously adapt to keep pace with the latest spam techniques.
"Deciding precisely where to draw the line must ultimately be up to the individual," Gates wrote. "However, a smart filter can learn from a user's personal preferences to create a unique, anti-spam immune system that is much harder for spammers to work around."
The next version of Microsoft's Exchange email server software will also allow third-party software makers to create spam filters that can easily be plugged in to Exchange. "Our goal is to do everything we can to secure email systems with servers that monitor and control the points of entry," Gates wrote.
Gates also called on technology companies, consumer groups and legitimate marketers to work together to develop guidelines for distinguishing between commercial and personal email, so businesses and individuals can more easily sift out the messages they want to receive.
And he applauded growing government interest in tackling spam, saying industry efforts need to be accompanied by strong punitive measures for spammers who continue to bombard businesses and consumers. "Self-regulation needs to be supported by strong federal legislation that empowers consumers without threatening the vitality of legitimate ecommerce," Gates wrote.
David Becker writes for CNET News.com.
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