The A to Z of spamming exposed
Bills might want to go back to being Williams
SPAMMERS ARE FANS of the alphabet according to recent research – you’re going to start wishing your name was Zebedee.
While it used to be thought that the section of the address after the '@' was most important to spammers, research by Richard Clayton, an insecurity expert from Cambridge University's computer lab shows that the info before the '@' is equally as important.
Clayton’s report shows that those with names higher up the alphabet are actually more likely to receive spam than those lower down – so Anne can expect to get around 35 percent of spam email, while Zack may only get 20 percent.
'Rumplestiltskin' attacks are to blame according to Clayton – this is when spammers pick through the entire dictionary guessing names and sending millions of spam email to these addresses, most of which turn out to be real.
This explains why A gets more than Z, as the spammers obviously get bored by the close of the alphabet.
Although this research is based on some truth, it is not only the beginning of the dictionary that is targeted – scammers, phishers and guttersnipes will still target those with their email address pasted across the web, without forgetting unique cases.
Clayton does suggest however, if you are an Alex or Amy with a lot of spam then it might be worth changing your email name to something a bit further down the alphabet. µ
Comments
also..
isn't it more likely that your ISP or mail server spots the influx of spam more readily as it moves through the alphabet and closes the hole accordingly ?One email to "albert" from a certain IP is less likely to raise an eyebrow than 10 similar ones to "albert", "betty", "charlie" etc...
Simple heuristics, no ?
Moral of the story is
change your name to ZzzZddFEdfd445De77Uoip ZzzZzzF55GTHy7764 and you should be ok for some time.