MAKE MONEY FAST FROM ANYWHERE!!!
By Justin Hall, Thu Apr 17 00:00:00 GMT 2003
Spam threatens mobile messaging worldwide, legislators take aim.
Internet-connected mobile devices create
an environment where anyone can reach out and touch you. While these
first few years of mobile living have been like sweet caresses from
loved ones, the coming years could bring a series of continuous hard
pokes from complete strangers.
Hook half the globe up to mobile
mail they can read anywhere and you have the world's largest, most
immediate market. Billions of consumers are forced to acknowledge any
commercial summons the moment it arrives, wherever they are, whatever
they're doing. Already, small businesses and some direct marketing
firms have begun to send unsolicited commercial electronic email into
the world's purses and pockets.
Lawmakers worldwide are
vying to emerge as spam-vanquishing heroes. But the problem refuses to
be easily solved, due to marketing industry concerns, technological
ambiguities and it's just too damned easy to
send.
Thin targets
Americans
are the world's mobile messaging under-achievers. Americans still
prefer to keep their fingers on the steering wheels of their giant cars,
it seems, instead of thumbing up pithy messages for friends. This has
made Americans a thin target thus far for mobile
marketers.
Still there have been some folks eager to be the
mobile equivalent of Cantor & Seigel, pioneering spam for a new
medium. Instead, one company ended up pioneering effective
spam-stopping lawsuits. Last year, Acacia National Mortgage, based in
Phoenix, ran afoul of America's largest mobile phone service
provider Verizon when they sent thousands of SMS messages to Verizon
subscribers, on a near-daily basis. Fortunately some of these
subscribers were in Colorado, a state with laws strictly detailing terms
for commercial email. In particular, this law specifies that
mass-marketing emails must have a valid, working means by which
subscribers can remove themselves.
But in spite of calls from
Verizon, the mails from Acacia did not let up. Verizon filed a lawsuit
and Acacia quickly settled, promising to cease the spam - a promising
victory. But at least 20 of the United States that have unsolicited
commercial email laws, and it doesn't seemed to have stopped the
relentless tide of Internet spam.
Perhaps if the United States
establishes strong national anti-spam laws for wireless messaging before
the medium takes off, they can keep a tighter leash on rabid direct
mailers. That's the logic behind legislation proposed by New
Jersey congressman Rush Holt. The language is bold and straightforward:
"to protect the privacy of wireless telephone subscribers,
transmission of unsolicited commercial messages on wireless telephone
text, graphic, and image messaging systems should be prohibited."
Proposed in January, "HR113" is still working its way through
congressional committees.
These efforts to limit unsolicited
commercial email on one type of device beg interpretation. If I connect
my mobile phone to my computer, does that make the incoming email mobile
mail? What if someone spams an email account that I read through a web
browser on my mobile phone?
Holt's intention is the same as
Verizon's, to protect the medium of mobile messaging for American
consumers who haven't yet tried it. They hope to keep unsolicited
commercial mail from being the first mobile phone messages American
subscribers
receive.
Opt-which?
Unsolicited
commercial SMS messages have provoked spam legislation from the European
Union, but the two EU lawmaking bodies have been decidedly split. The
European Council of Ministers has determined that unsolicited commercial
email, both to mobile devices and Internet-connected PCs, should be
banned, while the European Parliament has voted down a ban on
spam.
Both acknowledge that all commercial electronic mails
should have opt-out capabilities, that is, consumers should be able to
remove themselves from commercial email lists. The critical question
remains whether consumers can be added to those lists without their
permission.
The original legislation before the European
commission proposed that all commercial email must be
"opt-in," essentially a ban on unsolicited commercial email.
Now it seems the EU is prepared to leave "opt-in" versus
"opt-out" up to individual member states. The mobile spam
provision in question is part of a larger electronic privacy law that
must be ratified by all member states so it should be some time before
any consumer email protection could become law across
Europe.
Meiwaku mail
The
shadow side of Japan's vaunted consumer-friendly mobile phones is
intense, relentless, and consumer alienating spam. Ensuring open
gateways between desktop computers and different mobile phone provider
networks has made Japanese mobile phones a spammer's
playground.
