Leading ISPs sign up for Goodmail antispam service

Five of the largest Internet service providers in the U.S. plan to start charging businesses for guaranteed delivery of their e-mails, in a bid to combat spam.

Goodmail Systems, which provides a service called CertifiedEmail, announced Thursday that it had signed up Comcast, Cox Communications, Time Warner Cable's Road Runner and Verizon as customers. E-mails certified using the system will be marked with a blue ribbon to show they come from a trusted source, thus bypassing spam filters--a privilege that will cost the sender a quarter of a U.S. cent per e-mail.

The voluntary plan is aimed at large corporations and financial institutions whose mass mailings are most likely to be caught in spam filters. Nonprofit groups will be able to use the service for roughly a tenth of the commercial rate.

"With spam and phishing hitting historic highs even in the last six months, we have seen the limits of technologies which attempt to filter out the bad e-mail," Goodmail's chief executive, Richard Gingras, said in a statement. "Consumers want their e-mail system to let them know which e-mail is real and safe to open and act on."

Peter Castleton, director of Verizon's consumer broadband services, acknowledged that phishing and fraud were eroding trust in e-mail as a medium. "A certification service, such as CertifiedEmail, enables us to help restore that trust and makes it easier for consumers to identify legitimate e-mail messages," he said in a statement.

According to Goodmail, seven U.S. ISPs now use CertifedEmail, accounting for 60 percent of the U.S. population. Goodmail--which takes up to 50 percent of the revenue generated by the plan--will for now approve only mail sent by companies and organizations that have been operational for a year or more. Ordinary users can still apply to be white-listed by individual ISPs, which effectively provides the same trusted status.

David Meyer of ZDNet UK reported from London.

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17 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Blackmail
by hadaso June 7, 2007 6:56 AM PDT
This actually means there are services that can afford to pay 0.25 cents per emamil message to spam the service's userbase (OK, it's technically not spam. It's solicited as it's part of the service the IS{ provides: "prmotional messages from selected affilates"). It doesn't mean the end of spam. It doesn't mean the end of phishing. It doesn't apply to mail sent by individuals. It applies to mass mailings. And BTW, phishing is trivial to avoid. Just don't use the same email address with your bank and either financial institutes as you use with all your friends/family/colleagues or post all around the web. dedicate an address for your bank. If a message from your bank comes to the address you only gave to your bank then you can probably trust it. If a message claims to be "from" your bank but comes to the address you use to sign up with certain unmentioanable websites, then it's not from your bank and you can smile and think what fools those phishers are thinking they could fool you. (Search the web for "disposable addresses".) On the other hand spammers and phishers can put the blue ribbon on their email themselves. Many people would be fooled by that. What is really needed is an easy way for non-technical people to to use multiple addresses: email clients should handle these for non-technical people. Banks should adopt them because they are a very effective way to avoid fraud (and allow the bank to push in ads on the unfiltered channel they get if they identify themselves properly and don't overdo it).
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My Idea
by digit1001 June 7, 2007 7:41 AM PDT
I think it would be better to charge a high rate for messages, but only if they've been rejected by the receiver as SPAM. As pointed out before if you're making money off the Viagra you're selling through these messages, it's no problem to pay. On the other hand, if you sent out 100,000 messages at once with the cost being $1.00 for each one rejected, odds are it would stop the flow a lot better. The "how" this is accomplished would have to be some kind of challenge/response type of message to all messages through is my initial thought. I'll let someone smarter then I am with more time to figure that part out ;-)
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Wrong Idea.
by Renegade Knight June 7, 2007 7:45 AM PDT
Spam filters are supposed to block spam. Not block legitimate email. Paying so legitimate email gets through...is not helping me as a customer of those companies and it's not helping me as a user of those ISPs. My own ISP is blocking some my outgoing email with spam filters. Their days are numbered if they don't get that fixed. They need to find another way.
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It's Still Spam
by Marcus Westrup June 7, 2007 7:47 AM PDT
I don't care who these messages come from: Legitimate or otherwise, anything I didn't ask for is still spam. My own bank (a trusted source?) keeps bombarding me with special deals and offers and won't stop. This anti-spam service won't be bypassing my spam filters anytime soon.
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SPAM problem already solved....
by Jim Hubbard June 7, 2007 9:50 AM PDT
Just use a whitelist people! If someone wants to email you, they have to be on your whitelist. It simply amazes me that people are still having problems with this when you can stop it so easily. ChoiceMail 3.1 is free at http://www.download.com/ChoiceMail-Free/3000-2382_4-10129568.html . If anyone gets an inbox full of spam it's because of their own ignorance.
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An even better solution:
by hadaso June 7, 2007 12:44 PM PDT
Close your email account. You will not receive any spam at all!
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not impressed
by Dalkorian June 7, 2007 3:11 PM PDT
So someone figured out a way to extort money from big corporations for the priveledge of spamming the world. Big deal. Seeing some blue ribbon on a message will mean nothing to me, except possibly to direct my mouse pointer to the "report as spam" button faster.
Reply to this comment
I've had Zero Spam for the Last Three Years
by sfrank212 June 10, 2007 9:34 AM PDT
Spam Arrest has wiped out 100% of my SPAM for the last three years. http://www.spamarrest.com
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