A father-son team that has dedicated time and energy to fighting spam says that as of today, it has shut down more than 50,000
Web sites that use unwanted messages to lure traffic.
The team, named KnujOn (pronounced “new john”; the word is `no junk’ spelled backwards), has spent the last two years relentlessly
following the links embedded in spam messages to determine what Web sites they point to, and has shut those illicit sites
down.
Read the latest WhitePaper - NAC: A Multi-Symptom Remedy
“E-mail and the spammers are the least interesting part of the problem. We want to stop the transaction, to take down those
platforms” from which consumers are buying fake luxury items and phony drugs -- or worse yet, having their identity stolen,
says Garth Bruen, the son in this two-man operation, who is based in Boston.
The organization runs a Web site with 2,000 registered members and roughly 2,000 unregistered, casual users, the younger Bruen says. These users report spam
to KnujOn by forwarding unwanted messages to e-mail accounts run by the group, which then compiles information about the Web
sites that the URL embedded in spam points to.
By collecting and analyzing this information – to date the group has received 3 million to 4 million spam messages – Bruen
says he can go after illicit sites where the crimes are being committed.
“We’re building up a map of Internet crime, figuring out who their benefactors are, where they are coming from, what networks
they're running on and what products they’re pushing,” says Bruen, who has a background in criminal justice and software engineering.
Bruen won’t talk much about how he gets these sites shut down, other than to say his methods are completely legal and require
filling out many, many forms. Most ISPs will investigate reports of fraudulent Web sites operating on their networks and have
the power to cease their operations if they determine them to be illicit.
Once these sites are shut down, spammers will have nothing to point consumers to and no one to pay them for sending out e-mail,
so the unwanted messages will slow to a trickle, Bruen says.