Mobile phones in Japan have incredible music
synthesizers built into them. Your phone doesn't just briefly
chirp the arrival of new mail but it might play three verses and two
choruses from TLC's "No Scrubs" to let you know one of
your friends is awake, probably drinking, and probably just wrote to ask
if you were already asleep. With most young folks, turning off your
phone means leaving the social network, an unconscionable act. So the
phone stays on all night long and short mails are full symphonic wake-up
calls.
Still, even if your friends know when you go to sleep,
it's likely that you'll still get email after bedtime. DoCoMo
subscribers can receive over 10 or 20 unsolicited commercial email
messages a day. For a PC user who is inundated regular Internet spam,
that may not sound like much. But when each spam rings in your pocket,
potentially during a business meeting, intimate dinner or a funeral, it
can quickly push people to ignore mobile Internet services. Japanese
folks call this "meiwaku mail" (or "annoyance
mail"). Messages might contain offers for Viagra and various
strains of herbal ecstasy, or more frequently, invitations to dating
clubs. DoCoMo regulations prevent official i-mode sites from
introducing strangers online. But anyone can set up a site outside of
the official DoCoMo i-mode network; all they have to do is lure in
customers. Thousands of fly-by-night operators have set up dating
clubs, sites where men are promised the chance to meet young ladies
excited to talk. To help keep up the conversation, men must pay to get
in, but ladies get in free.
Of the roughly 950 million mails
passing through DoCoMo's networks each day, a staggering 85% of
those messages are sent to addresses that don't resolve. Nearly
all of these bounced mails are from computers randomly emailing DoCoMo
subscribers to see what addresses will work.
This is easier in
Japanese than in English; Daniel Scuka did the math in his
"Wireless Watch" newsletter: "Keep in mind that the
Japanese syllabary is different than English. To generate an address
like thomas@docomo.ne.jp, my computer would have to create
26x26x26x26x26x26 = 308 million names (and then filter out the invalid
combinations). To generate an address like yumiko@docomo.ne.jp, I'd
have to create fewer than 175,616 combinations." 175,000 is not a
challenging number for a modern desktop computer. And since DoCoMo is
the only one of the leading carriers to host all of their addresses at a
single domain (@docomo.ne.jp) their users and their network are
especially hard hit by relentless computer-enabled spammers.
Why
bother? Because having a computer send repeated messages is cheap. It
only takes a few paid visits from lonely businessmen to earn a return on
the costs to set up such a business. But meanwhile these active
spammers are threatening to tarnish the great shining success of DoCoMo.
DoCoMo has already granted customers 400 free packets of incoming mail
per month, and last year they pledged to spend an additional $8.7
million fighting mobile Internet spam on their
networks.
No ring tone nocry
Meanwhile the Japanese Diet has developed a
legislative shift similar to that of the Europeans. Last month the
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry announced legislation to limit
only certain types of commercial solicitations, and they're backed
by the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Meanwhile, NTT DoCoMo is
siding with a group of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) members intent on
banning a wider range of unsolicited commercial email. A resolution
should take some months at least.
There have been technical
solutions proposed - changing email addresses to include letters and
numbers, changing domains, filtering with the address book, filtering at
the server. Young users might have the patience to try new
spam-filtering methods, but many of the Japanese people I know over the
age of 30 haven't figured out how to change their phone mail
addresses to avoid phone spam and they are real tired of it.
I
asked one woman the other day; "Did you get my mail?"
"No, sorry, I don't read mail, I just delete it." These
ladies don't bother with short mail - they don't want to incur
the charges for downloading the loads of spam. Friendly mail is deleted
along with commercial solicitation, so these folks aren't
generating packets. Some pundits covering the mobile phone industry in
Japan think that DoCoMo will eventually be forced to make mobile email
free so people won't be charged for unsolicited
email.
Either way, DoCoMo is busy looking for solutions.
Meanwhile, many customers are looking elsewhere for their communication
needs, and missing out on the fun of 21st century short
messaging.
It's Regulation Week on
TheFeature. Be sure to check back daily for original reports,
interviews, analysis and discussion covering the mobile data
industry!
Justin Hall is a freelance journalist covering culture and
technology, living between Capsule Hotels and Love Hotels in Tokyo.
His work appears on the web at http://www.links.net/.