21/01/2010 00:00:00

Spam Survey 2009: Status Report of the Fight Against Spam in Europe

BRUSSELS and HERAKLION, Greece, January 21 /PRNewswire/ -- The EU 'cyber security' Agency - ENISA (the European Network and

Information Security Agency) presents its new, 3rd 'spam report'

(http://www.enisa.europa.eu/act/res/other-areas/anti-spam-measures), i.e.

anti-spam measures implemented by European Internet service providers (ISPs).

The report looks at spam budgets, impact of spam and spam management. No

significant progress is reported in the fight against spam.

The survey

(http://www.enisa.europa.eu/act/res/other-areas/anti-spam-measures) targeted

email service providers of different types and sizes, and received replies

from 100 respondents from 30 different countries, throughout the EU (26 /27

EU Member States); and 80 million mailboxes managed. The survey analyses how

e-mail service providers combat spam in their networks, and identifies the

state of art in the fight against spam. Some of the key findings are:

- Less than 5% of all email traffic is delivered to mailboxes. [This

means the main bulk of mails, 95%, is spam.]This is a very minor

change, from 6%, in earlier ENISA reports.

- 70% of respondents consider spam extremely significant or significant

for their security operations.

- Over 1/4 of respondents had spam accounting for >10% of helpdesk calls.

- Among very small providers, 1/4 of respondents allocate anti-spam

budgets of over EUR10,000 per year.

- 1/3 of very large providers dedicate anti-spam budgets >EUR 1 Mn/year.

- Fighting spam has reached a certain level of maturity.

- ISPs are using various kinds of measures: technical, awareness,

policies and legal framework. Blacklists are the most commonly used

anti-spam tool. On average 5 kinds of measures are used.

- ISPs consider spam prevention as a competitive advantage to attract and

retain customers. However, spam is not a critical factor.

The Executive Director of ENISA, Dr Udo Helmbrecht concludes: "Spam

remains an unnecessary, time consuming and costly burden for Europe. Given

the number of spam messages observed, I can only conclude more dedicated

efforts must be undertaken.

Email providers should be better at monitoring spam and identifying the

source. Policy-makers and regulatory authorities should clarify the conflicts

between spam-filtering, privacy, and obligation to deliver."

Next steps: ENISA will deliver a report on botnets to study root causes

of spam by the end of 2010. Botnets are networks of thousands of remotely

controlled computers, secretly infected by malicious programs "bots", for

distributing spam and criminal activities.

Download the full survey (

http://www.enisa.europa.eu/act/res/other-areas/anti-spam-measures) and slides

(http://www.enisa.europa.eu/act/res/other-areas/anti-spam-measures/studies/sp

am-slides).

(Due to the length of this URL, it may be necessary to copy and paste

this hyperlink into your Internet browser's URL address field. Remove the

space if one exists.)

ENISA - European Network and Information Security Agency

For interviews: Ulf Bergstrom, Spokesperson, ENISA, press@enisa.europa.eu, Mobile: +30-6948-460143, or Pascal Manzano, Security Policy Expert.

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