Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

Global spam levels…in decline?

Add as a preferred source on Google
Spam in mailbox
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A funny thing happened over the end-of-year 2010 holiday season: levels of spam email on the Internet declined precipitously, with Symantec’s MessageLabs reporting that levels have dropped to the lowest point since the shutdown of spam-friendly ISP McColo back in 2008. And while the decline seems to be attributable to three major botnets shutting down…nobody knows why those botnets might have gone quiet.

“At present we don’t know why these botnets have stopped spamming, perhaps the botnet herders have decided they need a holiday too?” wrote Symantec’s Paul Wood. “Whilst this is an excellent gift over the holiday season for anyone who regularly uses email, we would not expect the level of spam to stay this low for long.”

Recommended Videos

Although major botnets like Cutwail and Gheg continue to churn out millions of unwanted messages, antispam authorities are attributing the drop in spam levels to a seeming near-total shutdown of the Rustock botnet, one of the most prolific spam-generators of 2010. Rustock seems to have gone quiet on December 25, 2010, with spam levels from Rustock bots accounting for less than one half of one percent of all spam worldwide, Two other major botnets, Lethic and Xarvester, also went quiet on December 28 and December 31, respectively.

Although antispam takedowns and enforcement actions are becoming more common around the world, there’s no evidence law enforcement has had any role in these three major botnets going dark. Similarly, there’s no real evidence that spam is becoming any less lucrative for spammers: although very, very few Internet users fall prey to too-good-to-be-true online offers, it only takes a couple clicks for every million messages for spammers to make money. Although spammers and other cybercriminals have started turning their attention to social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook, most industry watchers expect spam to return to previous levels (or even higher levels) in short order: if Rustock, Lethic, and Xarvester don’t come back, other botnets will likely step into their former turf.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Topics
You can now check if a Google ad was made using AI
Google will auto-label its own AI ads, but third-party AI ads still rely on advertisers to come clean.
google-ads-ai-label

Ever looked at an ad and wondered if a real person made it or if it was AI generated in seconds? Google is now giving you a way to find out.

The company just announced a new AI transparency label that tells you whether an ad was created or edited using generative AI tools. The label lives inside Google's My Ad Center, and it is rolling out across Google Search, YouTube, and Discover globally.

Read more
Outlook will soon warn you before you answer an outdated email
Microsoft is bringing reply alerts, rule-based templates, and improved categories to Outlook
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Microsoft has recently been cleaning up some longstanding Windows 11 pain points, including parts of the Start menu and Search. According to a new report from Windows Latest, the company is also preparing several useful changes for the new Outlook app on Windows 10 and Windows 11, which became generally available in 2024.

Microsoft is adding a warning for users who start replying to an older email after a newer response has arrived in the same conversation. The alert is meant to stop people from replying without seeing the latest information in the thread.

Read more
Google just changed how it grades the AI models you use for Android coding
Android Bench has a new testing framework and eight new models, so the rankings you remember are now out of date.
Android Bench featured.

Google just changed how it measures which AI models are best at writing Android app code, and the update has shuffled the rankings developers use to pick their tools. The company's Android Bench leaderboard, which launched in March, now runs on a new testing system called Harbor. Google says this replaces the older, more generic testing tool it used before, and gives a better read on how models perform on real Android tasks, like updating old code to Jetpack Compose or handling wearable device networking.

New models shake up the top of the list

Read more