America Online Releases 'Top 10 Spam' List of
2003
Roster of Most Recognized Junk Emails Offers Online
Consumers Valuable Tips to Fight Back Using 'Custom Word
List' Blocking Tool
Company Also Announces It Blocked Total of 500,000,000,000
- a Half-Trillion - Spam Emails From Getting to Members
in 2003
DULLES, VA - December 31, 2003 - Dubious education offers,
pharmaceuticals, body enhancing hormones, and shady finance-related
offers ranked as the most widely recognized junk email subject
lines of 2003 by AOL 'spamwatchers' protecting the service
from spammers on behalf of its members.
The AOL Postmaster team in northern Virginia has calculated
the Top 10 most widely sent spam email subject lines - or
'headers' - on the AOL service in 2003 after reviewing data
forwarded by AOL members during the year, much of it collected
in the aggregate via use of the popular 'Report Spam' button
in AOL.
"We want to encourage AOL members and all online users
to take this important data and use it to improve their
online email experience," said Charles Stiles, Manager
of the Postmaster Team within AOL's Anti-Spam Operations
group. "Taking this Top 10 list of most often-used
subject lines in spam emails and placing them in AOL's 'Custom
Word List' is a great online New Year's resolution to make
- and it's much easier to tackle than a lot of other resolutions
people feel compelled to make in the offline world!"
"I'd also urge our members, as part of their online
New Years resolution, to continue to be our allies in our
ongoing fight against spam and spammers in 2004 by actively
and regularly clicking on AOL's popular 'Report Spam' button
on their email inbox, to continually develop and add to
their 'Custom Word List' in Spam Controls, and to check
their 'Spam Folder' regularly to make sure their personal,
adaptive spam filters are fine-tuned and customized for
maximum effectiveness", Stiles added. Members can access
the Spam Folder at AOL Keyword: Spam Folder, or by clicking
the easily accessible "Spam Folder" link on their
mailbox in AOL 9.0 Optimized.
Information about setting up and using a Custom Word List
can be found at AOL Keyword: Spam Controls. The Custom Word
List anti-spam feature is available for members using AOL
software versions 6.0, 7.0, 8.0, 8.0 Plus, and 9.0 Optimized.
Stiles offered up 'expert tips' for online consumers who
are interested in improving their email experience by building
a Custom Word List of terms that show up most often in the
subject lines of junk emails. "First of all, when setting
up any kind of anti-spam list, be as precise as possible
and use your creativity to out-guess and out-smart spammers
at their own game. That means setting up spam mail controls
to block multiple variations of a particular word that you
often see in spam subject lines. Second, look at the messages
you report as spam, and make a list of the words used most
often in those messages' subject lines - then add those
words to your Custom Word List within Spam Controls. You
can start by using AOL's own new Top 10 list for 2003. Third,
when it comes to spam in your email inbox - report it, report
it, report it! AOL can block spam better when our members
report spam more often. Clicking on the 'Report Spam' button
also trains our members' adaptive spam filters and helps
their AOL software 'learn' what members' individual, personal
email preferences are."
Stiles also outlined what made spam-fighting in 2003 unique
at the grassroots level for the AOL Postmaster team: "There
are many ways in which spammers were using techniques of
fraud and falsification to attempt to get their junk email
past AOL's anti-spam filters. We continue to see lots of
interesting patterns used by spammers, such as: 'randomized
characters' in the email subject line; the use of word variations,
including 'whitespace' insertions within words, to elude
spam screens; misspellings of common spam terms; numeric
substitutions for certain letters within common junk email
words - such as a number '3' for an 'E' and a number '1'
for an 'I', and a number '0' for a 'o'; and even the use
of characters from the Cyrillic alphabet in email subject
lines.
"At the same time, AOL announced it had blocked a total
of almost 500 billion - or a half-trillion - spam emails
from getting to the inboxes of its members during the 2003
calendar year. Using its advanced, finely-tuned spam-blocking
filters, AOL estimates that by blocking this number of spam
emails, it has detected and deleted prevented an average
of 15,000 spam emails from getting into the inboxes of each
AOL member. That amounts to an average of 40 less spam emails
daily per AOL account.
The Company also reached a new high when it blocked 2.4
billion spam emails in a single day using its spam filters.
During the 2003 year, AOL members also set a record for
the amount of spam emails they reported to the Company in
a single day at 20.4 million. AOL also reaffirmed that it
routinely blocks 75%-80% of all Internet inbound email as
spam, preventing it from reaching members' email inboxes.
AOL's 'Top 10 Spam Email Subject Lines' of 2003:*
1. Viagra online (also: xanax, valium, xenical, phentermine,
soma, celebrex, valtrex, zyban, fioricet, adipex, etc.)
2. Online pharmacy (also: 'online prescriptions'; 'meds
online')
3. Get out of debt (also: 'special offer')
4. Get bigger (also: 'satisfy your partner'; 'improve your
sex life')
5. Online degree (also: 'online diploma')
6. Lowest mortgage rates (also: 'lower your mortgage rates';
'refinance'; 'refi')
7. Lowest insurance rates (also: 'lower your insurance now')
8. Work from home (also: 'be your own boss')
9. Hot XXX action (also: 'teens'; 'porn')
10. As seen on oprah
* - Source: AOL. This list is unscientific, and is not in
any specific order. The cited email subject headers are
not ranked by volume.
About America Online, Inc.
America Online, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of subsidiary
of Time Warner Inc. Based in Dulles, Virginia, America Online
is the world's leader in interactive services, Web brands,
Internet technologies and e-commerce services.
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