According to my limited technical understanding that does not solve the
problem but just means that a message can be traced back to the
originator and that company then can be cut off. Or do the operators
actually filter incoming messages from these connections ?
Cheers,
Marc
----- Original Message -----
From: Gustaf Alstromer <gustaf.alstromer@hyperisland.se>
Date: Monday, November 3, 2003 8:48 pm
Subject: (keitai-l) Re: SPAM on mobile networks still an issue ?
> In UK it is still a major issue(and growing). The operators are
> just
> about to cut off most of the "alternative routes" and will require
> direct connections from the agregators a service providers.
>
> Does anyone know if this really helps?
>
> /Gustaf
>
> masheldo@staff.bond.edu.au wrote:
>
> >Folks,
> >
> >I am doing some research work on the occurence of general
> unsolicited
> >messages in various media (aka SPAM). Up to late last year there
> was
> >a lot of discussion on the topic of spam in mobile networks such
> as
> >DoCoMo, AU/KDDI and J-Phone. As I do not live in Japan I would be
> >curious to know if this is still a major problem and what the
> >providers are doing against it.
> >
> >I would be especially curious to know what the type of spam is
> that
> >you typically encounter (and how it has changed over time).
> >
> >I appreciate that a discussion like this is probably off-topic for
> >this list and would be more than happy with direct e-mail responses.
> >
> >Thanks,
> >Marc
> >
> >--
> >Marc Sheldon
> >Bond University
> >Gold Coast, Australia
> >
> >
> >This mail was sent to address gustaf.alstromer@hyperisland.se
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> http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> This mail was sent to address masheldo@staff.bond.edu.au
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>
>
Received on Mon Nov 3 13:26:38 2003