Distributed Computing To Stop Spam
from the we-need-something dept
The BBC has an article about a distributed computing system that works as a spam filter. It shares spam characteristics among 20 computers and looks to block out spam. Thus, if a spam message is caught on one machine - the "signature" of that message is immediately accessible to the other machines. Apparently, it works pretty well. Of course, I'm not completely sure why such a system needs to work in a distributed manner. It seems as though it could work just as easily on a centralized system.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Reason for being distributed
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Re: Reason for being distributed
Mike, SpamCop essentially is a centralized clearinghouse for spam. Furthermore, they have done enough spam reporting that they now can spot a spoofed header at 50 hops, allowing them to kill spam before anyone reports it. They are also networking with latest-surviving ORBS players to kill spam from open relays. So, I'd say that subscribers reap great network benefits from the centralized service.
Not sure what distributed computing does to help this, btw, but I'll read the article first ;).
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