A new Competitive Enterprise Institute study on spam email surveys the effectiveness of current user-based countermeasures and laws and suggests additional strategies for stopping unwanted emails
through legal and technical solutions to help Internet Service Providers (ISPs).
Spam is the consumer technology issue of the moment. Everyone agrees it is a problem, but there is little
agreement on the best solution. And while far more public attention has been focused on how spam affects individual email users rather than ISPs and other large network administrators, the
consumer-focused approach is only part of the solution. The consumer is the end of the spam's journey; its origins lie in the policies and technologies of networks.
"While there is naturally
more public sympathy for end users deluged with emails for adult products and pyramid-marketing scams than for the headaches of ISPs, solving most of the ISPs' problems would probably also solve most
of the problem for consumers," said Senior Policy Analyst and study co-author Solveig Singleton. "The converse is not true, however, meaning that legal and technical solutions with an emphasis on the
perspective of ISPs are more likely to be effective for everyone."
The study, Spam: That Ill O' the ISP: A Reality Check for Legislators, assesses contractual, technical, and statutory
solutions, noting that while there are some effective technical solutions to help consumers and businesses control spam, ISPs, the most seriously affected, have found only partial solutions. It also
concludes that effective spam control will come only with innovations in enforcing laws or policies. Many of the provisions of proposed new laws thus far are too broad, but research on deterrence
shows none would be helpful without relatively strict enforcement.