Robietherobot.com
Home Home
Geo Storm Performance Products Storm/Impulse Performance Parts
My Geo Storm My Geo Storm
My Ford Cobra My Ford Cobra
My Geo Metro My Geo Metro
Projects Web Projects
Solar and Alternate EnergySolar and Alternate Energy
Research articlesResearch information
Links Links
Online Resume Online Resume
Contact Information Contact Info

I Really hate spam, so this page shows HUNDREDS of randomly generated email addresses to help clog up the process. Would you like to help fight spam? Put up your own page, just like this one! Just link to this page with the following code:



Put in the following code in your webpage:
<A HREF="http://www.robietherobot.com/spamfight.htm">Fight SPAM</A>


Spam comprised 96.2 percent of all email traffic in May

June 16, 2010
Email Security News

New research shows that malware has grown steadily since the beginning of the year, according to a Web Host Industry Review, making antivirus protection even more important for safeguarding computers.
Trojans make up nearly 75 percent of all malware spread via email, WHIR reports. Spam output continues to plague users, with the annoying and sometimes dangerous messages comprising 96.2 percent of all emails sent and received in May 2010.
Spam emails have been found by researchers to carry links for multiple topics in one message, WHIR reports, a new trend that may assist users in differentiating between fake spam messages and legitimate emails.
Researchers have found that botnets are being sent from places across the globe, with 7.8 percent and 7.3 percent of all spam emails stemming from German and Brazilian IP addresses, respectively. According to WHIR, most spam is sent from IP addresses in the U.S., which account for 8 percent of the total share.
According to an MSDN blogpost, a former spammer said he made nearly $7,000 a week selling spam, which comes to nearly $336,000 a year. He also said he was paid a 50 percent commission rate on his sales and spent nearly $11,000 a week in botnet access, obtaining email addresses and providing security for his network.


Email harvesters (also known as spambots) will crawl this page and store all of these hundred bogus email addresses in a database, and follow the link at the bottom of the page, filling them up with more invalid email addresses as they go along. They eventually end up in an infinite loop, and thousands of randomly generated email addresses before the spammer realises what's happening.

BLsMph@Gn6Zar.com
ltrwfK@RxTr4A.com
P5jipl@iHcpBh.com
joITCG@YU6wLv.com
zpPCTZ@pVSBeD.com
Zzl1Wr@rsljHh.com
Pousej@CMZHbJ.com
HCYjGq@uxSpfZ.com
dvnxUq@cFxJnh.com
eGgmXT@phkPsN.com
wisRBM@fpqwCl.com
FZDoqK@tNqm6h.com
0B7SRM@oPh3VL.com
aieHof@5PhNHG.com
v5XMAR@pKjuzi.com
h0RlNg@5tq8v9.com
frMP4F@h8p0m4.com
q2iGdB@9NsPTb.com
qW7Unc@EdhtjQ.com
pxQNKh@jNWmhG.com
CNKTyh@ph1TXk.com
uqkFsD@G3IQzF.com
NHYJTw@NC8GZw.com
lpCMfq@Q4vZx0.com
F43Sdv@wdTxkQ.com
gswRLh@0UMTg3.com
jUOmhA@L8s6wf.com
wCjQHd@HgsUI8.com
nmoj4x@msdNiD.com
EhJNXz@izBSof.com
hviEJl@zSRiJC.com
RVamHD@nUVerT.com
hHeYRC@eIqyJs.com
KhyRwQ@RWqtvn.com
JVA9ro@Distpg.com
sPijdN@yMP7E1.com
ti6jmK@GQkMHC.com
hksxB0@uELtl4.com
VGFzmi@NpEjxk.com
v0BhpC@SqRyl8.com
B1genU@pqANDt.com
vothIG@hFtjqk.com
HnL7Yf@qjgukC.net
rjkghl@GbuiHD.net
pIcLlB@FhlNCS.net
heJzwu@Hyfcdo.net
Y9lpUr@0xHDZB.net
l25teN@tSL6zK.net
Kz9Owy@fKyAS1.net
ptHQsK@AodIMi.net
sx6A7O@Uht53e.net
xOHyIi@IKFACn.net
OfWHTl@hm1ulc.net
edtgqr@owhNz6.net
MizkE4@DTpGP4.net
gLlSVv@74stqf.net
NwFhoO@iKugnC.net
rnkPKs@GpgScN.net
VQOjpY@iR5QYD.net
vwpeNq@fKF7qD.net
jtUzRu@OyIFDB.net
4EutmD@zlJivg.net
FYMkIO@h2LSjO.net
rkWHlj@FUMDYI.edu
M1dlNG@03dmZU.edu
vth3zn@jgkeu5.edu
JViT21@glAupq.edu
LrChQe@xhuwXG.edu
nhjems@q1sBKP.edu
dehJvG@dNru4q.edu
UfMTG0@WqiNUG.edu
mcsMhT@djrANx.edu
IsPzpH@FNGmCi.edu
iXdSRq@0iGIwn.edu
mMG7ef@TkjUcy.edu
2j4RCp@uIiJny.edu
AinmCS@IbFKy0.edu
E7vpiq@XrpHYB.edu
ibKZFL@vFbHs8.edu
sc4hFd@KLyjrs.edu
XG6UFD@EdS38k.edu
sjoHfQ@PvKyLH.edu
K0idfP@qj2DLd.edu
t2hl9N@KIz5E0.edu
d17kxI@hpjUg7.edu
xKg36N@Fy2KzE.edu
nrdiqw@kIMm34.edu

more email addresses

I think that using anti-spam software or anti-spam appliances to filter out spam is not enough. While spam filters will help you from getting spam in your inbox, they still waste your bandwidth, your server's bandwith or your hosted email provider's bandwidth.
In the long run, spammers are the root cause of most bandwidth charge increases. This Harvester Bomber helps fight spam from its roots by discouraging the spammers in a direct attack at UBE (Unsolicited Bulk Email) and UCE (Unsolicited Commercial Email).

How did junk mail ever get named after a luncheon meat? The earliest record of the spam referring to junk mail dates back to March 31, 1993. If you're not familiar with SPAM the luncheon meat, it is basically highly preserved pork which can be eaten right out of the can. Most meat aficionados who know how to cook prime rib would never think of eating processed SPAM. No matter how long the prime rib cook time is, prime rib is always worth waiting for and can never be compared to a can of SPAM.