Lycos DDOS’s Spammers
Whenever I hear about projects to flood spammers’ servers and bring down their sites, I think it’s a good idea. I was interested in Lycos Europe’s new screensaver, which follows in footsteps of SETI@Home, offering a distributed solution to a common problem:
Internet portal Lycos has made a screensaver that endlessly requests data from sites that sell the goods and services mentioned in spam e-mail. Lycos hopes it will make the monthly bandwidth bills of spammers soar by keeping their servers running flat out.
Sign me up. Not yet, apparently, as they’re launching only in Europe. I hope Lycos is extremely zealous about ensuring that only spammers’ sites get hit by these distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks. The Register notes that these types of attacks are illegal (presumably) in the US. I also recently read about Project Honeypot (which sounded to me like the title of some softcore porn film). They’ve got a different take on distributed spam fighting.
UPDATE: As far as I can tell, there are no actual geographical restrictions on this screensaver. It only uses 3.4 MB of upload bandwidth a day–a trickle for the average broadband user.
UPDATE #2: In a predictable irony, the Lycos site has been unavailable for at least a couple of hours. Is it getting DDOS’d by the spammers, or by its own success?
