On CBSSports.com: Mike Tyson's daughter dies in accident
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Dawn Kawamoto
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 12, 2004 7:10:00 PM

Microsoft on Thursday is holding a summit with members of the E-Mail Service Provider Coalition to address the use of Sender ID technology as a standard to fight spam and phishing.

The software giant said it would gather more than 80 members of the ESPC coalition at its Redmond, Wash., headquarters to discuss using Sender ID as a way to ensure that e-mail originates from the Internet domain it claims to come from. Fighting the annoyance of spam and the dangers of fraud activity such as "phishing" is among the top concerns of Internet users and the companies that serve them.

Sender ID validates the server Internet Protocol address of the sender to assure an e-mail recipient that a message claiming to be from a credit card company actually is. The technology relies on Microsoft's Caller ID for E-Mail technology and the Sender Policy Framework, authored by Meng Weng Wong, chief technology officer at Pobox.com.

The Internet Engineering Task Force is currently evaluating Sender ID as an industry standard for e-mail authentication. Thursday's meeting will look at what Sender ID can do to control unwanted e-mail and at the challenges the technology will bring to legitimate users of e-mail.

Several companies have already announced plans to roll out products and services that support Sender ID, including Cloudmark, DoubleClick, IronPort Systems, Sendmail, Symantec, Tumbleweed and VeriSign, Microsoft said in a statement.

DoubleClick, which delivers Web advertising, will use Sender ID in the e-mail system it uses to communicate with its customers. Ken Takahashi, DoubleClick's senior director of e-mail operations and ISP relations, said a framework like Sender ID is only part of the solution to controlling unwanted and fraudulent e-mail.

"Since the spam epidemic exploded in the past few years, we have always maintained that a solution could only come from a combination of legislation, technology, industry self-regulation and consumer education."

Companies and individuals are increasingly deluged with spam and phishing scams, in which con artists send e-mail purportedly from a recipient's bank, credit card company or Internet provider requesting sensitive information such as "lost" credit card numbers or passwords "needing confirmation."

Spammers often "spoof" their return addresses--forging them to make them look legitimate to the recipient's spam filters. This can trick recipients into opening the unwanted mail, because it appears to be from a known contact. The technique also assists in the dissemination of e-mail viruses.

Other efforts
The e-mail problems have sparked efforts by other e-mail giants such as America Online and Yahoo to research their own authentication systems. AOL and Yahoo have technologies in the works, and plan to implement them into their e-mail systems by year's end.

AOL has been testing a system called Sender Permitted From, or SPF, that uses the domain name server (DNS). A company spokesman said SPF tests for outbound mail are currently compatible with SenderID. The company plans to test inbound SPF with SenderID beginning in September. AOL also will test technology supported by Yahoo by the end of the year.

"This isn't an online medal race to see who gets the gold when it comes to spam-fighting," AOL spokesman Nicholas Graham wrote in an e-mail. "We're all on the same team."

As for Yahoo, the Web portal is testing its so-called DomainKeys system for Yahoo Mail. The technology creates an encrypted e-mail address signature and then uses DNS to prove a message verify it came from Yahoo. Recipient e-mail servers must add software to use domain keys.

A Yahoo spokeswoman said the company is also looking into SenderID technology.

"We are evaluating IP-based solutions like SenderID," said company spokeswoman Terrell Karlston. "We are eager to see the results of some rounds of testing by other industry leaders."

CNET News.com's Jim Hu contributed to this report.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 39 Talkback(s)
Add Sender ID Support to your Windows SMTP!
Our Aloaha is supporting allready for several
month SPF1, SPF2, CallerID and SenderID.
Just check it out on www.aloaha.com.

Modules like:

SPF1, SPF2, CallerID and SenderID
RBL,... (Read the rest)
Posted by: aloaha Posted on: 08/31/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
But..  Jeff Spicoli | 08/12/04
No thanks, not if it's Microsoft  shawkins | 08/12/04
Dude, who cares??? Seriously...  Stellardyne | 08/12/04
Microsoft could care less about fighting spam  Jeff Spicoli | 08/12/04
Yes, I know Microsoft Cares  KyleLC | 08/13/04
Your mail is spam  Yagotta B. Kidding | 08/12/04
I care  OhMyGosh | 08/13/04
Technology?  nomorems | 08/12/04
the ip is in the header already is it not? (NT)  V Sanders | 08/12/04
Yes, sort of  Patrick Jones | 08/12/04
but  seosamh_z | 08/12/04
Partially...  Patrick Jones | 08/13/04
But partially  seosamh_z | 08/13/04
What? No comment from No_Ax?  itanalyst | 08/12/04
He's busy patching..  Jeff Spicoli | 08/12/04
SP2 downloaded  mikeybrass | 08/12/04
You're funny  Fred Fredrickson | 08/12/04
Longhorn anyone?  nomorems | 08/12/04
Presumption...  mikeybrass | 08/13/04
*shakes head*  mikeybrass | 08/13/04
Yah and wher's Mikey (NT)  daveswan | 08/12/04
*LOL* Good one IT Analyst... (NT)  Stellardyne | 08/12/04
License problem sorted yet?  Nigel Johnstone | 08/12/04
Hey if you can't trust Microsoft  skeptic tank | 08/12/04
Patents depending  Yagotta B. Kidding | 08/12/04
Government intervention  medezark | 08/12/04
But  seosamh_z | 08/12/04
Not all doom and gloom  Fred Fredrickson | 08/12/04
Patents don't protect  Yagotta B. Kidding | 08/12/04
Yes but...  Fred Fredrickson | 08/12/04
There's gotta be..  Xunil_Sierutuf | 08/12/04
Bunch of whingers  mikeybrass | 08/12/04
Strings attached  Yagotta B. Kidding | 08/12/04
Brought it on themselves  nomorems | 08/12/04
Not if it is from Micro$sux$ALOT!  NonZealot | 08/12/04
nice, but.....  Suicida| | 08/12/04
Another "One click" patent will hand email to MS  Sleveless | 08/13/04
White Man Speak With Forked Tongue  ParadigmOdyssey | 08/14/04
Add Sender ID Support to your Windows SMTP!  aloaha | 08/31/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Meet Doc

  • Here to help you with your Document Management Needs
  • Doc is an enigma. Born to a Russian ballerina and a German electrical engineer, he grew up in various locations in the United States. He’s seen the insides of more brands, versions, and generations of printer and printer-related hardware than almost anyone.
  • To learn more about this mysterious figure check out his blog on ZDNet and his Workspace on TechRepublic. You’ll be glad you did.
  • Produced by
    ZDNet and
advertisement
Click Here