News.admin.net-abuse.email: Difference between revisions
Removed the 'Regulars' section. Please keep the bashing of JB inside NANAE. |
→Topics covered: remove unsourced information; per BLP. Do not replace without secondary references |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
Eventually, by mutual consent, it was also determined that the following were also "on-topic": |
Eventually, by mutual consent, it was also determined that the following were also "on-topic": |
||
*[[Cats]] (on a superficial/anecdotal level) |
*[[Cats]] (on a superficial/anecdotal level) |
||
In recent years the group has been subject to several attacks, most prominently [[denial-of-service attack]]s using [[Hipcrime (Usenet)|hipcrime]] and has lately been almost totally hijacked by [http://www.google.ca/search?q=jamie%20baillie%20spammer Jamie Baillie]. |
|||
==History== |
==History== |
Revision as of 13:25, 24 May 2010
news.admin.net-abuse.email (sometimes abbreviated nanae or n.a.n-a.e, and often incorrectly spelled with a hyphen in "email") is a Usenet newsgroup devoted to discussion of the abuse of email systems. According to a timeline compiled by Keith Lynch,[1] news.admin.net-abuse.email was the first widely available electronic forum for discussing spam.
Steve Linford, the founder of The Spamhaus Project, sometimes posts in the newsgroup.
Topics covered
In its original charter the following examples of "on-topic" areas were listed:
- Chain letters
- DoS attacks
- Email address list
- Email bomb
- Email viruses
- Filtering software
- Large-scale mailings
- Listserv bombs
- Mailing list abuse
- Pyramid schemes
- Unsolicited email
Eventually, by mutual consent, it was also determined that the following were also "on-topic":
- Cats (on a superficial/anecdotal level)
History
The group was officially proposed (i.e its RFD posted) by Tim Skirvin (tskirvin) on July 9, 1996 alongside a number of other groups in order to reduce the load on the two net abuse groups at that time, news.admin.net-abuse.announce and news.admin.net-abuse.misc.[2]
Later that month it went to vote and passed 451 to 28.[3]
In September 2002 it was proposed that a subgroup, news.admin.net-abuse.email.blocklists, be created.
NANAEisms
Over time, some (more or less) NANAE-specific terms were coined:[4][5]
- 404-compliant
- A website that has been terminated by its hosting provider for terms of service violation is said to be "404-compliant", a reference to the 404 "not found" status code in HTTP and a parody of spammers claiming their spam is 301 compliant, referring to a bill that never made it into a law.
- Auto-ignore
- The automated response from an ISP's abuse desk, when it is believed that sending out the automated response is the only action the ISP will take.
- Bulletproof
- Said when it's difficult to get an ISP to take action against spamming customers.
- Black hat
- An ISP that enables spamming, for example a hosting provider that does not act upon spam complaints. Named after old westerns where the bad guys often wore black hats. Compare white hat and gray hat.
- Cartooney
- A fake lawsuit with which a spammer tries to threaten an anti-spammer. It may also refer to the spammer's lawyer (whom is usually assumed not to exist). The word is a contraction of attorney and cartoon. Also used when a listed entity threatens a blacklist maintainer with legal action.
- Cats and Coffee warning
- A Cats and Coffee warning[6][7] or C&C warning is a satirical warning that a usenet posting or other writing may contain humorous material. The C&C warning originated with the usenet group news.admin.net-abuse.email, but has spread to other groups.[8] The warning is an admonition to the reader to secure liquid beverages (particularly hot ones) and cats in case uncontrollable laughter breaks out upon reading the article.
- Chickenboner
- A minor spammer. Named after a colorful and humorous description one participant made of spammers living in trailers and eating at Kentucky fried chicken.
- Cut it out, Ron
- A standard response to a posting that is suspected to be a troll. Named after a regular poster who often wrote humorous trolls.
