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By Declan McCullagh
Posted on ZDNet News: May 24, 2004 12:20:00 PM

Comcast's high-speed Internet subscribers have long been rumored to be an unusually persistent source of junk e-mail.

Now someone from Comcast is confirming it. "We're the biggest spammer on the Internet," network engineer Sean Lutner said at a meeting of an antispam working group in Washington, D.C., last week.

Lutner said Comcast users send out about 800 million messages a day, but a mere 100 million flow through the company's official servers. Almost all of the remaining 700 million represent spam erupting from so-called zombie computers--a breathtaking figure that adds up to six or seven spam-o-grams for each American family every day.

Zombie computers arise when spammers seize on bugs in Microsoft Windows--or from naive users who click on attachments--to take over PCs and transform them into spambots.

Comcast users send out about 800 million messages a day, but a mere 100 million flow through the company's official servers.
No hard numbers exist, but some estimates say that about one-third of spam comes from zombie computers with broadband connections. The owners of the zombie PCs typically don't even notice what's happening.

Because home computers are more likely to be infected than business PCs, and because Comcast has about 6 million high-speed customers, it may have been inevitable that the cable provider became a haven for remote-controlled zombies that churn out junk e-mail.

Don't take Comcast's word for it. IronPort Systems' statistics for comcast.net show that while the company's six official mail servers have a monthly outgoing e-mail index of 6.2, there are at least 44 Comcast subscribers with similar scores of 5.8 or higher. Overall, Comcast is the single biggest source of all types of e-mail, with a higher volume than the next two, Time Warner's Road Runner and Yahoo, combined.

Brian Martin, a computer security consultant in Denver, experienced Comcast zombies firsthand. Last year, a Comcast subscriber apparently infected by zombieware disgorged approximately 10,000 e-mail messages an hour to Martin's e-mail address.

It took two weeks of almost daily complaints to Comcast's abuse department before the deluge stopped. "I don't think that they really care about spam or virus infections," Martin said. "They don't want to put any personnel on it, because it takes away from the bottom line."

Slowing the spam
I don't mean to pick on Comcast. At least nowadays, its technicians appear to be more responsible: In March, it began sending warnings to suspected zombie infectees. In terms of the percentage of its users infected by zombies, Comcast is far from the worst--it's just the sheer number of subscribers that makes the company such an awesome source of spam.

Comcast could block zombies by preventing outgoing mail from leaving its network before it flows through its servers. That technique is called blocking port 25, the port used by the venerable Simple Mail Transport Protocol.

It's just the sheer number of subscribers that makes the company such an awesome source of spam.
It has the benefit of making e-mail departing Comcast's network easier to monitor so that network technicians can spot zombie PCs more quickly.

"It's not rocket science," John Levine, co-chair of the Internet Engineering Task Force's antispam research group, said of this technique. "Basically, you count the mail, and you give everyone a quota. If Grandma usually sends six messages a day and now tries to send 10,000 messages a day, what are the odds that she made that many new friends?"

Some Internet providers, including EarthLink, Cox Communications and a number of universities, block port 25. But because it inconveniences people who rely on remote e-mail providers or the Linux aficionados who run their own mail servers, it's still a controversial response. (Eventually, all e-mail clients will support the workaround of outgoing connections through port 587.)

Based on my conversations last week, Comcast's network engineers would like to be more aggressive. But the marketing department shot down a ban on port 25 because of its circa $58 million price tag--so high partially because some subscribers would have to be told how to reconfigure their mail programs to point at Comcast's servers, and each phone call to the help desk costs $9.

Instead, Comcast's engineers plan to try the innovative approach of identifying the zombie PCs and surreptitiously sending the subscriber's cable modem a new configuration routine that prevents outbound connections on port 25. Zombie-infected users won't even notice, the thinking goes, because most people use Comcast's mail servers for outgoing e-mail. Anyone wrongfully blocked can call and complain.

That's a clever idea, and it might even work. More importantly, it shows that the Internet's biggest spammer is finally trying imaginative ways to save our in-boxes from its subscribers.

biography
Declan McCullagh is CNET News.com's Washington, D.C., correspondent. He chronicles the busy intersection between technology and politics. Before that, he worked for several years as Washington bureau chief for Wired News. He has also worked as a reporter for The Netly News, Time magazine and HotWired.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 51 Talkback(s)
Found a FIX!
Using smtpport.com I'm using it on optimum online at home. Using it on the road right now. Works with both, and i think it would work with any ISP!

-Rob... (Read the rest)
Posted by: rkris2000 Posted on: 08/30/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
I hate ISPs that carte blanche block port 25!  troy@... | 05/24/04
Completely Agree.  doe_z | 05/24/04
re: Completely Agree  cbradshaw@... | 05/27/04
I don't have much love for those who won't clean up spam  kiddpeat | 05/25/04
RE : I hate ISPs that carte blanche block port 25  flightresponse | 05/25/04
re: and i still recieve about 100 aday  cbradshaw@... | 05/27/04
Found a FIX!  rkris2000 | 08/30/04
Would someone explain...  Anton Philidor | 05/24/04
they do  avdp | 05/24/04
They already said each call to their help line  kiddpeat | 05/25/04
US Mails  Harlan_z | 05/27/04
Biggest spammers  Chrish_z | 05/27/04
How Bout An Off Switch  ParadigmOdyssey | 05/24/04
Thanks to Panther...  panic man | 05/24/04
re: Thanks to Panther...  cbradshaw@... | 05/27/04
What is your point  dplaut@... | 05/27/04
Yeah right  sp1k3 | 05/27/04
Here is an idea  DarthRidiculous | 05/25/04
Here is an idea (not possible)  sp1k3 | 05/27/04
RE: Here is an idea  chessdad@... | 05/30/04
I've won the spam battle!  swriter33 | 05/25/04
No you haven't  tech_ed | 05/27/04
Won the battle but lost the war  coder_in_Detroit | 05/30/04
Comcast should require SMTP authentication  lgmayka | 05/26/04
re: Comcast should require SMTP authentication  Wolfie2K3 | 05/26/04
SMTP AUTH  dr_who@... | 05/27/04
AOL has to be close second  danwelty@... | 05/27/04
Complaints of Service from Comcast  joereloj | 05/27/04
Port 25 Blocked  SRipley | 05/27/04
PORT 25 Block SOLUTION  rkris2000 | 08/30/04
Comcast definitely  mmzulu | 05/27/04
Unpaid Bills  dr_who@... | 05/27/04
Spam Fix  bott@... | 05/27/04
THEIR problem (ISP)  Hameiri | 05/27/04
SPAM KILLER- Fine the money makers  robert@... | 05/27/04
Fine the money makers  Chrish_z | 05/27/04
no fine - JAIL TIME IN IRAQ  fastant@... | 06/01/04
Unless I'm wrong...  Chris Topher | 05/27/04
Unless I'm wrong... (not really)  sp1k3 | 05/27/04
Unless I'm wrong  Gueze | 05/27/04
Earthlink fighting spammers (not really)  sp1k3 | 05/27/04
An open question  Chrish_z | 05/27/04
an OPEN reply  dr_who@... | 05/27/04
Comcast Spam  realrdp@... | 05/27/04
which are the valid Comcast smtp servers  sol@... | 05/28/04
Comcast & Earthlink  tundraroamer | 05/29/04
How can I tell if I'm a "Zombie Computer"  ncornett | 05/30/04
Who is at fault here  kohuratahi | 05/30/04
Oh be serious...  Mr L | 06/01/04
Tell it to the zombies  kohuratahi | 06/02/04
reverse spam  fastant@... | 06/01/04

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