Businesses in the US and UK agree that spam is a problem, but according to MessageLabs many users cannot reach a consensus on its definition
Published:
30 July 2002 y., Tuesday
According to MessageLabs' recent survey, an average of 15 percent of e-mails received by businesses contain spam. One third of the respondents to the UK survey said that spam was currently a problem and three quarters of the respondents expected it to become a problem in the future.
Meanwhile, over 50 percent of the respondents to the US survey said that spam represents 30 percent of their daily e-mail load. Furthermore, around half of those questioned who had spam-filtering technology in place said that it was "ineffective" or "very ineffective."
Despite this deluge of unsolicited mail, approximately 58 percent of those questioned in the US said that they do not want to get rid of spam altogether, but need a better way to filter the messages they want from the messages that they would like to block.
Filtering is difficult to implement because users are unable to agree on a definition of spam, MessageLabs claimed.
According to the survey, 90 percent of UK respondents said that spam was promotional or marketing e-mail from someone they did not know, whereas 89 percent said that it was an e-mail containing information clearly irrelevant to their work. Eighty-one percent said it was news or information from someone they didn't know and 71 percent considered it to be an e-mail they did not request, regardless of content or sender.
Only 29 percent said that a promotional e-mail from an organisation they know was spam, with only 12 percent saying the same for news or information from a source they recognised. In contrast nearly a third defined a mass circulation business e-mail from within the company as spam.
The survey was carried out among 160 UK IT directors and managers and 200 general business managers across the US.
Šaltinis:
electricnews.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Hewlett Packard is due to launch a new desktop computer in the UK, with pre-release users currently including interior designer Sophie Conran and her son Felix Conran.
more »
Unisys Corp. the Blue Bell computer services and systems company, said it named Peter A. Altabef as president and chief executive officer, effective Jan. 1.
more »
IBC has named Tim Richards as the next chairman of its Partnership Board. He will take over from Mike Martin, who retires at the end of 2014.
more »
Unisys has won a contract to provide the US Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) with a range of data centre support services.
more »
Networking solutions giant Cisco today said it has signed a multi-year agreement with software major Microsoft to modernise data centres.
more »
Cisco, a leading provider of wired and wireless network solutions, today announced it has been positioned by Gartner, Inc. in the Leader's quadrant of The 2014 Gartner Magic Quadrant for the Wired and Wireless LAN Access Infrastructure.
more »
US giant Cisco Systems has announced plans to build a global InterCloud - the world's largest network of clouds - in collaboration with a set of partners.
more »
Microsoft may have released a basic Office app for Android phones almost a year ago, but the company is now building a suite designed specifically for Android tablets.
more »
Google Docs now offers its users with the option of editing all types of Microsoft Office.
more »
Cisco announced today that it has acquired cloud platform startup Assemblage, as the company continues its focus on enterprise collaboration.
more »