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[Internet]| Wednesday 14th May 2008 |
The award was handed to MySpace after the men behind the spam, Sanford Wallace and Walter Rines, failed to turn up for the Los Angeles district court hearing. Wallace was known as the "spam king" and it's believed that during the nineties he was sending out around 30 million pieces of spam every day.
The MySpace scam involved the spammers either creating their own accounts or stealing the passwords of others through
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According to MySpace the spammers sent 735,925 messages to its members, some of which linked to pornographic sites.
MySpace believes the judgement will set an example for other spammers trying to exploit the social networking site: "Anybody who's been thinking about engaging in spam is going to say, 'Wow, I better not go there,'" MySpace's chief security officer, Hemanshu Nigam tells the AP. "Spammers don't want to be prosecuted. They are there to make money. It's our job to send a message to stop them."
However, that statement appears naļve considering that Wallace and Rines already have existing anti-spam judgements against them, following suits from AOL and other leading service providers. In the past the two men have simply disappeared, before opening a new spam company elsewhere in the country.
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