- Frea Speach
- Spammers claim the right to distribute unsolicited bulk mail as part of their right to free speech under the United States' Constitution. After one such person repeatedly mis-spelled it as "frea speach" , newsgroup participants who argued that the right to free speech refers to the right to not be censored by the U.S. Government and nothing to do with the right to employ the services of private individuals and organizations to distribute bulk mail, took to referring to this claimed right as "frea speach", deliberately mis-spelling it partly as a parody and partly to distinguish it from actual free speech rights.[9]
- Gray hat
- An ISP whose stance in spam matters is somewhat ambiguous. It may terminate some spamming customers but not all of them. Compare black hat and white hat.
- Hat check
- A request to determine the reputation of a given ISP in spam matters. See also black-, gray- and white hat.
- Joe job
- The act of sending out spam made to look like it came from a person or organization which the spammer dislikes. Spamhaus, SpamCop and other anti-spam organizations are often the victims of these, as are some individual anti-spammers. Being Joe-jobbed is usually taken as a sign that the victim must have really hurt some spammer.
- Lumber Cartel
- A tongue-in-cheeck conspiracy theory that claimed anti-spammers were secretly paid agents of lumber companies.
- LART
- A meme jokingly describing a blunt instrument used to metaphorically whack clue into a clueless person. Large mallets and anvils are popularly referred to.
- An acronym for Luser Attitude Readjustment Tool
- Listwashing
- The act of responding to complaints by removing the complainer's email address from the spammer's list, without taking any further actions against the spammer.
- Mainsleaze
- Spam coming from a mainstream company.
- Pink contract
- A contract for internet services or hosting that makes it difficult to impossible to terminate the contract for spamming.
- Quirk Objection
- 'Objection! Assumes X not found in evidence!' A humorous objection, raised when the previous poster assumes the presence of something that has not yet been proven to exist, such as a spammer's brains or balls. Not used to refer to things that have definitely been proven not to exist, such as a spammer's ethics. Named after the regular poster 'Captain Gym Z. Quirk' who first raised this. Often shortened to ObQuirk!
- Sock
- A poster whom is suspected to be someone else (usually a spammer) using a new name. Shortened from Sock Puppet.
- Spamhaus
- Originally, an ISP that has mostly or only spammers for customers. Nowadays, it usually refers to the blacklist by the same name.
- Spamware
- Software that was written explicitly for the purpose of spamming, or has features that are mostly or only useful to spammers and other abusers. Also called 'ratware'.
- TINLC
- There is no Lumber Cartel
- TINW
- There is no We. The poster recognizes that NANE does not have a collective opinion.
- Whack-a-Mole
- The act of repeatedly causing spammers' throwaway accounts and drop boxes to be terminated. Named after the Whack-A-Mole arcade game.[4]
- White hat
- An ISP which takes spam complaints seriously and terminates offenders swiftly and with extreme prejudice. Named after old westerns where the good guys usually wore white hats. Compare black hat and gray hat.
References
- ^ Lynch, Keith. "Keith Lynch's timeline of spam related terms and concepts".
- ^ Skirvin, Tim (1996-07-09). "RFD: news.admin.net-abuse reorganization". Newsgroup: news.announce.newgroups. 836945105.13229@uunet.uu.net. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
{{cite newsgroup}}
: Unknown parameter|PS=
ignored (|postscript=
suggested) (help) - ^ Patokallio, Jani (1996-11-09). "RESULT: news.admin.net-abuse reorganization all groups pass". Newsgroup: news.announce.newgroups. 847550753.7941@uunet.uu.net. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
{{cite newsgroup}}
: Unknown parameter|PS=
ignored (|postscript=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Andrew Nellis (1998-09-14). "The Net Abuse Jargon File".
- ^ Brian S. McWilliams (2004). Spam Kings: the real story behind the high-rolling hucksters pushing porn, pills and @*#?%. O'Reilly. pp. 11–14. ISBN 0596007329.
- ^ SPAM FAQ
- ^ The Jargon File
- ^ Catsandcoffee.org
- ^ "Frea Speach Store". The unofficial NANAE Kook Kollektion.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|url=
(help)
External links
- News.admin.net-abuse.email
- The rules of spam [dead link] (by the Rules Keeper)