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Its 6pm, Time for Your Daily Dose of Spam!
Anyone who has received telemarketing calls at dinner time knows just how annoying
these intrusions can be. One solution is to ask the caller to add your number to the
call center's permanent do not call list. But, don't be surprised if telemarketer
feigns ignorance of laws requiring them honor such requests.
Spammers are not troubled by such legal impediments. It is simply too easy for a spammer
to acquire everything needed to promote their schemes (scams?) outside of the
recipients' legal jurisdiction. Even if the sender is in the same jurisdiction, law
enforcement is so under-funded and under-resourced that the successful prosecution of a
spammer is still a newsworthy event.
Just as you expect antivirus vendors to stay on top of the latest attack vectors,
antispam companies expend significant resources analyzing spam attacks and developing
defenses against them. One of the more interesting attacks we've witnessed recently is
persistent nightly spamming. Spammers have adopted this strategy because:
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Targets are less likely to have people on staff after hours; so spammers need only
overcome automated defenses
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Users clearing their in-basket in the morning are more likely to read suspect
messages and fall victim to their scams
A 7-day activity graph for a site that was methodically attacked by a spammer
attempting to overwhelm, and thereby defeat, e-mail defenses illustrates this style of
attack:
Figure 1 - Persistent nightly attacks. Green/Yellow - wanted mail. Red/Blue - unwanted mail.
The nature and size of the attack clearly displays the spammer's intentions. Using a
coordinated effort from hundreds of spam sources, the spammer:
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Attacks at the end of the day when staff is either busiest, or has left for the day
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Raises spam traffic (red, blue) by 5-7+ times legitimate mail volumes in an attempt
to overwhelm antispam defenses
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Evades detection by not attacking during the day, even on weekends!
Spammers know that many antispam products simply cannot handle a 5-10 fold increase in
e-mail volume. They also know that, because e-mail is so critical, customers usually
configure antispam products to allow all e-mail through if a filter fails.
Why do spammers employ directed spam attacks? Simple, these attacks work. If you've
ever experienced elevated spam volumes, congested e-mail servers or significant delays
in forwarding mail, then you've likely fallen victim to a directed spam attack.
E-mail server products (such as MS Exchange™ Novell GroupWise™ or Lotus Domino™) do not
provide comprehensive antispam protection and traffic analysis tools, so administrators
cannot use these products to analyze spam attacks. To provide effective protection from
spam attacks, organizations must supplement their e-mail infrastructure with antispam
defenses that can:
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Withstanding large, sustained, spikes in e-mail traffic
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Provide protection without delaying legitimate e-mail traffic (so important mail
doesn't languish in a queue)
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Monitor and display activity in real time
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Chart attack patterns and progress
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Maintain filter accuracy and consistency so that unwanted e-mail doesn't pass
through the filter
Because spam volumes vary so widely, it is critical that you test drive any potential
antispam solution before you buy. You should ask your supplier for a free 30-day trial
period (if asked, reputable vendors will comply). Have your administrator monitor the
product during the trial, looking for spikes in e-mail volume. If you experience
unexpected traffic patterns, and you will, check to see if your filter handles them
gracefully. Did the product:
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Perceptibly delay e-mail delivery during spikes or extended queues?
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Experience contention on any of CPU, memory or disk such as running at 100%
utilization that might lead to delays?
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Fail, stop or reboot at any time which is a sure sign of overloading?
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Loose any e-mail due to stress?
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Suffer a reduction in filter effectiveness during the spike?
If the answer to any of these questions is yes, you should consider a larger appliance
or another product. Don't play into the spammers' hand by deploying or keeping an
under-sized antispam solution that can't reliably withstand the stress of a concerted
spam attack.
________________
I hope you found this article useful. My intent is to help organizations understand,
assess and effectively defend against e-mail threats. I would like to receive your
thoughts on this article. Please direct your comments by e-mail to
Larry Karnis.
© 2006 by Larry Karnis and XPMsoftware. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to
quote from this article in whole or in part, or to reproduce this article by any means as long as
the the author and XPMsoftware receive appropriate attribution.
About the Author
Larry Karnis is the president of
XPMsoftware, the developer of PerfectMail Antispam and
Antivirus appliances. Larry has spent the last 7 years focused on e-mail security best practices
and e-mail
security solutions. Before that, Larry worked as an IT infrastructure and security consultant,
software engineer with multiple commercial products to his credit, and as a
professional IT trainer.
Comments on this article should be directed to
lkarnis@xpmsoftware.com.
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