China blocks spam servers

By Will Sturgeon
10 September 2003 09:50 AM
Tags: sturgeon, linford, china, spam, steve, beijing, servers, will

China has woken up to the problem of spam e-mail and blocked 127 servers identified as sources of high volumes of unsolicited e-mail.

The move is likely to send shockwaves through the international community of spammers who previously had regarded China as a safe haven in which to base their operations. An estimated 100 of North America's most prolific spammers are based in the suburbs of Beijing, according to Steve Linford, president of the London-based Spamhaus Project, which runs a spam-blocking service.

Many spammers placed their servers in and around Beijing because they believed they were safe from Western law and of little interest to the Chinese authorities. But if that situation is now changing a drastic rethink may be in order.

The Internet Society of China announced Tuesday that 127 servers have been blocked. Of these, eight are based in China itself, 90 are in Taiwan and 29 are located elsewhere around the world. Any e-mails sent from these servers will automatically be blocked from reaching Chinese internet users.

"This has been the first large-scale spammer blockade launched by the Chinese Internet industry," Ren Jinqiang, an ISA official, told the official state news agency Xinhua.

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Talkback 2 comments

    This is indeed very encouragin ...Anonymous -- 10/09/03

    This is indeed very encouraging news. What we really need here in Australia is a government where the needs of the majority overide the "rights" of the spammers. Next, lets block the porn servers...

    This a very important bit of i ...Dan Dycke -- 09/10/03

    This a very important bit of information to international business. It would have been even more helpful with a couple of links so we could find out the addresses of these servers. Don't want to get entangled with them somehow.

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