The European Commission has warned its member states to beef up their efforts to cut spam, spyware and malicious software,
after research showed that up to 85% of all e-mail received in the European Union is unsolicited.
The findings come four years after the EU adopted antispam legislation in the form of the e-privacy directive. "It is time
to turn the repeated political concern about spam into concrete actions to fight spam," Viviane Reding, the commissioner for
Information Society and Media, said in a statement on Monday.
If there is no improvement by this time next year, Reding will consider introducing legislative measures to fight the scourge,
she said.
She pointed to the Netherlands as an example of how the current legal regime can be used to cut spam. Holland’s spam-busting
unit, known by the initials OPTA, has just five full-time staff and €570,000 ($747,000) worth of equipment, and has succeeded
in cutting spam by 85%. “I'd like to see other countries achieving similar results through more efficient enforcement,” Reding
said.
Finland was also singled out for praise. A filtering system there has cut the amount of spam to 30% of all e-mail, from 80%
two years ago, the Commission said.
“We encourage other countries in the Union to develop similar filtering means,” said Martin Selmayr, Reding’s spokesman, at
a press conference Monday.
The Commission is urging other countries “to lay down clear lines of responsibility to use the tools available under E.U.
law effectively."
Better cooperation with enforcement authorities from other countries, including countries outside the Union, is essential
to defeat the spammers, the Commission said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.