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auteur: Paul Judge, CTO, CipherTrust, Inc.
Microsoft scores one for the good guys Scott Richter, the self-proclaimed âSpam King,â just canât seem to get enough attention. Admittedly responsible for sending literally billions of
Unsolicited Commercial Email messages (UCE), Richter made headlines again recently when his spam-fed cash cow, OptInRealBig.com, filed for bankruptcy protection in U.S. federal court in his home
state of Colorado. According to Richterâs father (who is also his attorney), âItâs the legal fees that are battering the company. OptIn is profitable but for these lawsuits.â At the time of
its bankruptcy filing, OptInRealBig.com claimed assets of less than $10 million and liabilities of over $50 million. Richter claimed his company made $15 million a year sending more than 15 million
email messages per day. However, in 2003, OptInRealBig was dealt a powerful 1-2 punch from Microsoft and Eliot Spitzer, the Attorney General of New York; both sued Richter under local state anti
spam laws. Although the New York case was settled out of court last year, Richter has had no such luck dealing with Microsoft, whose claims top $19 million. A Case of Global Amnesia? Richter's
company and others like it market products ranging from diet pills to pornography. Heâs also been accused of using spam to extract personal information from unsuspecting recipients. For instance,
one alleged scheme hatched by Richter and his associates promised recipients a copy of a "Girls Gone Wild" DVD if the recipient registered on a website. The registration information was then used
to bombard the recipient with more and more spam. Richter contends that his methods are all legal, and that heâs just a regular guy trying to do right by the world; heâs even gone so far as to
claim that heâs a âvictimâ of overzealous anti spam companies and prosecutors. âWe don't spam,â explained Richter in an August 2004 PC World interview. âThe biggest problem is when
people get an email that they think they didn't sign up for or don't remember signing up for, and they call it spam.â To hear Richter tell it, tens of millions of people simply forgot that they
had previously asked to receive his messages. According to the state of New York, however, he falsified header information and used deceptive routing and domain purchase practices in order to get
his messages through. The lawsuit also accused Richter of using a network of approximately 500 âzombieâ computers to send his messages. When asked how so many users could have subscribed and
not remember doing so, Richter claimed the signups must have been via anonymous "partners of our partners" web sites, the names of which slipped his mind. Not Just an Online Threat Evidently not
satisfied with stealing bandwidth, Richter also shows a penchant for heavy equipment. In an unrelated 2003 case, he was put on probation after pleading guilty to a felony charge of receiving stolen
items worth more than $10,000. According to court records, an informant's tip regarding a stolen Bobcat loader led undercover officers to Richter. Over the course of 13 months, the officers
proceeded to strike deals with him for a Honda generator, hundreds of cases of cigarettes, three laptop computers and other items, all offered at suspiciously low prices and purchased in some of
Denverâs seediest neighborhoods. In addition to probation, Richter was also ordered to pay $38,000 in restitution for the stolen goods. Despite his guilty plea, Richter maintains his innocence,
saying he pleaded guilty to the felony charges because it was "easier to be done with it," and he had "too much stuff going on in my life." Whatâs Next for Scott Richter? The 5-year-old
OptInRealBig.com, which employed 25 people last year and had 350 clients, will continue to operate under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. While the bankruptcy filing shows the power of legislation
and legal action from parties with a vested interest in stopping spam, Richter is not likely to fade quietly into the sunset. Under Chapter 11 bankruptcy laws, the company must follow a
court-supervised âdebt rehabilitationâ plan to pay off creditors, but is not required to modify its business practices. None of OptInRealBigâs assets will be liquidated, meaning the
companyâs stable of spam cannons will remain active. The bottom line: Scott Richter will not be required to stop sending UCE in the immediate future, pending ongoing litigation intended to
determine exactly what spam is in legal terms. In the meantime, the best defense against spam is a comprehensive gateway solution that will guard against all manner of email threats, especially
spammers like Scott Richter.
- » auteur: Paul Judge, CTO, CipherTrust, Inc. - » Tags: