• DocumentCode
    3295594
  • Title

    Zmail: zero-sum free market control of spam

  • Author

    Kuipers, Benjamin J. ; Liu, Alex X. ; Gautam, Aashin ; Gouda, Mohamed G.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci., Texas Univ., Austin, TX, USA
  • fYear
    2005
  • fDate
    6-10 June 2005
  • Firstpage
    20
  • Lastpage
    26
  • Abstract
    The problem of spam is a classic "tragedy of the commons" (G. Hardin, 1968). We propose the Zmail protocol as a way to preserve email as a "free" common resource for most users, while imposing enough cost on bulk mailers so that market forces control the volume of spam. A key idea behind Zmail is that the most important resource consumed by email is not the transmission process but the end user\´s attention. Zmail requires the sender of an email to pay a small amount (called an "e-penny") which is paid directly to the receiver of the email. Zmail is thus a "zero-sum" email protocol. Users who receive as much email as they send, on average, neither pay nor profit from email, once they have set up initial balances with their ESPs (email service providers) to buffer the fluctuations. Spammers incur costs that moderate their behavior. Importantly, Zmail requires no definition of what is and is not spam, so spammers\´ efforts to evade such definitions become irrelevant. We describe methods within Zmail for supporting "free" goods such as volunteer mailing lists, and for limiting exploitation by email viruses and zombies. Zmail is not a micro-payment scheme among end-users. It is an accounting relationship among "compliant ESPs", which reconcile payments to and from their users. Zmail can be implemented on top of the existing SMTP email protocol. We describe an incremental deployment strategy that can start with as few as two compliant ESPs and provides positive feedback for growth as Zmail spreads over the Internet.
  • Keywords
    Internet; computer viruses; transport protocols; unsolicited e-mail; Internet; SMTP email protocol; Zmail protocol; email service providers; email viruses; micropayment scheme; spam control; zero-sum email protocol; zero-sum free market; Costs; Electronic mail; Electrostatic precipitators; Feedback; Fluctuations; Force control; Protocols; Unsolicited electronic mail; Viruses (medical); Web and internet services;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Distributed Computing Systems Workshops, 2005. 25th IEEE International Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2328-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICDCSW.2005.144
  • Filename
    1437152